University thesis:
Dissertation, Berlin University of Arts
Footnote:
In English
Description:
The first monograph on the artists group "Collective Actions", one of the most significant enterprises of modern and contemporary Russian art, studies their guiding esoteric principle of 'Empty action'. Departing from the seemingly mundane fact that their practice emerged in their free time from full-time employment for the Soviet State in a period of stagnating industrialisation, Marina Gerber identifies Empty action as a form of "art after work". The result is a comprehensive and profound investigation of the artistic and socio-historical context of Collective Actions' practice that bears some significance for contemporary debates on art and labour in a post-industrial age.
Frontmatter -- -- Contents -- -- Acknowledgements -- -- Introduction -- -- Interlude: A Participant’s Report on the Action SUMMA (2015) -- -- 1. Empty Action -- -- 2. Collective Actions’ Concept of Art -- -- 3. Free Time in Trips out of Town -- -- 4. Free Time, Labour and Art: A Theoretical Contextualisation -- -- 5. Collective Actions Members ‘at Work’ and ‘after Work’ -- -- 6. The Production of (Collective) Actions -- -- 7. Empty Action as the Suspension of Work -- -- Bibliography -- -- List of Illustrations