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Street Art, the Discontinuity Thesis, and the Artworld

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Abstract The topic of this article is the relationship of street art to both the street (or “the street”) and the artworld. I take it as significant that philosophers have turned their attention to “street art” and not, say, “urban outdoor art” or “site-specific art in urban settings.” The “street” in street art seems to imply more than a location or geographic modifier. I consider the further significance of the “street” in street art, and the view, argued or assumed, of the street when philosophers discuss street art. My second target in this article is what I have called the “discontinuity thesis.” This is the idea, defended or assumed in some of the most important philosophical writing about street art, that street art represents a radical break with the artworld and is “antithetical” to it. I argue that the discontinuity thesis is mistaken, and that to understand the larger institutional context of street art we must examine the sociology of artworlds. Street art has followed a familiar process and pioneering street artists are best seen as “mavericks” in Howard Becker’s sense. I argue that seeing street artists in this way can help better understand and appreciate their work.
Title: Street Art, the Discontinuity Thesis, and the Artworld
Description:
Abstract The topic of this article is the relationship of street art to both the street (or “the street”) and the artworld.
I take it as significant that philosophers have turned their attention to “street art” and not, say, “urban outdoor art” or “site-specific art in urban settings.
” The “street” in street art seems to imply more than a location or geographic modifier.
I consider the further significance of the “street” in street art, and the view, argued or assumed, of the street when philosophers discuss street art.
My second target in this article is what I have called the “discontinuity thesis.
” This is the idea, defended or assumed in some of the most important philosophical writing about street art, that street art represents a radical break with the artworld and is “antithetical” to it.
I argue that the discontinuity thesis is mistaken, and that to understand the larger institutional context of street art we must examine the sociology of artworlds.
Street art has followed a familiar process and pioneering street artists are best seen as “mavericks” in Howard Becker’s sense.
I argue that seeing street artists in this way can help better understand and appreciate their work.

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