Title: An artist speaks out against neo-orientalism
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One of the many implications of Aram’s piece is its challenge to the not altogether unfamiliar use of ‘identity’, both questioned and not, as a tool of the market. ‘Identity’ has been a major theme not only for contemporary art, but for contemporary literature and, indeed, politics itself; and it seems part and parcel of this thematic’s rise that it is, exactly, marketable. One of the questions then is this: are we witnessing a neo-orientalism in the marketplace? One that is interested to–as the Sotheby’s auction notes do–keep in play the divide between a modern west and primitive east? Or is what Aram identifies as neo-orientalism more like a single facet of what someone like Walter Benn Michaels would call neoliberalism in art in general–an art that is itself more interested in identity (i.e who belongs to this or that group) than in class (i.e. who has the money and who doesn’t)? Categories: Auctions|Middle East|Kamrooz Aram|Orientalism|Sotheby's|Walter Benn Michaels
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Published: 11/4/09
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