posted on 2018-02-14, 11:24authored byChristian Morgner
There is a boom of art historical studies on the globalisation of the
arts or global art world. Sociological accounts are, despite the rise of cultural
and art sociology in recent years, almost complete absent from this discussion.
This paper makes a contribution to the globalisation of the arts, but
from a sociological and quantitative perspective. The focus of this paper is on
particular type of global institution – biennials and other types of art festivals
or large-scale exhibitions. These institutions are seen being major places of
exchange and formulation of norms and standards. They define what is hip
and new. However, theories of globalisation, in combination with accounts
from professionals of the field, claim that these institutions propagate only
Western values or have a homogenising quality, because they only show
caste works from artists of the Western hemisphere or that they repeat the
same works and artists across the globe. However, based on a large-scale
quantitative survey, this paper will demonstrate that picture is more complex
and that we find tendencies to homogenisation and heterogenisation existing
at the same time or that the locality of these events acts as a source of
uniqueness and innovativeness. The paper proposes a new theoretical framework
that interprets these findings as based on Niklas Luhmann’s idea of
second-order observation and Bruno Latour’s and Harrison C. White’s conception
of the network.
History
Citation
New Global Studies, 2017, 11 (3), pp. 165–196
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Media and Communication
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