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All together now: crowd scenes in contemporary art.


German art historian Wolfgang Kemp has observed that the crowd appears in art when it erupts in political life. Jacques-Louis David's Tennis Court Oath Tennis Court Oath

(June 20, 1789) Oath taken by deputies of the Third Estate in the French Revolution. Believing that their newly formed National Assembly was to be disbanded, the deputies met at a nearby tennis court when they were locked out of their usual meeting hall at
, 1791, depicting the start of the French Revolution, began what would be a line of images of politicized crowds by artists including Daumier and Delacroix. (1) The nineteenth century also saw the leisure crowd, at the opera or swarming the streets of Paris on a holiday. After modernism's long (but not, of course, complete) vacation from such subjects, analogues of this classic imagery have been appearing during the past decade in the work of artists as diverse as Andreas Gursky Andreas Gursky (1955) is a German photographer known for the highly textured feel of his enormous photographs often using a high point of view.

Gursky received a strong influence from his teachers, Hilla and Bernd Becher, who are known for their distinctive method of
, Glenn Ligon Glenn Ligon (born 1960) is an American conceptual artist. He works in multiple media, including painting, video, photography, and digital media such as Adobe Flash for his work Annotations. , Vanessa Beecroft Vanessa Beecroft (Genoa, Italy, 1969) is an Italian contemporary artist living in Los Angeles. Artistic practice , Matthew Barney, Andrea Bowers, and Paul Pfeiffer
For the American politician see Paul Pfeifer.
For The Wonder Years character see Josh Saviano.


Paul Pfeiffer (born Honolulu, Hawaii, 1966) is an American video artist whose work incorporates the use of found footage.
. (2)

The theme of the crowd came into sharper focus after September 11, 2001. For people in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, the event was a powerful reminder that we live in a densely packed metropolis. It precipitated the neo-Orientalist cliche of "the Arab street Arab Street (Chinese: 阿拉伯街) is the name of a road and neighbourhood in Singapore. There are two explanations to exist of the road name. The first being that the area was owned by an Arab merchant, Syed Ali bin Mohamed Al Junied and the site of an Arab ," while America's military response led to mass antiwar an·ti·war  
adj.
Opposed to war or to a particular war: antiwar protests; an antiwar candidate. 
 protests all over the world, images of which appeared on the front pages of newspapers as well as on television and computer screens. Artists and curators couldn't help but notice: Global politics, suddenly a hot topic in catalogue essays, implied the theme of the crowd; Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 photographs of mass demonstrations in Jakarta and Gaza made appearances in art magazines. The specter of the many (and the "ordinary") hovered over blockbuster exhibitions like Documenta 11, the Venice Biennale Venice Biennale

International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of
 ("Dreams and Conflicts: The Dictatorship of the Viewer"), the International Center of Photography Triennial tri·en·ni·al  
adj.
1. Occurring every third year.

2. Lasting three years.

n.
1. A third anniversary.

2. A ceremony or celebration occurring every three years.
 ("Strangers"), and the 2004 Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of recent American art, typically by young and lesser known artists, on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, USA. The event began as an annual exhibition in 1918. . (Most recently, "Faces in the Crowd: Picturing Modern Life from Monet to Today" opened last month at London's Whitechapel Gallery Coordinates:

‘The Whitechapel taught Britain to love Modern Art.’ The Guardian

The Whitechapel was founded in 1901to bring great art to the people of East London.
.) The theme of the crowd has also provided an underlying subject for numerous popular intellectual tracts: Howard Rheingold's Smart Mobs (2002), about networking, connectivity, and socializing via the Internet; James Surowiecki's The Wisdom of Crowds (2004), on decision making and economics; and Multitude (2004), Michael Hardt Michael Hardt (born 1960)[1] is an American literary theorist and political philosopher based at Duke University. Perhaps his most famous work is Empire written with Antonio Negri.  and Antonio Negri's sequel to their globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 tract, Empire (2000), which currently bears the mantle of serious thought "after theory."

