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The Artist–Enterprise in the Digital Age

Posted By: Underaglassmoon
The Artist–Enterprise in the Digital Age

The Artist–Enterprise in the Digital Age
Springer | Social Sciences | August 6, 2016 | ISBN-10: 4431559671 | 207 pages | pdf | 2.33 mb

Authors: Greffe, Xavier
Explains the specificity of the artist–enterprise: a conflict between the time period of artistic creativity and the time period of economic sustainability
Shows the need for new business models for content activity
Provides illustrations with many examples, from Hokusai and Disney to Pokemon and Chanel, and has a worldwide vision


This book is a monograph of cultural economics of a new concept, artist–enterprises. It explores various dimensions that artists embody, i.e., aesthetic, critical, messianic, and economic ones, and screens the multiple challenges faced by the artist–enterprises in terms of pricing, funding, and networking in the Digital Age. It shows how these artist–enterprises are at the core of the contemporary creative industries.
Even when they are on their own, artists have to demonstrate or manage a variety of skills, sign contracts both in the early and later stages of their activities, and also maintain relationships and networks that enable them to attain their artistic and economic goals. They are no longer simply entrepreneurs managing their own skills but are the enterprises themselves. The artist–enterprises thus find themselves at the confluence of two dynamics of production—artistic and economic: artistic because they invent new expressions and meanings; and economic because these expressions must be supported by monetary values on the market. The artistic dynamic is part of a long process of artistic enhancement and only an artist can say whether it has reached the point of presentation or equilibrium. The economic dynamic is dependent on the constant endorsement of artists' works by the market to ensure their survival as artist–enterprises. The tension created by this disparity is further aggravated by another tension: the need to overcome a number of risks so that artist–enterprises can progress.
This book will be of special interest to artists, managers, students, professionals, and researchers in the fields of the arts, creativity, economics, and development.
The author is Emeritus Professor at the University Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne.

Number of Illustrations and Tables
2 b/w illustrations
Topics
Cultural Management
Landscape, Regional and Urban Planning
Entrepreneurship
Arts
Regional and Cultural Studies

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