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Mute Music
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Introducing –
Pil and Galia Kollectiv,
one sixth of Mute's
ensemble music column

covering sonic adventures
across genres and time.
Email: info AT kollectiv.co.uk

Mute music column


No Room to Move
nils norman

No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
A fistful of research on the state of critical public art in the maelstrom of New Labour's regeneration programmes.
By Josephine Berry Slater and Anthony Iles


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No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 24 November, 2009 - 16:45

As the Creative City model for urban regeneration founders on the rocks of the recession, and the New Labour public art commissioning frenzy it triggered recedes, Anthony Iles and Josephine Berry Slater take stock of an era of highly instrumentalised public art making. Focusing on artists and consultants who have engaged critically with the exclusionary politics of urban regeneration, their analysis locates such practice within a schematic history of urban development’s neoliberal mode. Breaking down into a report and collection of interviews, this investigation consistently focuses on the possibility and forms of critical public art within a regime that fetishises ‘creativity’ whilst systematically destroying the preconditions for it in its pursuit of capital accumulation. How, they ask, is critical art shaped by its interaction with this aspect of biopolitical governance?

Contents of this cluster

  1. No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
  2. Interview with Alberto Duman
  3. Interview with Freee
  4. Interview with Nils Norman
  5. Interview with Laura Oldfield Ford
  6. Interview with Roman Vasseur
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New Labour orthodoxy maintains, in line with its predecessor, that public private partnerships are the only way forward economically. Transport, health and education have been the most controversial new enterprise zones, but is the cultural sector's restructuring any less absolute?

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