Even apart from moments of political upheaval, the masses of people flooding into the nineteenth-century city had pulsed with activity and potential. For poet and critic Charles Baudelaire it was "an immense joy to set up house in the heart of the multitude" into which "the love of universal life enters ... as though it were an immense reservoir of electrical energy." (3) In the next century, crowds showed a passive side, organized into armies and manipulated by Fascist politicians. As Mussolini wrote: "When I feel the masses in my hands, since they believe in me, or when I mingle with them, and they almost crush me, then I feel like one with the masses. However there is at the same time a little aversion.... Doesn't the sculptor sometimes break the marble out of rage, because it does not precisely mold in his hands according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 his vision?... Everything depends on that, to dominate the masses as an artist." (4) This overorganized crowd of Fascism, a reservoir of energy subordinated to the will of charismatic leaders, transformed after the war into another dark vision: the conformist con·form·ist  
n.
A person who uncritically or habitually conforms to the customs, rules, or styles of a group.

adj.
Marked by conformity or convention:
 crowd mesmerized by consumerism, mass media, and the spectacle.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The polarity between passivity and activity articulated in modern social thought might best be identified in contemporary art with the two themes of the audience and the protest group. While the spectator in nineteenth-century art frequented diversions such as cafes, circuses, and opera houses Opera houses are listed by continent, then by country with the name of the opera house and city; the opera company is sometimes named for clarity. Note: there are many theatres whose name includes the words Opera House , the current fascination with audiences reflects the rise of mass entertainment as an industry central to contemporary life: Artists find their imagery in the passionately engaged fans of sports arenas and pop concerts. A few, like Gursky, place the audience clearly in the context of modernity, as part of a wider spectrum of regimented life that includes the factory and the apartment block: His 2001 photograph of a Madonna concert depicts the star as a tiny individual subject to the same gridded structure as her massive audience. The ambiguities of this relationship--energetic audiences, like those of Gursky's rave photographs, are unpleasantly reminiscent both of the organized chaos of the stock exchange and of a fascist rally--are set into motion in Stephen Dean's Volta, 2002-2003. Shot at a football match in Brazil, the video captures thousands of soccer fans bouncing, shouting, and waving their arms in unison. The work's noneditorial nature implies that this reservoir could erupt in either nationalist violence or a tidal wave tidal wave, term properly applied to the crest of a tide as it moves around the earth. The wavelike upstream rush of water caused by the incoming tide in some locations is known as a tidal bore.  of self-determination.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

While Dean suggests both the promise and threat of the audience, other artists seem unreservedly un·re·served  
adj.
1. Not held back for a particular person: an unreserved seat.

2. Given without reservation; unqualified: unreserved praise.

3.
 positive about its creative potential, even given the conditions of mass-produced culture. British artist Julie Henry's video installation Going Down, 1999, isolates the rival fans at a football match, displaying their images in a corner on two facing screens to create a duet of opposite emotions. More recently, she has emphasized the participatory, productive aspect of leisure culture with her displays of cardigans knit by soccer fans, as well as photographs and videos of local talent shows where performers and audience are equal partners in their give and take. Similarly, recent Turner Prize winner Jeremy Deller Jeremy Deller (born 1966) is an English conceptual, video and installation artist. He is a Turner Prize winner. Life and work
Jeremy Deller was born in London and studied the history of art at the Courtauld Institute of Art.
 has organized exhibitions of artwork and published writing by devoted followers of the British rock British rock and roll, or British rock, was born out of the influence of rock and roll and rhythm and blues from the United States, but added a new drive and urgency, exporting the music back and widening the audience for black R & B in the U.S.  band Manic Street Preachers Manic Street Preachers (often known colloquially as "The Manics") are a Welsh rock band often associated with the Britpop scene, who gained mainstream popularity in the UK in the late 1990s.  under the title "The Uses of Literacy," after Richard Hoggart's seminal 1957 book on the role of culture in people's lives. It's probably no accident that Henry and Deller, involved with themes of fan participation and active reading, hail from the country where the birth of cultural studies was inspired by scholars like Hoggart and Raymond Williams Raymond Henry Williams (31 August 1921 - 26 January 1988) was a Welsh academic, novelist and critic. His writings on politics, culture, the mass media and literature reflected his Marxist outlook. He was an influential figure within the New Left and in wider culture. . Arguing against the prevailing academic criticism that mass literacy and entertainment necessarily create a stupefied stu·pe·fy  
tr.v. stu·pe·fied, stu·pe·fy·ing, stu·pe·fies
1. To dull the senses or faculties of. See Synonyms at daze.

