Poor Artists

20.00 JOD

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Description

‘Irreverent, provocative and funny’ Dazed’This book might change the way you look at art, or change the way you feel it’ Daisy Hildyard’A full-throated defence of the inherent value of making, experiencing and talking about art’ Frieze’Let me stay there, let me paint. Let me go to bed when the sun comes up. I don’t want life to sharpen me.’Why make art? Faced with a capitalist system that has turned art into artwork and creative expression into cut-throat competition, why do so many artists try anyway?In this eye-opening journey through the bizarre world of contemporary art, criticism duo The White Pube tell the story of art like never before. Poor Artists follows aspiring artist Quest Talukdar through childhood obsessions, art school lessons and her professional debut. In surreal encounters with other artists, Quest learns profound truths about money and power, and must decide whether she cares more about success or staying true to herself.Blending imaginative storytelling with dialogue from anonymized interviews with real people in the art world who have all had to wrestle with the same decisions – including a Turner Prize winner or two, a few ghosts, a Venice Biennale fraudster and a communist messiah – Poor Artists is a powerful testimony to the emotional, existential and financial experience of artists today.

Additional information

Weight 0.423 kg
Dimensions 3 × 14.3 × 22.3 cm
by

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Format

Hardback

Language

Pages

320

Publisher

Year Published

2024-10-3

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

0241633761

About The Author

The White Pube (Author) The White Pube is the collaborative identity of UK-based critics Gabrielle de la Puente and Zarina Muhammad. They have been turning heads since 2015 when the pair began publishing provocative art reviews and essays online from their art school studios and have earned themselves an international cult following due to their innovative writing style, their honesty and irreverence, and their willingness to challenge the pale, male, stale art establishment. Poor Artists is their first book.

Irreverent, provocative and funny . . . at some points it reads like a memoir and at others like a wildly surrealist novel . . . I found it fascinating as someone who knows basically nothing about the art world, but I’d also highly recommend it to anyone who went to art school or works as an artist – I’m sure the experiences it depicts would resonate deeply

Other text

Excoriating and energising . . . interweaves impassioned real-world critique with an exuberant narrative that’s by turns satirical and surreal

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