
I'm Not an Artist
Reclaiming Creativity in the Age of Infinite Content
Giovanni Aloi(Author)
Bloomsbury Visual Arts (Publisher)
Published on 20. February 2025
Book
Hardback
248 pages
978-1-350-41797-7 (ISBN)
Description
Romanticized notions of how one becomes an "artist" have long been questioned, so why do we still fetishize them in popular culture, turning a blind eye to the politics of exclusionism that characterize the art world and conforming our creative potential to well-trodden stereotypes?
I'm Not an Artist is a critical appraisal of the role of the artist through time and an account of how successful artists have conquered their spot in the history of art, from the rise of the Renaissance artist star to the multiplicity of artistic identities we see in the creative landscape today.
Entertaining, informative, and packed with important but lesser-known stories about how artists became famous, it examines the cultural importance of the professional label "artist" and invites readers to "give up the artist myth" in order to rediscover creativity beyond the stronghold of institutions, markets, trends, and cultural cliches. It's a book about art, artists, art history, and the art market as well as the role creativity plays in our lives and how outdated power structures and professional labels are a hindrance to unlocking creative potential. Openly engaging with the contradictions and paradoxes that currently define the relationship between artists, the education system, and the art market, the book proposes an eco-cultural model that can allow artists to reconfigure their identities, and in the process tilt the artworld's axis.
By turns a critical framework for examining what constitutes the term "artist", an alternative art historical account and a no holds barred guide to how the art world really works, this boundary-breaking book challenges existing practices, methodologies, and metrics of success, calling for a fairer art world that is non-elitist and multicultural. It allows readers to critically position themselves in today's art world in a clear, ethically grounded, and responsible way.
I'm Not an Artist is a critical appraisal of the role of the artist through time and an account of how successful artists have conquered their spot in the history of art, from the rise of the Renaissance artist star to the multiplicity of artistic identities we see in the creative landscape today.
Entertaining, informative, and packed with important but lesser-known stories about how artists became famous, it examines the cultural importance of the professional label "artist" and invites readers to "give up the artist myth" in order to rediscover creativity beyond the stronghold of institutions, markets, trends, and cultural cliches. It's a book about art, artists, art history, and the art market as well as the role creativity plays in our lives and how outdated power structures and professional labels are a hindrance to unlocking creative potential. Openly engaging with the contradictions and paradoxes that currently define the relationship between artists, the education system, and the art market, the book proposes an eco-cultural model that can allow artists to reconfigure their identities, and in the process tilt the artworld's axis.
By turns a critical framework for examining what constitutes the term "artist", an alternative art historical account and a no holds barred guide to how the art world really works, this boundary-breaking book challenges existing practices, methodologies, and metrics of success, calling for a fairer art world that is non-elitist and multicultural. It allows readers to critically position themselves in today's art world in a clear, ethically grounded, and responsible way.
Reviews / Votes
Giovanni Aloi's I'm Not an Artist is an ambitious and overdue contribution to the much-needed (and much-avoided) project of reconsidering what art is, was, and could be. Bucking an artistic discourse that long ago mastered the dark art of co-opting such challenges into its own image, Aloi strips away the truisms which shield the art world's collective false consciousness from so many dangerous yet necessary questions. * Mitch Speed, Art Critic and Writer, Berlin, Germany * Urgent and vital reading for anybody interested in questioning what an artist is. Giovanni Aloi carefully dismantles the conception of the artist, equipping the reader with the tools to define their creativity on their own terms. * Harold Offeh, Reader in Performance and Social Arts Practice, Tutor in Contemporary Art Practice, Royal College of Art, UK *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Illustrations
43 bw illus
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-350-41797-7 (9781350417977)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Giovanni Aloi is an art historian and curator, specializing in the representation of nature, history and theory of photography, and everyday objects in art. He currently lectures on modern and contemporary art at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, USA.
Author
Associate Professor, Adjunct at The School of the Art Institute of ChicagoSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago, USA and Sotheby's Institute of Art in New York, USA and London, UK
Content
Note on the Author
Introduction
Part One
1. Becoming an Artist: Constraints and Freedom
2. The Modern Artist: A Rebel Without a Cause?
3. Modern Ecologies: Markets, Marketeers, and Alliances
4. Responsibility: Art that Builds Better Worlds
5. Art Capital: The Infinity of Currencies
Part Two
6. Dissociative Identity Disorders
7. Outsiders and Professional Amateurs
8. I'm Not an Artist
9. In Private: Conversations
List of Illustrations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Part One
1. Becoming an Artist: Constraints and Freedom
2. The Modern Artist: A Rebel Without a Cause?
3. Modern Ecologies: Markets, Marketeers, and Alliances
4. Responsibility: Art that Builds Better Worlds
5. Art Capital: The Infinity of Currencies
Part Two
6. Dissociative Identity Disorders
7. Outsiders and Professional Amateurs
8. I'm Not an Artist
9. In Private: Conversations
List of Illustrations
Notes
Bibliography
Index