
How to Learn About Contemporary Art
Season 1 Episode 20 | 5m 50sVideo has Closed Captions
In which we talk about ways to find out about contemporary art.
In which we talk about ways to find out about contemporary art.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

How to Learn About Contemporary Art
Season 1 Episode 20 | 5m 50sVideo has Closed Captions
In which we talk about ways to find out about contemporary art.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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You may know this, but I live in Indianapolis, Indiana, which is not exactly the white hot center of the contemporary art world.
So how do I stay up to date with what's going in the wider world of art, and why is it even worth bothering?
Let's discuss.
[music playing] First, let's answer the question of what is contemporary art.
It's art being made now and in the recent past.
Period.
Doesn't matter what style it is or what it's made of.
People do have different understandings of what recent past means, however.
And museums sometimes include anything made after modernism or after, say, World War II in their contemporary art collections.
But for our purposes, it's art being made now.
And there are physical centers to art being made now.
Berlin and Beijing and New York and Los Angeles.
But many artists do not live in those centers.
And many art lovers don't either.
Fortunately, there's a miraculous series of tubes called the internet that allows us to remain connected and engaged to our interests and their communities, whether it's "Orange Is the New Black" or One Direction or Kara Walker.
You'll find a link to suggested resources in the video info below.
But it's also worth cluing in to your IRL art community, whatever its size.
Check out what museums, art centers, art fairs, commercial art galleries, or auction houses are in your vicinity, and go visit them or at least look at their websites.
More and more cities and towns are doing First Fridays or Second Saturdays or Third Thursdays and what have you as a way of showing off what new art is around.
Also many of these places have thimble-sized glasses of free wine.
Terrible wine, but free.
Only drink these if you're of age, of course.
Please don't break the law.
And then there are art schools or art programs within the universities closest to you.
They're always putting on shows and it could be a fun and un-stuffy way to see some fresh, new artwork.
Those schools also bring in artists, curators, and art historians in to speak, and they're almost always desperate to have warm bodies in the audience.
It can be intimidating to go to real life galleries and talks, and et cetera, where you don't know anyone, but everyone will be very happy to see you.
It's soul crushing to invite someone from across the world to speak to your community and have only a handful of people show up.
Also definitely don't hesitate to go into commercial art galleries or auction houses even if there's no way you're ever going to buy anything.
The majority of people who go in don't buy anything and the majority of people who work there can't afford to buy anything they're selling.
Most of the people who work in those places do so because they love art and they are usually more than happy to talk to you about it.
And if they're not nice to you, eff them.
The next way is to clue in to the art communities that are not near you.
It's important to remember that there is not just one art world, there are many art worlds, and yours is just as legitimate as the one people talk about all the time that is almost exclusively composed of 1%-ers who rattle their jewels at the premiere art fairs and biennials around the globe.
Those can be really fun too, by the way, as long as you keep your sense of humor and get out before you become one of them.
If you're lucky enough to be able to travel, go to the museums or galleries wherever you're traveling.
And if you can't travel, just go back to the first step and research a place online.
Look up contemporary art galleries in Mumbai and see what artists they're showing and what their most recent shows have been.
You can also sign up for email updates from art galleries in cities all over the world just by sending them an email and asking.
And last but not least, books.
Browsing through the art section in your library, or better yet, your museum's library, can be extremely rewarding and you'll stumble upon things you never knew you were interested in because the Dewey Decimal system is funny.
There's also the periodicals section, where you can spend an entire afternoon flipping through the latest issues of all the best art magazines.
Even the ads in them are worth looking at and give you ideas for avenues of research.
But back to books.
It's best to remember that art books are not always written with an eye to what people actually want to read.
There are a ton of books about art and art theory that are mind-numbingly boring.
There are amazing ideas hidden within these books and I encourage you to read them regardless.
But just remember that you're smart and it's OK to read little bits at a time, and even to give up.
I give up on art books all the time.
But some books about art are actually fun to read.
And this video is my very long-winded way of announcing The Art Assignment book club.
For our first book, we're going to be reading Dave Hickey's "Air Guitar: Essays on Art and Democracy."
I've chosen it because I haven't read it in a long time.
And in college, when I was first studying art, it was what I would read to remind me that art doesn't have to be intimidating and that there are many ways to write about it.
You'll find links to get the book in the video info below.
And to convince you to buy it, I've also linked to some Hickey essays and articles available for free online.
Before I leave you, I want to say one thing to those of you who don't live in London or New York, and also to those of you who do.
There's a certain blindness that comes with living in the center of anything.
It can be overwhelming to have so many offerings to choose from.
And once you live in a place for a while, it can be really easy to just go to work or school and come home, and just do the bare minimum to keep yourself out of trouble.
When I visit New York now, I see much more in three days than I did in a month when I actually lived there because I make a point of maximizing my time.
So if you've got it, take advantage of it.
And if you don't live in a big city with great art, there can be a real advantage to being able to zoom out and learn about art with the perspective that comes from distance.
Art communities can get very sceney and distract you from why you got interested in art in the first place.
I got interested in contemporary art because it's a remarkable avenue into the way other people live and think and process life on earth today.
It's something that can be invigorating from a physical and experiential perspective, and also bring up new ideas and questions you may have never considered.
How do you learn about art?
Let's talk about in the comments and let's also read Dave Hickey's "Air Guitar" together and see if it holds up.
[music playing]
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