2. To amaze; astonish.
, passive consumer, cultural studies asserts that audiences are capable of using popular culture's most banal forms in original, authentic, and liberating ways.

Fabian Marcaccio's images of crowds, depicting protesters and pedestrians in parks and city streets, emphasize the tension between the mass as seen from a distance and the individuals who emerge when you come closer. Andrea Bowers's exquisite pencil drawings are based on people plucked from audiences that she has photographed or videotaped (she occasionally uses historical footage and photographs as source material). By isolating these figures from the swelling noise and pressure of the group, she lets us see crowd behavior in the individual but also the individual as an independent actor. Some of her subjects--such as a bellowing bellowing

see bellow.


bellowing continuously
in bovine rabies, continues until pharyngeal paralysis supervenes.

bellowing soundlessly
 sports fan whose face is painted with stars and stripes--are probably difficult for many gallerygoers to identify with. Still, Bowers never condescends, playing the fan herself in homages to Chrissie Hynde and Nina Simone, for example, rendering the former as an icon in her artwork or playing the latter's music in a gallery installation. In this she is like other artists who, far from treating fans as objects of criticism, often themselves swap the roles of calculating, professional producer for that of passionate amateur consumer. Besides Bowers, Karen Kilimnik Karen Kilimnik (born Philadelphia, 1954) is an American painter and installation artist.

She trained at Temple University, Philadelphia. Paintings
Her paintings, characterised by loose brushwork, bold colors and "thrift shop paint-by-numbers awkwardness"
, Elizabeth Peyton Elizabeth Peyton (born 1965) is an American painter who rose to popularity in the mid 1990s. She is a contemporary artist best known for stylized and idealized portraits of her close friends, pop celebrities, and European monarchy. , Jonathan Horowitz, and Banks Violette Banks Violette (born 1973, Ithaca, New York) is an artist based in New York.

Violette studied at the School of the Visual Arts in New York earning at BFA in 1998, and graduated with an MFA from Columbia University in 2000.
 also depict their idols, whether Kurt Cobain or Prince William, in the swooning swoon  
intr.v. swooned, swoon·ing, swoons
1. To faint.

2. To be overwhelmed by ecstatic joy.

n.
1. A fainting spell; syncope. See Synonyms at blackout.

2.
 style of young romantics. T.J. Wilcox has also made a semidocumentary sem·i·doc·u·men·ta·ry  
n. pl. sem·i·doc·u·men·ta·ries
A book, movie, or television program presenting a fictional story that incorporates many factual details or actual events.
 on the fan culture of The Rocky Horror Picture Show's role-playing devotees, capturing them camping their way through the movie's routines, swinging between fidelity and deviation, copy and original.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Perhaps the audience-conscious art receiving the most attention recently does not represent but instead incorporates a real, present audience--visitors to a gallery, museum, or alternative space--into living social situations. Philippe Parreno, Pierre Huyghe, Liam Gillick, and Rirkrit Tiravanija are the best-known practitioners of this mode, celebrated by Nicholas Bourriaud as "relational aesthetics." You can question the meaning or quality of this participation: What new relationships are built among art-world insiders hanging out and, say, dining together in a plywood apartment? Despite Bourriaud's distaste for technology's alienating effects, the quandary resembles that of participatory art at its most extreme, an Internet "mob" of thousands together making art. In such cases, each individual surfer adds to and corrects the marks and decisions already made by others--a concept closely related to open-source or cooperative software projects. What is the social valence of people sitting at home alone, "collectively" at work on the computer? Whatever the value of either kind of participation, both evidence the odd blurring of audience and performer that is ever-more present in popular culture as well as high art.

Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle (1967) earned its fame with the argument that all of social life, including art and politics, was adopting the model of entertainment. His concept of the spectacle crystallized crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize  
v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es

v.tr.
1.
 a more general feeling that people don't participate in politics but comprise the audience for the "acts" politicians present. Alternatively, the crowd can put on the show. The awareness of media representation, a balance between action and representation, also conditions all aspects of contemporary demonstrations and the politics of the crowd. As New Left protesters being beaten by police chanted in 1968, mindful of television cameras around them, "The whole world is watching." More recently, marchers against the latest war in Iraq and the Republican National Convention in New York often carried horizontal signs over their heads--flatbed picture planes meant to be read from above by reporters in helicopters and on rooftops, photographed, and transmitted to people watching the protest at home. From a Debordian perspective, this is politics as spectacle, and the protest is a homemade reality show rather than an effective transformation of reality. (5) On the other hand, Hardt and Negri have taken a more positive view, arguing that the consciousness-shaping global media, however central to corporate and state repression, also provides new means of resistance. By raising local protests and struggles to the level where they can be seen from a distance, the media allow activists to escape their locality and mingle electronically with others to form what these theorists call "the multitude." The visibility seems as important as the action.

This conflicted relationship between political activity and its representation plays out in ambivalent art about the media and the crowd. Dutch artist Aernout Mik references photojournalism directly, having staged and documented weirdly anarchic group interactions (like a fight in a restaurant) and fictional protests. In 2003, he made a split-screen video in which one half of the image features a crowd of photographers and reporters surrounding and jostling a generic political figure; in the other half, children seem to act out scenes from television news reports. Many more artists indirectly nod to the importance and uneasy role of the media, and photojournalism in particular. In Glenn Ligon's silk screens depicting the 1995 Million Man March, images of African-American men surface and disappear, partially obscured by black coal dust--seemingly trying to make themselves visible in America, while their failure implies that it is impossible for the media to adequately represent them. Sam Durant makes faithful, if awkward, drawings from photographs of famous protests; he then unmoors the protesters' signs from their original contexts and reproduces them as light boxes, stressing the conflict between representation and activity, examining the way a protest becomes a picture and a demand becomes a slogan--here invoking the historical processes of remembering as well.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

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Nowhere does the question of political representation become so prominent as around the mythic events of 1968. Across different forms of cultural production and social representation we have seen an enormous crush of popular references to the '60s, in forms as various as Che Guevara T-shirts adorning nubile nu·bile  
adj.
1. Ready for marriage; of a marriageable age or condition. Used of young women.

2. Sexually mature and attractive. Used of young women.
 chests and analogies between the US invasions of Iraq and Vietnam. (Vietnam itself is lately having its own, even more hard-earned nostalgia wave, with cute girl groups covering revolutionary anthems like "Springtime in Ho Chi Minh City Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, city (1997 pop. 5,250,000), on the right bank of the Saigon River, a tributary of the Dong Nai, Vietnam. .") In art, this can take the form of nostalgia, belated regret, and suspicion. The "wish I had been there" sentiment drives British duo Leah Elsey and Sonia Uddin, who literally collage themselves into iconic images of historic moments, as in Prague 1968, 2003.

