Artistic Bedfellows
Histories, Theories and Conversations in Collaborative Art Practices
Contributions by Vladimir Belogolovsky, Alan F. Blackwell, Horace Brockington, Nicolas Collins, Critical Art Ensemble, Cristyn Davies, Pierre-Olivier Douphis, Chris Fite-Wassilak, Shawna Ferris, Ken Friedman, Fernando Galán, gelatin, David A. Good, Charles Green, Grant Kester Professor of Art History at the University of California, San Diego, Pia Lindman, Holly Longstaff, Lull (Elena Knox), Eva Merz, Beret Norman, Orlan, Nadín Ospina, Martin Simon, Tracey Snelling, Lisa Paul Streitfeld, TODT, Andrea Thal, Zoe Trodd, Guy Van Belle, Catharyne Ward, Steve Wozniak, Eric Wright, Nina Zimmer Edited by Holly Crawford

Publication date:
17 September 2008Length of book:
330 pagesPublisher
University Press of AmericaDimensions:
232x154mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780761840640
Artistic Bedfellows is an international interdisciplinary collection of historical essays, critical papers, case studies, interviews, and comments from scholars and practitioners that shed new light on the growing field of collaborative art. This collection examines the field of collaborative art broadly, while asking specific questions with regard to the issues of interdisciplinary and cultural difference, as well as the psychological and political complexity of collaboration. The diversity of approach is needed in the current multimedia and cross disciplinarily world of art. This reader is designed to stimulate thought and discussion for anyone interested in this growing field and practice.
Holly Crawford brings together a series of interviews, essays, conversations, and remarks on collaboration. International visual artists, critics, writers, and musicians explore a range of histories, discourses and theories relating to communal, collective practices including FLUXUS, Zero, GRAV and SPUR in mid-20th century, women artists in the GDR and the Critical Art Ensemble in the Eighties and the experimental New Social Art School set up in Aberdeen in 2004. The resulting anthology, a considerable collaborative project in its own right, challenges orthodoxies and engages in the vital and current debate within the global artistic community about participative cooperative approaches.