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The Warhol Economy: How Fashion, Art, and Music Drive New York City
 
 
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The Warhol Economy: How Fashion, Art, and Music Drive New York City [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Elizabeth Currid
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 258 Seiten
  • Verlag: Princeton Univ Pr; Auflage: 1st Edition (9. Juli 2007)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0691128375
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691128375
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 23,1 x 17,5 x 2,8 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 2.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 141.150 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)
  • Komplettes Inhaltsverzeichnis ansehen

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Produktbeschreibungen

Pressestimmen

[Currid] describes the organic, informal, social networking side of the creative arts in a mixed tone of Rolling Stone new journalism and objective reporting that serves to advance her central thesis: that as an independent drive of an urban economy, the arts and its related industries should stop being viewed as the beautiful step-child of city environments. -- Susan Gardner Daily Kos Any discussion about New York City's economic well-being tends to start and end with one phrase: Wall Street. As the Street goes, we assume, so goes the city, which is why politicians will do almost anything to keep the brokerages and investment banks happy... [In] The Warhol Economy the social scientist Elizabeth Currid argues that this fixation is misdirected, and that it has led us to neglect the city's most vital and distinctive economic sector: the culture industry, which, in Currid's definition, includes everything from fashion, art, and music to night clubs. In other words, it's SoHo and Chelsea, not Wall Street, that the politicians should really be thinking about. Of course, everyone knows that art and culture help make New York a great place to live. But Currid goes much further, showing that the culture industry creates tremendous economic value in its own right. -- James Surowiecki The New Yorker Elizabeth Currid's argument in this intelligent and innovative book is that New York, and certain other great cities in particular periods, function as the Factory on a greater scale, and that social policy out to reflect that fact. -- Roz Kaveney Times Literary Supplement In detailing the inner workings of New York's creative industries...urban planning Ph.D. Currid gives readers an eagle-eyed look at the networking mechanics of the art-as-business crowd. Colorful description abounds, as do colorful characters. Publishers Weekly Not every Ph.D student blows her fellowship money at Barneys New York. But for the urban planner Elizabeth Currid, her passion for style led to some interesting statistics, which she examines in The Warhol Economy. -- Anya Kamenetz The New York Times Sweeping, gossipy, flawed and fun, Currid's book stands alone as a work equally obsessed with the 'location quotient' of a given industry and with Marc Jacobs, the designer...It is the job of the social scientist to take a banal observation--for example, that New York is full of artists and musicians who like to go out at night and all seem to know one another--and worry over it to the point that the obvious seems to fairly glow with complexity. Currid pulls this trick off nicely, and she throws in some amusing backstage anecdotes for extra cultural currency. -- Carly Berwick Bloomberg Muse An exploration of how fashion, art, and music drive New York City, The Warhol Economy argues that the city's cultural resources contribute more to the economy than most policy makers realize or admit. Interviews with well-known bands, designers, artists, club owners, and writers underscore the value of cultural producers; an appendix's worth of hard numbers back them up. -- Annie Fischer Village Voice Currid points to the glittery fashion industry, fabulous club life and art openings as more than just creative inspiration in the New York Scene. All are big financial players that help fill the Big Apple's own coffers... The Warhol Economy brings out the voices of New York scenesters, including fashion designers Diane von Furstenberg and Zac Posen, musicians Quincy Jones and the Talking Heads, as well as Hilly Kristal, founder of the famous but now defunct club CBGB. -- Tanya Enberg 24 Hours Toronto Currid offers social science with a downtown mentality, crunching numbers with one eye on her data set and the other on the dance floor...The Warhol Economy performs the very useful role of demonstrating how that which appears ephemeral and unimportant in the life of a city actually serves as part of what makes it function... [The] book reforms and advances the debate on cities and the creative economy that continues to loom large in New York and across the country. -- Joe Leduc Big RED & Shiny New York's creative industries are inextricably linked...