Interestingly, while we usually associate the '60s with political pressure and possibility, recent art about that period rarely focuses on the specific issues at stake, instead featuring the protesters themselves--the mass as message. This is true for artists picturing more recent political protest as well. Much as in her images of fans at concerts, Bowers picks out individuals from protests such as antinuclear antinuclear /an·ti·nu·cle·ar/ (-noo´kle-ar) destructive to or reactive with components of the cell nucleus.  demonstrations of the '80s and other current acts of civil disobedience civil disobedience, refusal to obey a law or follow a policy believed to be unjust. Practitioners of civil disobediance basing their actions on moral right and usually employ the nonviolent technique of passive resistance in order to bring wider attention to the , climbing fences or being dragged away by the police. Likewise, Tiravanija has based a series of recent drawings on photographs from the International Herald Tribune International Herald Tribune

Daily newspaper published in Paris. It has long been the staple source of English-language news for American expatriates, tourists, and businesspeople in Europe.
 of demonstrations including mass assemblies of cyclists. Tiravanija seems to reference the idea of the protest rather than the explicit political situation and its complications. Bowers abstracts her figures from their context still more, but she pushes the idea of agency and the ability of ordinary people, particularly women, to act. Here you see the tension between protest as a shorthand reference for hip rebellion and a meaningful possibility for everyone.

Obviously, the potential for the aestheticization of politics given these examples runs high. In fact, politics has become fashionable again (Durant saw this coming in 2002 when he photographed models carrying protest signs), championed by cheeky layouts in groovy groov·y  
adj. groov·i·er, groov·i·est Slang
Very pleasing; wonderful.



groovi·ness n.
 magazines from BlackBook to High Times--which now calls itself an "activist guide"--and P. Diddy, who has remade re·made  
v.
Past tense and past participle of remake.
 himself as a champion of the youth vote. Protests are already "spectacular," in that they represent the will or wish to change but not the act of change itself. Olaf Breuning graphically illustrates this idea in a 2002 photograph of laconic la·con·ic  
adj.
Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent.



[Latin Lac
 demonstrators camped on a semi-industrial wasteland beneath a sign reading: "We only move when something changes!!!" Just as sports or music audiences push aside the ostensible Apparent; visible; exhibited.

Ostensible authority is power that a principal, either by design or through the absence of ordinary care, permits others to believe his or her agent possesses.
 stars in much of the art described above, pictured protests are removed from the historical context of political struggles, either by virtue of being conjured from the past or through their status as mediated images or simply by some effacement effacement /ef·face·ment/ (e-fas´ment) the obliteration of features; said of the cervix during labor when it is so changed that only the external os remains.  of the actual issues at stake.

But a question remains as to why so many artists are more interested in images of protests of the past than in the politics of today. Perhaps the erosion of the special political authority of the old organized Left--like the slow death of the avant-garde and the weakening distinction between audience and protest crowd--provides an answer. If we are "post" something, it is not modernity or production but ideology. The big ideas and structures of the past--liberal democracy, the labor movement, Soviet-style Communism, the free market, the benevolent state, technological progress, the artistic avant-garde--have either disappeared or are increasingly bankrupt. With the degradation of older political forms, the "great man," too, has passed from view: no more Lenin, Churchill, Mao, Martin Luther King, JFK, Lumumba. Instead of leaders and parties, we have the political analogue to the group of fans and hangout art projects. Affinity groups are local and based on similar tastes, positions, and identities--they are a way to be both an individual and a member of a group.

A similar slip from older, production-based labor struggles to the pluralism of the multitude is visible in the variety of crowds appearing in Jeremy Deller's projects. The former can be seen in his reenactment re·en·act also re-en·act  
tr.v. re·en·act·ed, re·en·act·ing, re·en·acts
1. To enact again: reenact a law.

2.
 of the bitter 1984-85 strike of coal miners in Orgreave, England that marked a nadir in relations between labor and the government; the latter is embodied in a civic parade of groups ranging from tango dancers to the blind that Deller organized for Manifesta 5. On the face of it, the two works seem to represent opposing, even incommensurable in·com·men·su·ra·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Impossible to measure or compare.

b. Lacking a common quality on which to make a comparison.

