Opening Spaces of Resistance in the Corporatized Cultural Institution: Liberate Tate and the Art Not Oil Coalition

Authors

  • Emma Mahony National College of Art and Design, Dublin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v15i2.828

Abstract

In the current economic climate where state subsidies for the arts have been steadily eroded, there is a consensus in support of the good of corporate sponsorship for cultural institutions. This article seeks to problematize this consensus by critiquing the strategies that corporations employ in their sponsorship agreements with public cultural institutions and opening up a discussion around the ethical issues this poses for their recipients. It then examines how a coalition of subversive arts collectives, that come together under the banner ‘Art Not Oil’, have begun to successfully shatter this consensus through a sustained campaign of unauthorized live art interventions enacted inside cultural institutions. It argues that the unique strategy of resistance they employ operates at an interstitial distance to the public cultural institutions they target, from where they open up spaces of resistance ultimately capable of rewriting the cultural sectors’ corporatized value system.


Key Words: Corporate sponsorship, Public cultural sector, Liberate Tate, Simon Critchley, Interstitial distance

Author Biography

Emma Mahony, National College of Art and Design, Dublin

Dr. Emma Mahony is a lecturer in the School of Visual Culture at the National College of Art and Design, Dublin. Her research investigates the relationship between contemporary art, curatorial studies, radical pedagogy and activism, instituting conversations with radical philosophy and public sphere theory, to propose methodologies for artist’s collectives that seek to rewrite the neoliberalization of the cultural landscape and the public university. From 2004-8 she was exhibitions curator at the Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre London.

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Published

12.07.2017

How to Cite

Mahony, E. (2017). Opening Spaces of Resistance in the Corporatized Cultural Institution: Liberate Tate and the Art Not Oil Coalition. Museum & Society, 15(2), 126–141. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v15i2.828

Issue

Section

Articles