d . garcia on Fri, 19 Mar 2021 02:13:24 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> what does monetary value indicate? |
In 1977 the Tate gallery bought the work 'Equivalent VIII' from US minimalist Carl Andre. It was a rectangular arrangement of 120 fire bricks all of which shared the same height, mass and volume and were therefore ‘equivalent’ to each other. Andre used common industrial materials that could be bought anywhere and assembled by anyone. And in this case it was bought by the Tate for £2,297. Even in those days, this wasn’t huge money for a museum to pay for an art work but the scandal and general hoo haa was huge at the time and to this day holds a special place in UK tabloid culture as the ultimate signifier of art world bullshit. “Two grand for a pile of bricks!”
Like the NFT discussions Equivalent VIII also revolved around and raised questions of provenance. Might, someone not have secretly substituted another set of fire bricks for Andre’s
original ? How could we ever know whether we were experiencing theoriginal Andre? Etc etc. Signed certificates by the artist were the metadata of the day. Although he denied it the fuss might well have delighted Andre who as a Marxist had at some point had advocated selling art by weight. And in truth the politics of the best art of that era was the very opposite of the pro market obsession of the NFT venture. It was best captured by a book, Lucy Lippard’s Six Years: The Dematerialisation of the Artwork from 1966 to 1972. From the book’s title to the way its contents were arranged it shares the bare faced literalness of Andre’s work. And as her introduction makes clear the works represented were valued by Lippard in part because they embodied the impulse to explode any possibility of entering the market place on terms that allowed the works to function as market tokens or as “exchange value”. It was a different time.
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