Art as Critique Under Neoliberalism: Negativity Undoing Economic Naturalism

Is contemporary art still a viable medium for socio-political critique within a cultural terrain almost wholly naturalised by neoliberalism? Historically, negativity is central to the project of critical theory. Today, art’s critical acuity is revivified by negatively divesting from art contexts saturated with neoliberal economism. Criticality is then negatively practiced as an ‘un-’ or ‘not-doing’, defining modes of exodus while crucially not abandoning art’s institutional definition altogether.

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contemporary music, capitalism, Marx, post work Alex Gawronski contemporary music, capitalism, Marx, post work Alex Gawronski

Work and the Immaterial Labour of Music, Marx 200, KARL records, Berlin

Karl Marx critiqued the domination of life by capitalist labour. Increasingly labour has been dematerialised. Music is inherently immaterial: it escapes true physical capture as much as it is increasingly accessible digitally. Music is temporal and from one perspective, un-ownable: we own the music in a subjective sense. We incorporate its rhythms, textures, harmonies and patterns into the organic circumstances of our own lives. We live the music.

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To produce value under Capital is a misfortune because it means producing value for somebody else.