Martha Rosler
Culture Class
22 September 2013
Series editors: Julieta Aranda, Brian Kuan Wood,
Anton Vidokle
With an introduction by Stephen Squibb.
10.8 x 17.8 cm, 256 pages, softcover
ISBN 978-1-934105-81-8
www.e-flux.com
www.sternberg-press.com
Book launch, Berlin
September 20, 6pm
Martha Rosler in conversation with Pelin Tan
Introduced by Julieta Aranda
at MISS READ: The Berlin Art Book Fair
Station Berlin, MISS READ STAGE
Luckenwalder Straße 4–6
10963 Berlin
www.missread.net
Book launch, New York
September 22, 7:30pm
after the New York Art Book Fair
Martha Rosler in conversation with Stephen Squibb
Introduced by Brian Kuan Wood
at e-flux
311 East Broadway
New York
www.nyartbookfair.com
What makes a city successful today? Over the past few decades, artists—and more broadly, clusters of creative people—have become central to narratives of urban revitalization and civic growth in cities around the world.
In many locales, artists in search of cheap rent constitute the vanguard wedge of gentrification. Yet the so-called creative class includes whole categories of knowledge workers enjoying far less precarious conditions than artists, and it is their affluence that continually displaces both working-class residents and artists alike. In the creative city, the branding of subcultural movements, the translation of the gritty into the quaint, and the professionalization of the arts combine to produce a user-friendly social interface dressed in the trappings of former bohemian artistic milieus.
How do we confront the soft violence of an urban landscape that adapts itself to successive booms and busts by dissolving or willfully suppressing class distinctions to the point of amnesia? Has a contradiction emerged between the declared politics of artists and their actual role in flows of global capital that course through biennials and art fairs? Can we take the broad commitment of so many artists to the Occupy movement as a signal of their desire to mobilize and redirect their energies back toward social justice?
This collection of essays written between 2010 and 2012 presents Martha Rosler’s most extensive update to her consideration of the role of artists in world culture and in urban gentrification since her landmark 1989 project If You Lived Here….
e-flux would like to thank AA Bronson, Galerie Nagel Draxler, and Sternberg Press.
Martha Rosler, Culture Class
Introduction by Stephen Squibb.
Series editors: Julieta Aranda, Brian Kuan Wood, Anton Vidokle
Design by Jeff Ramsey, cover design by Liam Gillick, cover image: John Sloan, “Sun and Wind on the Roof,” 1915.
September 2013, English
10.8 x 17.8 cm, 256 pages, softcover
ISBN 978-1-934105-81-8
Please contact magdalena [at] e-flux.com for further information.