tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique (Sep 2015)

Art Struggles: Confronting Internships and Unpaid Labour in Contemporary Art

  • Panos Kompatsiaris

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31269/triplec.v13i2.613
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
pp. 554 – 566

Abstract

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This article explores the practices of recently formed and mainly UK-based art workers’ collectives against unpaid internships and abusive work. The modes through which these collectives perform resistance involve activist tactics of boycotting, site-specific protests, counter-guides, and whistleblowing and name and shame approaches mixed with performance art and playful interventions. Grappling with the predicaments of work in contemporary art, a labouring practice that does not follow typical processes of valorization and has a contingent object and an extremely loose territorial unity, this article argues that while the identity of the contemporary artist is systemically and conceptually moving towards fluidity and open-endedness, these groups work to reaffirm a collective in whose name it is possible to advance certain claims, assumptions, and demands. The contradictions and dynamics of art workers organizing against internships and voluntary work within a highly individualized, self-exploitative, and often privileged field are useful for informing labour organizing in the framework of ongoing capitalist restructuring.

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