In Search of a Lost Avant-Garde: An Anthropologist Investigates the Contemporary Art Museum

In Search of a Lost Avant-Garde: An Anthropologist Investigates the Contemporary Art Museum

by Matti Bunzl (Author)

Synopsis

In 2008, anthropologist Matti Bunzl was given rare access to observe the curatorial department of Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art. For five months, he sat with the institution's staff, witnessing firsthand what truly goes on behind the scenes at a contemporary art museum. From fund-raising and owner loans to museum-artist relations to the immense effort involved in safely shipping sixty works from twenty-seven lenders in fourteen cities and five countries, Matti Bunzl's In Search of a Lost Avant-Garde illustrates the inner workings of one of Chicago's premier cultural institutions. Bunzl's ethnography is designed to show how a commitment to the avant-garde can come into conflict with an imperative for growth, leading to the abandonment of the new and difficult in favor of the entertaining and profitable. Jeff Koons, whose massive retrospective debuted during Bunzl's research, occupies a central place in his book and exposes the anxieties caused by such seemingly pornographic work as the infamous Made in Heaven series. Featuring cameos by other leading artists, including Liam Gillick, Jenny Holzer, Karen Kilimnik, and Tino Sehgal, the drama Bunzl narrates is palpable and entertaining and sheds an altogether new light on the contemporary art boom.

$19.10

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 126
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 23 Sep 2016

ISBN 10: 022641812X
ISBN 13: 9780226418124

Media Reviews
Not since Debora Silverman's 1986 Selling Culture, near the beginning of America's neoliberal era, has there been such a delicious, astute, and acutely observed account of the cultural economy of contemporary art museums, now in the full maturation of that era. Embedded ethnographically among the curators of Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art, as much managerial mediators as connoisseurs of the new, Bunzl ranges widely, and in so doing redeems the idea of an avant-garde in an art system that so degrades it. --George E. Marcus, coeditor of The Traffic In Culture
An important, lucid, and miraculously easy-reading contribution to the ethnography of art
--Sarah Thornton, author of Seven Days in the Art World
An important, lucid, and miraculously easy-reading contribution to the ethnography of art
--Sarah Thornton, author of Seven Days in the Art World
Not since Debora Silverman's 1986 Selling Culture, near the beginning of America's neoliberal era, has there been such a delicious, astute, and acutely observed account of the cultural economy of contemporary art museums, now in the full maturation of that era. Embedded ethnographically among the curators of Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art, as much managerial mediators as connoisseurs of the new, Bunzl ranges widely, and in so doing redeems the idea of an avant-garde in an art system that so degrades it. --George E. Marcus, coeditor of The Traffic In Culture
Author Bio
Matti Bunzl is professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the artistic director of the Chicago Humanities Festival. He is the author of Symptoms of Modernity: Jews and Queers in Late-Twentieth-Century Vienna and Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia: Hatreds Old and New in Europe.