[Currid] discusses not just the power of such social networks, but also the fusion of fashion and art. -- Elissa Strauss New York Sun From a public policy perspective, art and culture are often thought of as mere frills--so-called 'quality of life' traits--that help attract the business talent that really drives a city's economy. But in The Warhol Economy, Currid argues that the cultural industries are actually a much larger economic force than is traditionally understood...The research in The Warhol Economy is specific to New York, but Currid argues that its larger lesson can and should be applied to any city that seeks a place in the new idea-driven economy. -- Simon Houpt The Globe and Mail Currid takes the reader on a concise tour of New York's 150-year history of being a haven and incubator for artists while offering a healthy reminder for any city interested in sustaining a lively arts scene: culture drives economic growth. -- Andrew Brink CityView What Currid shows is that culture matters as much as high finance to the city's economy--150,00 new jobs in 2001, she says--but nobody's paying attention to how it really works: not the grants for plodding public art, not the checques for art world institutions, but the life. If you want to be world capital of culture, it may be more important to have low rents for big spaces and somewhere to dance...The importance of her work is that she's saying the obvious to policy wonks and city planners, hanging her arguments on an impressive framework of proper statistics. -- Michael Pye Scotsman The numerous formal and informal--and even messy--interactions that connect the people and companies within a cluster come alive under Currid's direction. Currid offers a detailed, thorough account of how a cluster works at the micro level where people cross over related industries (graffiti artist and fashion designer, for example), cross-pollinate ideas, and work through word of mouth. -- Wendy Waters AllAboutCities.com Elizabeth Currid argues forcefully that government policy plays an essential role in attracting or repelling cultural producers. She suggests that economic planners should apply themselves to building cultural hubs as assiduously as policy-makers did in developing Silicon Valley and the City of London as technological and financial centres. -- Julia Fetherston The Australian The Warhol Economy is a provocative study of New York City's economy and how the creative industries such as fashion, art and music drive its economy as much as finance, real estate, and law. What's fascinating about this book is that she has used first-hand documentation and over 100 illuminating interviews with leading fashion designers, musicians, club owners, and artists such as Ryan McGinness, Lee Quinones, and Futura, to get an insider's account of how creativity is at work in New York from a sociological point of view. Umbrella Magazine A brilliant analysis of the social mechanisms by which creative individuals and the industries they populate drive New York's economy...Beyond Ms. Currid's reasoned analysis and careful exposition of fact, The Warhol Economy is simply a pleasure to read in a way that sociological studies never are. Engaging, gossipy without being trashy, and just plain fun, The Warhol Economy is social science with a downtown mentality, it points to significant realities in the generation of cultural capital that are, important, and ready for broadcast. -- Christina Panas Soho Journal Given the current hype about economic clusters, what a pleasure it is to read a book about a real cluster--one with all the competition and collaboration, the shared pool of skilled labor, and the intense face-to-face interaction that are essential to the true cluster. Others have discussed the New York City arts scene from the standpoint of economic geography, but none better than Currid. Her understanding of how the industry functions and her insightful analysis of its economics provides the basis for her discussion of what urban policy makers should do to foster growth of this essential element in the economy of the creative or knowledge city. -- P.K. Kresl Choice This book is about how one urban conurbation, New York City, works and how creativity occurs within it. It sets out to provide an understanding of how creativity in fashion, art and music originates, why it happens and where it takes place. The book is a good read, generously illustrated with stories of the NYC creative milieu past and present, extensively noted and referenced. -- Simon Roodhouse Journal of Cultural Economy

