Guerrero-Rippberger, Sara Angel (2017) 30° from the Northern Tropic: Art, region and collective practices from urban Latin American and Arab worlds. PhD thesis, University of the Arts London.
30° from the Northern Tropic: Art, region and collective practices from urban Latin American and Arab worl ... (41MB) |
Type of Research: | Thesis |
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Creators: | Guerrero-Rippberger, Sara Angel |
Description: | This thesis investigates the socially imagined representation of two areas of the global South, through the lens of contemporary art. It traces the historicisation of urban Latin America and the Arab world along a timeline of critical lenses, questioning their construction as imagined sites. Re-occurring tropes from exhibition spaces acting as representations of the global South on a macro-level are contrasted with observations from a local level, in an ethnographic study of nineteen artist groups of four capital cities of Latin America and the Arab world. The research draws upon sociological methodologies of research, arts methodologies and historicisation to chart the scope and function of these groups against the backdrop of the global art-institution’s so-called geographic turn and it’s romanticisation of the precarious state as the new avant-garde. Moving away from the traditional cartography of art and social history, this thesis offers an expanded concept of collectivity and social engagement through art, and the artist group as unit of social analysis in urban space. Putting these ideas into dialogue, artist-led structures are presented as counter-point to collective exhibitions and to the collectivity of national identity and citizenship. An abundance of artist groups in the art scene of each city represents an informal infrastructure in which a mirror image of inner-workings of the city and art world become visible through this zone of discourses in conflict. This unorthodox exploration of art, region, and collective expression launches into the possibility of new constellations of meaning, tools to recapture the particulars of everyday experience in the unfolding of large narratives. Examining the place of collective art practices in the socio-political history of the city, this intervention into current theory around the role of art from the global South traces the currents and counter-currents of the art-institution and its structures of representation re-enacted in places of display and public discourse -- the museum, the news, the gallery, the biennial,the street and the independent art space. |
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Camberwell College of Arts |
Date: | January 2017 |
Date Deposited: | 13 Feb 2018 13:47 |
Last Modified: | 22 Mar 2021 21:41 |
Item ID: | 12038 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/12038 |
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