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  • Hi everybody! You may know this but I live in Indianapolis,

  • Indiana which is not exactly the white hot center of the contemporary art world. So how

  • do I stay up to date with what's going on in the wider world of art, and why is it even

  • worth bothering? Let's discuss.

  • First, let's answer the question, "What is contemporary art?"

  • It's art being made now and in the recent past. Period. It doesn't matter what style

  • it is or what it's made of. People do have different understandings of what 'recent past'

  • means, however, and museums sometimes include anything made after modernism or after, say,

  • World War II in their contemporary art collections. But for our purposes, it's art being made

  • now.

  • There are physical centers for art being made now - Berlin and Beijing and New York and

  • Los Angeles - but many artists do not live in those centers and many art lovers don't

  • either. Fortunately there's a miraculous series of tubes called the internet that allows us

  • to remain connected and engaged to our interests and their communities, whether it's Orange

  • Is The Black or One Direction or Kara Walker, you'll find a link to the suggested resources

  • in the video info below.

  • But it's also worth cluing into your IRL art community, whatever its size. Check out what

  • museums, art centers, art fairs, commercial art galleries or auction houses are in your

  • vicinity and go visit them, or at least look at their websites.

  • More and more cities and towns are doing First Fridays or Second Saturdays or Third Thursdays

  • and what have you as a way of showing you what new art is around. Also, many of these

  • places have thimble sized glasses of free wine. Terrible wine, but free. Only drink

  • these if you are of age of course. Please don't break the law.

  • And then there are art schools or art programs within the universities closest to you. They're

  • always putting on shows and it could be a fun and un-stuffy way to see some fresh new

  • artwork. Those schools also bring in artists, curators and art historians in to speak, and

  • they're almost always desperate to have warm bodies in the audience. It can be intimidating

  • to go to real-life galleries and talks and etc. where you don't know anyone but everyone

  • will be very happy to see you! It's soul-crushing to invite someone from across the world to

  • speak to your community and only have a handful of people show up.

  • Also, definitely don't hesitate to go into commercial art galleries or auction houses,

  • even if there's no way you're ever going to buy anything. The majority of people who go

  • in don't buy anything and the majority of people who work there can't afford to buy

  • anything they're selling. Most of the people who work in those places do so because they

  • love art and they're usually more than happy to talk to you about it, and if they're not

  • nice to you eff 'em.

  • The next way is to clue into art communities that are not near you. It's important to remember

  • there is not just one art world. There are many art worlds and yours is just as legitimate

  • as the ones people talk about all the time, that is almost exclusively composed of one

  • percenters who rattle their drools at the premier art fares and biennials around the

  • globe. Those can be really fun too by the way, as long as you keep your sense of humor

  • and get out before you become one of them!

  • If you're lucky enough to be able to travel, go to the museums or galleries wherever you're

  • travelling, and if you can't travel, just go back to the first step and research a place

  • online. Look up contemporary art galleries in Mumbai and see what artists they're showing

  • and what their most recent shows have been. You can also sign up for email updates from

  • art galleries and cities all over the world just by sending them an email and asking.

  • And last but not least, books. Browsing through the art section in your library, or better

  • yet your museum's library, can be extremely rewarding and you might stumble upon things

  • you never knew you were interested in, because the dewy decimal system is funny! There's

  • also the periodicals section where you can spend an entire afternoon flipping through

  • the latest issues of all the best art magazines. Even the ads in them are worth looking at

  • and give you ideas for avenues of research.

  • But back to books. It's best to remember that art books are not always written with an eye

  • of what people actually want to read. There are a ton of books about art and art theory

  • that are mind-numbingly boring. There are amazing ideas hidden within these books and

  • I encourage you to read them, regardless. But just remember that you're smart and it's

  • okay to read just little bits at a time and even to give up. I give up on art books all

  • the time.

  • But some books about art are actually fun to read and this video is my very long winded

  • way of announcing the Art Assignment Book Club! For our first book, we're going to be

  • reading Dave Hickey's Air Guitar, Essays on Art and Democracy. I've chosen it because

  • I haven't read it in a long time and in college when I was first studying art, it was what

  • I would read to remind me that art doesn't have to be intimidating and that there are

  • many ways to write about it. You'll find links to get the book in the video info below, and

  • to convince you to buy it, I've also linked to some Hinckey essays and articles available

  • for free online.

  • Before I leave you, I want to say one things to those of you who don't stay in London or

  • New York and also to those of you who do. There's a certain blindness that comes with

  • living at the center of anything. It can be overwhelming to have so many offerings to

  • choose from and once you live in a place for a while it can be really easy to go to work

  • or school and just come home and just do the bare minimum to keep yourself out of trouble.

  • When I visit New York now, I see much more in three days than I did in a month when I

  • actually lived there because I make a point of maximizing my time. So if you've got it,

  • take advantage of it. And if you don't live in a big city with great art, there can be

  • a real advantage to being able to zoom out and learn about it with a perspective that

  • comes from distance.

  • Art communities can get very sceney and get distract you from why you got interested in

  • art in the first place. I got interested in contemporary art because it's a remarkable

  • avenue into the way other people live, and think and process life on Earth today. It's

  • something that can be invigorating from a physical and experiential perspective and

  • also bring up new ideas and questions you may have never considered.

  • How do you learn about art? Let's talk about it in the comments and let's also read Dave

  • Hickey's Air Guitar together and see if it holds up!

Hi everybody! You may know this but I live in Indianapolis,

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現代アートを学ぶには|アートの課題|PBSデジタルスタジオ (How to Learn About Contemporary Art | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios)

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    Chihyu Lin に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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