Abstract
In 2021, for the first time, all the nominees for the Turner Prize were socially engaged art (SEA) collectives. The groups all ‘democratised’ their practices by relinquishing their authorial control to non-artists. Framed by the prestige of the Turner Prize, this relinquishing of control, through collaborative actions with various communities, was lauded as ethically meritorious, because of its egalitarian and non-hierarchical nature. We argue that behind the growing institutional success of SEA lies a tension between its ‘goodness’ as a necessity based on a model of authentic practice, and the context of ‘post-truth’ that informs its rejection of ‘artistic expertise’ in favour of egalitarian processes. However, we contend that it is not the processes themselves, but the monumentalising of democracy and equality that brings SEA into the domain of post-truth. We conclude that SEA must retain a dialectical tension between equality and the production of truth as a cultural value: a dialectic which involves the careful reinstatement of artistic authorship and a sincerer vision of its political ambitions and signification.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 59-76 |
| Journal | Journal of Cultural Management and Cultural Policy |
| Volume | 9 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| Early online date | 11 Jul 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published online - 11 Jul 2023 |
Keywords
- Sozial engagierte Kunst / Socially engaged art
- Postfaktische Politik / Post-truth politics
- Monumentalisieren / Monumentalising
- Demokratie / Democracy
- Kuratieren / curating
- Soziokultur / community arts
- Kulturproduktion / cultural production
- Gesellschaftlicher Wandel / social change.
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