Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates art and cultural workers. Addressing the internalisation of the ideology that one loves one's labour, the interlocutors consider the gendered and class conditions of work in the cultural and academic sectors. Reading ‘theory’ against ‘practice’, they reflect on their own work experiences and upbringings, their curatorial research, and their readings of feminist and Marxist theories of artistic and feminised labour. The discussion considers how the precarious conditions of cultural labour today divide and isolate workers, immersing them in antagonism and competition, a...
In this article, we present our current research into the body and mind at work, with a particular f...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
Inequalities within the cultural and creative industries (CCI) have been insufficiently explored. In...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
This discussion explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates a...
This discussion explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates a...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
Social-reproduction theory demands that attention be paid to the mostly overlooked and undervalued p...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
This article considers the changing definitions of curatorial labour in the light of affective econo...
The crisis of care and sustainability has become a key preoccupation in the art world. Artists and c...
This article approaches the optic of ‘reproduction’ in feminist theory and politics from two sides: ...
In this submission, I argue for a re-thinking of the concept of an artist's oeuvre, to extend it con...
The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art sinc...
The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art sinc...
In this article, we present our current research into the body and mind at work, with a particular f...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
Inequalities within the cultural and creative industries (CCI) have been insufficiently explored. In...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
This discussion explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates a...
This discussion explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates a...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
Social-reproduction theory demands that attention be paid to the mostly overlooked and undervalued p...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
This article considers the changing definitions of curatorial labour in the light of affective econo...
The crisis of care and sustainability has become a key preoccupation in the art world. Artists and c...
This article approaches the optic of ‘reproduction’ in feminist theory and politics from two sides: ...
In this submission, I argue for a re-thinking of the concept of an artist's oeuvre, to extend it con...
The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art sinc...
The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art sinc...
In this article, we present our current research into the body and mind at work, with a particular f...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
Inequalities within the cultural and creative industries (CCI) have been insufficiently explored. In...