Abstract
This article investigates the diverse and heterodox array of labour practices and economic activities in artistic work. Existing studies contend that artistic income is highly skewed, with the majority of artists living in poverty, and that artistic work is intermittent, project-by-project based and precarious, with artists juggling multiple jobs. However, these prevalent perspectives typically foreground only formal contractual employment while neglecting the variegated range of informal, alternative and relational economic practices. Building on a mixed method study of Danish visual artists’ livelihoods and drawing on the total social organization of labour perspective, the article maps a diverse spectrum of labour practices ranging from formal paid/unpaid work to informal cash-in-hand work and non-monetized barter exchanges, to wholly non-commodified everyday practices of mutual aid and favour-swapping, as well as ‘consumption work’ such as thrift and self-provisioning. Heterodox economic practices are the primary mode by which artists cope with and manage precarious artistic livelihoods.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
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Tidsskrift | Work, Employment and Society |
Vol/bind | 35 |
Udgave nummer | 6 |
Sider (fra-til) | 1053-1072 |
Antal sider | 20 |
ISSN | 0950-0170 |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - dec. 2021 |
Bibliografisk note
Published online: November 24, 2020.Emneord
- Alternative economies
- Artistic income
- Artistic work
- Creative industries
- Creative work
- Cultural economy
- Diverse economies
- Heterodox economies
- Precarity
- Total social organization of labour