Reviews of Habibi Funk 031, Kayatibu, and The Good Ones
Book Review: Working Aesthetics: Labour, Art and Capitalism
		Danielle Child's book tackles the neoliberal penetration of artistic production from a Marxist perspective
	 
			Working Aesthetics: Labour, Art and Capitalism
by Danielle Child
(Bloomsbury, £21.99)
UNUSUALLY for a young art historian, Danielle Child bases her discussion of the relationship between contemporary art, labour and capitalism on the “Marxian” ideology that art, as part of the superstructure, is defined by its economic base.
Focusing mostly on US and British art, where neoliberalism has been strongest, she argues that its managerialist, fragmented, individualised and precarious working models are mirrored by new artistic practices since the 1990s.
	Similar stories
	 
               Peter Mitchell's photography reveals a poetic relationship with Leeds
 
               This is poetry in paint, spectacular but never spectacle for its own sake, writes JAN WOOLF   
 
    
               ANDY HEDGECOCK relishes two exhibitions that blur the boundaries between art and community engagement
    
               CHRISTINE LINDEY welcomes a fascinating survey of the work of the communist and socialist artists who founded the AIA in the 1930s
   
 
               

