The editorial premise of this special issue is that the adage ‘art and money do not mix’ is now wholly untenable. As detailed in our extended interview with Clare McAndrew, the art market has grown rapidly over the last twenty years, leading to systemic and structural changes in the art field. For some, this growth of the market and its significance for art is an institutional misfortune that, for all of its effects, is nonetheless inconsequential to the normative claim that art and money shouldn’t mix. This commonplace premise looks to keep the sanctity or romance of art from the business machinations of market mechanisms, as eloquently summarised by Oscar Wilde’s definition of cynicism (‘knowing the price of everything and the value of no...
The worlds of art and finance often make for uncomfortable bedfellows. Throughout history, artists f...
Based upon a series of interviews with art market experts, this article identifies and answers a sig...
Within recent years the trading of art has grown not only to entice art enthusiasts, but financial i...
The editorial premise of this special issue is that the adage ‘art and money do not mix’ is now whol...
Over the course of the 20th century the market for contemporary art has emerged to dominate percepti...
The “hostile worlds” view argues that money corrupts the meaning of art, but some suggest this is a ...
The financialization of art merits the attention of social scientists studying finance for a number ...
In the mid 1970s, very few people thought of art as an investment. Several economic, demographic, an...
The commercial methods and transactional processes of the art market contravene in almost every way ...
Linda Dürkop-Henseling (2020) In: Glauser A., Holder P., Mazzurana T., Moeschler O., Rolle V., Sc...
Clare McAndrew is a leading analyst of the global art market. Here the guest editors of this special...
Changing the Currency On the Problems of Value and Critique in Art. In their recent manifesto, ...
Recent decades of financialisation have seen a significant growth in art that mobilises various form...
This article examines the processes through which, since the 1970s, the art market has become more a...
"Transnational markets hold sway over all aspects of contemporary culture, and that has transformed ...
The worlds of art and finance often make for uncomfortable bedfellows. Throughout history, artists f...
Based upon a series of interviews with art market experts, this article identifies and answers a sig...
Within recent years the trading of art has grown not only to entice art enthusiasts, but financial i...
The editorial premise of this special issue is that the adage ‘art and money do not mix’ is now whol...
Over the course of the 20th century the market for contemporary art has emerged to dominate percepti...
The “hostile worlds” view argues that money corrupts the meaning of art, but some suggest this is a ...
The financialization of art merits the attention of social scientists studying finance for a number ...
In the mid 1970s, very few people thought of art as an investment. Several economic, demographic, an...
The commercial methods and transactional processes of the art market contravene in almost every way ...
Linda Dürkop-Henseling (2020) In: Glauser A., Holder P., Mazzurana T., Moeschler O., Rolle V., Sc...
Clare McAndrew is a leading analyst of the global art market. Here the guest editors of this special...
Changing the Currency On the Problems of Value and Critique in Art. In their recent manifesto, ...
Recent decades of financialisation have seen a significant growth in art that mobilises various form...
This article examines the processes through which, since the 1970s, the art market has become more a...
"Transnational markets hold sway over all aspects of contemporary culture, and that has transformed ...
The worlds of art and finance often make for uncomfortable bedfellows. Throughout history, artists f...
Based upon a series of interviews with art market experts, this article identifies and answers a sig...
Within recent years the trading of art has grown not only to entice art enthusiasts, but financial i...