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OverviewA ground-breaking exploration of how art responds to democratic crisis. Is democracy over? Did we ever really have it? Most people would agree that today democracy finds itself in crisis. As this crisis has intensified, art has emerged as an important means of experimenting with new democratic processes and possibilities. In Model collapse, a brilliant group of art historians and theorists investigate the relationship between art and democracy since the 1990s. Exploring a wide range of artistic responses, from interactive public sculptures to autonomous curatorial projects, critical engagement with electoral politics and creative street protest, they offer fresh insights into the limits of representation, the appeal of collaboration and the role of the nation-state in post-national frameworks. 'Model collapse' is what happens when large language models start learning from their own generated data and lose all connection to reality. This book examines the multiple, intersecting crises that shape the conditions for artistic practice and define its socio-political aims. It advances our understanding of how art can contribute to one of the most vital political issues of our time. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lindsay Caplan , Kerry GreavesPublisher: Manchester University Press Imprint: Manchester University Press ISBN: 9781526177544ISBN 10: 1526177544 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 02 December 2025 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Contesting models – art and democracy since the 1990s – Lindsay Caplan Part I: Assembly: between intervention and institution 1 Performance and militant curating: rehearsing democratic imaginaries through critical spaces and publics – Gigi Argyropoulou 2 Nordic exceptionalisms: convivial curating and Denmark’s CAMP / Center for Art on Migration Politics – Kerry Greaves 3 Practices of avant-garde negation in Belarusian art during the 2020 anti-authoritarian uprising – Olga Kopenkina 4 From revolutionary art to democratic art: Oliver Ressler and Wolfgang Tillmans in the shadow of the Situationists – Mikkel Bolt Rasmussen Part II: Party/people: forms of collective identity and their limits 5 Party formalism: formlessness and collective form in contemporary art – Julian Nykolak 6 I am one people: the demos as aporia and opera in the work of Christoph Schlingensief – Jonah Westerman 7 Re-citing, re-siting: art and the figural politics of ‘the people’ in Europe – Sudeep Dasgupta 8 Monumental shadows: renegotiating public monuments and radicalising democracy in today’s culturally pluralised societies – Sabine Dahl Nielsen 9 Public art and democratic fallacies: patriarchal resilience in Erik A. Frandsen’s ‘toppled’ statue BAR ROMA – Mathias Danbolt and Amalie Skovmøller Part III: The state: within, against, beyond 10 ‘BITTERFELD IS EVERYWHERE’: industrial hauntings in the former East Germany – Sara Blaylock 11 Contemporary necropolitical mafia structures or necrodemocracy and contemporary European art and culture – Marina Gržinic 12 The financial system as public resource: Núria Güell’s post-Indignados activist practice – Tatiana Rybaltchenko and Sophie Cras 13 Off-state relations as resilience: grassroots arts instituting in Hungary – Eszter Szakács Index -- .ReviewsAuthor InformationLindsay Caplan is Assistant Professor of History of Art and Architecture at Brown University. Kerry Greaves is Assistant Professor of Arts and Cultural Studies at the University of Copenhagen. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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