Kurzbeschreibung

Which is more important to New York City's economy, the gleaming corporate office - or the grungy rock club that launches the best new bands? If you said 'office', think again. In "The Warhol Economy", Elizabeth Currid argues that creative industries like fashion, art, and music drive the economy of New York as much as - if not more than - finance, real estate, and law. And these creative industries are fueled by the social life that whirls around the clubs, galleries, music venues, and fashion shows where creative people meet, network, exchange ideas, pass judgments, and set the trends that shape popular culture. The implications of Currid's argument are far-reaching, and not just for New York.Urban policymakers, she suggests, have not only seriously underestimated the importance of the cultural economy, but they have failed to recognize that it depends on a vibrant creative social scene. They haven't understood, in other words, the social, cultural, and economic mix that Currid calls the Warhol economy. With vivid first-person reporting about New York's creative scene, Currid takes the reader into the city spaces where the social and economic lives of creativity merge. This book has fascinating original interviews with many of New York's important creative figures, including fashion designers Zac Posen and Diane von Furstenberg, artists Ryan McGinness and Futura, and members of the band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. The economics of art and culture in New York and other cities has been greatly misunderstood and underrated. "The Warhol Economy" explains how the cultural economy works - and why it is vital to all great cities.

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In 1977, a graffiti duo with the name of SAMO (standing for Same Old Shit) began bombarding New York subways and slums. Lesen Sie die erste Seite
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Von shojo
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Probably not that bad for the author's first publication, but a disappointment for anyone who is looking for ideas on the topic which go beyond the obvious common sense.

The writing lacks homogeneity. The first three chapters leave the impression of being put together by randomly copy-pasting from the "I have lots of quotes left but don't know where to put them" part of the work notes. Apart from giving a far too brief sketch of the history of creative industries in NYC from 1930s to present, the three initial chapters serve only to restate the books main idea over and over again without ever giving any evidence. It gets tiring to see words such as "to operate" and "to propel" used repeatedly within the same sentence and then again within the same paragraph. At some point it got so annoying that I started counting and got 7 "operates" and 4 "propels" within 8 lines of text! The style gets better from the fourth chapter, however.

The book's main idea - that the more artists are around in a certain area, the more art is likely to be produced there - quite apart from being not exactly revolutionary, is backed by unconvincing statistical findings and interviews with what represents only a small part of a creative community. And while I believe that the author had lots of fun doing research at gallery openings in SoHo and in fancy NY clubs, three quotes of Zac Posen are simply not enough to justify a hardcover.

The policy advice presented in the final chapter is a jewel of logical U-turns. How about this: the current "artist in residence" programme of subsidised housing in Manhattan is abused by investment bankers because there are no criteria to distinguish between an artist and a hobby painter. Therefore the author urges the policy makers to further blur the criteria by incorporating a wider definition of "arts". Hmmm.
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Fuelled completely by shoes 8. April 2008
Von Neal Van Winkle - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Completely redundant in that she mentioned only a handful of New York City's avante-garde. The book is interesting but limited in its discussion of the subject. Apparently she thinks that Charles and Ray Eames are brothers and that the MMA is now the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art. I wouldn't waste your time, if I were you.
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Beginner's Guide to the Manhattan Mindset 8. Juli 2010
Von Pensive Bear - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
If you're at all a fan of New York City, especially when defined as a cultural mecca, then this is a must read for different reasons than those that The Warhol Economy advertises. An extensive, heady gossip column gone delightfully awry, The Warhol Economy is a book completely infatuated with the city's culture and the industries lying behind it. Fellow New Yorkers and fans of the city and its artistic presence will not be disappointed, and even casual readers will get caught up in her name-dropping passion for the creative denizens of the Big Apple. However, if you're a fan of the artist Andy Warhol, you'll quickly see through the thin veil to realize the author is simply using the artist's name to move copies off the shelves a little more quickly. Very little knowledge or new wisdom involving Warhol is imparted. There is intrinsic value in the above truths, however. First of all, the name Warhol is synonymous with both Pop Art and New York, and, he himself would consider the mention high praise, thinking the concept as being "very pop." Secondly, while the author tends to ramble, loosely relating several familiar topics and famous people to the art and fashion scene of New York, through her chosen verbiage she inadvertently paints a very detailed portrait of the Manhattan collective groupthink. These thought processes are of great value in any timeframe, since as she even points out, "all business is done in New York." Thirdly, such a move to associate her work with Warhol was smart for business, which is really the biggest, if not the only lesson being a resident of New York will teach you.
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Fantastic book --other readers miss the mark 27. November 2011
Von QLoh. - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
There's something deeply truthful about the way in which the author weaves her brilliant observations with disparate scientific and sociological findings into a concise, well-written book. Some of the content may come across as vapid or superficial, especially to those far removed from the hierarchical system that does in fact rule New York.

It is something that I've personally struggled with, this genuine desire to have access to the "gatekeepers" of the city without sacrificing my dignity or spiritual "evolvement". It's somewhat counterintuitive to seek the approval and companionship of certain people simply for their power and access instead of cultivating yours on your own. But this city is ruled by only a handful of social networks. Manhattan demands an unparalleled level of social navigation and mutual reciprocity from its inhabitants, to engage in a sort of political game. At the end of the day, it is only a game -being opportunistic with grace, charisma, resilience, and integrity isn't a sin, it's a form of survival- ridiculous or not.
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