Título: Talking Prices: Symbolic Meanings Of Prices On The Market Of Contemporary Art | ||
Autor: Velthuis Olav | Precio: Desconocido | |
Editorial: Princeton University Press | Año: 2007 | |
Tema: Arte, Contemporaneo | Edición: 1ª | |
Sinopsis | ISBN: 9780691134031 | |
"Olav Velthuis has built a graceful, sturdy bridge across a torrent: the turbulent flow of art markets. On one side we have the supposition that art and money follow incompatible principles; on the other, the claim that markets reduce all commodities to creatures of supply and demand. By looking closely at the actual culture and social connections of art markets in New York and Amsterdam, he arrives at insight after insight into a meaning-drenched form of commerce, and by extension into the place of meanings in markets of every kind. This bridge stands firm."—Viviana A. Zelizer, author of The Purchase of Intimacy and The Social Meaning of Money
"A superb book! Talking Prices is the best thing I have yet to read on the way art markets-in any period-work. Written in the most fluid style, it is a pleasure to read and contains a great many juicy details that shed light on the inner workings of dealers and sellers and artists. Furthermore, it will carve out a space in the economic sociology of art that is occupied, at present, by nobody. Without question, it will leap across disciplinary boundaries, especially that huge and often ugly one between 'sociologists' and 'economists.' What tops it all off is that Velthuis is also an expert in art history and understands the aesthetic values and norms of composing art that matter not only to the artists who are selling to galleries, but also to the way in which artworks are sold and to the culture that shapes the way art markets operate. This is a major accomplishment."—Jack Amariglio, Merrimack College, coauthor of Postmodern Moments in Modern Economics "A brilliant piece of work. Velthuis has taken the hardest case, and gotten out of it the best laws: about pricing, which the economist wants to read as prudence and the anthropologist wants to leave to the economist; and about high art, which the anthropologist wants to read as power and the economist wants to leave to the anthropologist. It's a brave book, and accomplishes what it ventures."—Deirdre McCloskey, University of Illinois, Chicago, author of Knowledge and Persuasion in Economics |