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- Art_world abstract "The art world is composed of all the people involved in the production, commission, preservation, promotion, criticism, and sale of art. Howard S. Becker describes it as "the network of people whose cooperative activity, organized via their joint knowledge of conventional means of doing things, produce(s) the kind of art works that art world is noted for" (Becker, 1982). Sarah Thornton describes it as "a loose network of overlapping subcultures held together by a belief in art. They span the globe but cluster in art capitals like New York, London, Los Angeles, and Berlin." Other cities that can be classified as "art capitals" include Beijing, Hong Kong, Miami, Paris, Rome and Tokyo; due to there large art festival, followings and being centers of art production. The notion of the singular art world is problematic, since Becker and others have shown, art worlds are multiplicities, they are globally scattered, constantly in flux, and typically operating independently of each other: there really is no center to the art world any more. In her analysis of the "net art world" (referring to network-aided art or net art Amy Alexander states "net.art had a movement, at the very least it had coherence, and although it aimed to subvert the art world, eventually its own sort of art world formed around it. It developed a culture, hype and mystique through lists and texts; it had a centre, insiders, outsiders, even nodes. This is of course not a failure; this is unavoidable: groups form; even anarchism is an institution." Art worlds can exist at the local and regional levels, as hidden or obscured subcultures, via primary and secondary art markets, through gallery circuits, around design movements, and more esoterically as shared or perceived experiences. The one globalized, all-encompassing art world does exist – but it does so as a myth; more accurately, there are multiplicities of intersecting, overlapping, self-similar art worlds, each expressing different views of the world as they see it.New York Magazine art critic Jerry Saltz has referred to William Powhida's and Jade Townsend's drawing Art Basel Miami Beach Hooverville as "a great big art-world stinkbomb."".
- Art_world thumbnail Mona_lisa_crowd.jpg?width=300.
- Art_world wikiPageID "690245".
- Art_world wikiPageRevisionID "596747122".
- Art_world hasPhotoCollection Art_world.
- Art_world subject Category:Anthropology.
- Art_world subject Category:Arts.
- Art_world subject Category:Business_of_visual_arts.
- Art_world subject Category:Social_networks.
- Art_world subject Category:Sociology_of_culture.
- Art_world type Art102743547.
- Art_world type Artifact100021939.
- Art_world type Arts.
- Art_world type Creation103129123.
- Art_world type Object100002684.
- Art_world type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Art_world type Whole100003553.
- Art_world comment "The art world is composed of all the people involved in the production, commission, preservation, promotion, criticism, and sale of art. Howard S. Becker describes it as "the network of people whose cooperative activity, organized via their joint knowledge of conventional means of doing things, produce(s) the kind of art works that art world is noted for" (Becker, 1982). Sarah Thornton describes it as "a loose network of overlapping subcultures held together by a belief in art.".
- Art_world label "Art world".
- Art_world label "Kunstwelt".
- Art_world label "Мир искусства (социология)".
- Art_world label "العالم الفن".
- Art_world sameAs Kunstwelt.
- Art_world sameAs m.0330_k.
- Art_world sameAs Q2493043.
- Art_world sameAs Q2493043.
- Art_world sameAs Art_world.
- Art_world wasDerivedFrom Art_world?oldid=596747122.
- Art_world depiction Mona_lisa_crowd.jpg.
- Art_world isPrimaryTopicOf Art_world.