
Three Cases of Value Reflection: Ponge, Whitten, Banksy
In response to recent discussions about the value assigned to artworks, art critic and theorist Isabelle Graw introduces the term âvalue reflection.â Rather than an objective quality, value reflection is the potential for the specific artistic labor expended for artworks to be found in them. moreShe argues that an artwork can actually reflect on its value despite being defined by it. This book focuses on the artistic production of three individualsâwriter Francis Ponge and artists Jack Whitten and Banksyâand engages with the different types of value reflection detected in their work. Graw distinguishes between an explicit (Ponge), immanent (Whitten), and seemingly destructive (Banksy) approach to value. Three Cases of Value Reflection extends the themes found in Grawâs seminal book High Price, in which she questioned the dichotomy between art and the market as well as the notion that market value is equal to artistic value. By carefully combining a contextual, sociohistorical approach with close readings of the work of each case study, Graw demonstrates how art-historical and theoretical ambitions can, and must, go hand in hand.
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Description
In response to recent discussions about the value assigned to artworks, art critic and theorist Isabelle Graw introduces the term âvalue reflection.â Rather than an objective quality, value reflection is the potential for the specific artistic labor expended for artworks to be found in them. moreShe argues that an artwork can actually reflect on its value despite being defined by it. This book focuses on the artistic production of three individualsâwriter Francis Ponge and artists Jack Whitten and Banksyâand engages with the different types of value reflection detected in their work. Graw distinguishes between an explicit (Ponge), immanent (Whitten), and seemingly destructive (Banksy) approach to value. Three Cases of Value Reflection extends the themes found in Grawâs seminal book High Price, in which she questioned the dichotomy between art and the market as well as the notion that market value is equal to artistic value. By carefully combining a contextual, sociohistorical approach with close readings of the work of each case study, Graw demonstrates how art-historical and theoretical ambitions can, and must, go hand in hand.











