19.8.22 We are showing new work at The Royal Standard as part of the exhibition Do They Owe Us a Living?, as well as a new live performance, The Dead - United! at the Liverpool Guild of Students on Sunday 21.8.22, as part of the Art of Management and Organisation conference, programme here:


Do They Owe Us a Living?



Private View:
Wednesday August 17th
18:00 – 21:00

Exhibition open:
August 18th – September 24th 2022

The Royal Standard
Northern Lights
Cains Brewery Village,
5 Mann Street
Liverpool L8 5AF

Organised in collaboration with the Art of Management & Organisation conference, co-hosted by the Bluecoat and the University of Liverpool, the group exhibition Do They Owe Us a Living? brings together eleven artists and artist collaborations and takes as its point of departure the conference theme ‘art-as-activism’. Each artist was asked to respond to the theme within the broader context of the conference.

Featuring a diverse range of practice: from community-focused projects engaging with care in the workplace and council-approved regeneration programmes; through to artworks directed at the histories of prejudice surrounding different communities; as well as work that questions the efficacy of art to function as an act of political resistance in its vulnerability to political co-option, ‘activism’ is proposed less as a given than a complex proposition.

While the Achilles’ heel of activism lies with its susceptibility to sanitisation under capitalism, and the Achilles’ heel of ‘art-as-activism’, the squaring of aesthetic questions with moral ones, what unites these artists is the way in which they seek to critique life under the market forces of neoliberalism, shedding light on the grassroots of lived experience, in the workplace and beyond, whilst throwing caution to the ‘activist’ tag.

Inspired by the 1978 song by the punk band Crass, from which it takes its name, Do They Owe Us A Living? sets out to reveal, as exhibition and idea, how any “living“ owed is registered solely with quality of life, as distinct from the ubiquitous culture of cost-benefit analysis and transactional thinking that surrounds us.

Artists: Beagles & Ramsay, Terry Bond, Pil & Galia Kollectiv, Rachel Garfield, Julika Gittner, Al Hopwood, Sumuyya Khader, Manual Labours (Sophie Hope & Jenny Richards), Chad McCail, Ian Monroe, Simon Willems. Curated by Simon Willems, artist and British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Reading.

 

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