2. Mathematics
a.
 visions of social organization and change, but Deller moves easily from one to the other.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

If the big ideas and the great figures of politics and art are no longer with us, what are we left with? The work discussed here captures contradictory feelings: the conflicted envy someone today might feel for the '60s as a moment of belief in both politics and art; the exhilaration of participating in a mass protest and the deflation of failing to achieve goals or affect government policy; the troubling and expansive sense that no one knows where we are going or has any special moral authority to decide. Everyone from neo-Marxist theoreticians like Hardt and Negri to free-market enthusiasts like Surowiecki insists that social decisions should be made by ordinary people, but only collectively: "We are more intelligent together than any one of us is alone." (6) Contemporary art about large groups of people responds to a world in which spectators increasingly encounter images of themselves initiating activity, while action rises above representation only with difficulty.

Art itself has changed as part of these larger social transformations. Today museum exhibitions draw enormous crowds, even to shows of contemporary art (to which museums increasingly devote money and square footage). Recent art, "public" and otherwise, increasingly acknowledges and addresses the large audience, whether through kitsch subject matter, scale, or simply its picturing of that public (as in, for example, Thomas Struth's photographs of the Pergamon Museum in Berlin). Under these circumstances, it's not surprising that the idea of the art experience as a communion between a solitary, sensitive, even alienated viewer and an individual, even isolated artist is no longer the dominant one. As the painter Alfred Leslie put it, remembering the old MOMA Moma (mō`mä), town, E central Mozambique. It is important mainly as a harbor for the export of tropical produce. : "My memories of the museum from the period between the '40s and the '50s was that it was like an extension of an artist's studio; it was an intellectual destination.... And then when you went inside it was like noble isolation, because there was no one there. It was really an empty place; it wasn't crowded." (7)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

But an artist like Gursky or Barney has never known anything besides the crowded, institutional art world we have today. And an artist like Bowers isn't interested in communing with aesthetes. It's as if, despite the surviving detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue.

de·tri·tus
n. pl.
 of the avant-garde system--the rise from obscurity to stardom, the sincere investment that pays off, the faith in the cutting edge--artists have really absorbed its death. Their interest in crowds belongs to a new, ambivalent understanding of art as part of mass society, not alien to it. The death of the avant-garde doesn't mean the death of art, just as the death of old-style politics hasn't ended the politics of the crowd.

NOTES

1. Wolfgang Kemp, "Masse-Mensch," in Der Einzelne und die Masse (Recklinghausen, Germany: Stadtische Kunsthalle Recklinghausen, 1975). Thanks to Ilse Mattick for help with translating the German.

2. Three years ago I curated an exhibition in New York called "Everybody Now: The Crowd in Contemporary Art." What seemed at the time an original idea--or at least a unique observation--turned out, appropriately, to be shared with many.

3. Charles Baudelaire, "The Painter of Modern Life [1863]," in The Painter of Modern Life and Other Essays, ed. and trans. Jonathan Mayne (London: Phaidon, 1964), 9.

4. Benito Mussolini, as cited in Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi, Fascist Spectacle: The Aesthetics of Power in Mussolini's Italy (Berkeley: University of California Press "UC Press" redirects here, but this is also an abbreviation for University of Chicago Press

University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing.
, 1997), 21. Thanks to Emily Braun for bringing this book to my attention.

5. Taking a more positive view, John Berger wrote in 1968: "The aims of a demonstration ... are symbolic: it demonstrates a force that is scarcely used ... A demonstration, however much spontaneity it may contain, is a created event which arbitrarily separates itself from ordinary life. Its value is the result of its artificiality, for therein lies its prophetic, rehearsing possibilities." Berger, "The Nature of Mass Demonstrations" in Selected Essays, ed., Geoff Dwyer (New York: Pantheon Books, 2001).

6. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire (New York: Penguin Press, 2004), 340. It is amusing that this is the perfect synopsis of Surowiecki's book, written from a very different political vantage.

7. Alfred Leslie, quoted in "The Modern Gone By: Inspiration for a New Way of Art," New York Times, Nov. 18, 2004, sec. E, 3.

Katy Siegel is a contributing editor of Artforum. She is also coauthor with Paul Mattick of Art Works: Money, recently published by Thames & Hudson.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Siegel, Katy
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Date:Jan 1, 2005
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