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Economic Engagements with Art (History of Political Economy Annual Supplement) [Paperback]

Marcia Balisciano (Contributor), William J. Barber (Contributor), Bertil Friden (Contributor), Guido Guerzoni (Contributor), Robert J. Leonard (Contributor)

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Book Description

June 21, 2000 History of Political Economy Annual Supplement (Book 31)
Historically, economists have had very little to say about art: in the latter half of this century, that has begun to change. Difficult issues, like pricing and art valuation, the influence on pricing by what is fashionable in art, and the nature of the auction, have recently been tackled by economists in spite of elusive answers. Economic Engagements with Art suggests that taste and fashion in art need not be mysterious or outside rational discourse, and that they can be studied by economists to the great benefit of the discipline.
This volume, which deals mostly with painting, is divided into three sections that consider the interplay between art and economics from different perspectives. In the first section, Art and Economic Theory, economists clarify the need to construct a framework for understanding the roles of taste and fashion in art valuation. A historical view is considered in a piece about the teacher of Velasquez and artistic adviser to the Inquisition in Seville, who took into account not only market factors, like demand, but also the "truth" and the nobility of the artist’s profession and of the painting itself. Also in this section is an essay on Rousseau’s perspective on the worth of a painting based on its envy value in social circles; other contributions focus on William Stanley Jevons, a nineteenth century British political economist, whose problems with art stemmed from the uniqueness of each work, rendering definitive market and economic terms irrelevant. The second section of the book, Art and Economic Policy, looks at broader policy issues with regard to the historical role of art. Essays consider policy with respect to art exports and imports and federal patronage of the arts during theDepression; Lionel Robbins and the political economy of art; and the interplay among economy, architecture, and politics as shown in certain postwar Hilton hotels. In the final section, The Business of Art, a variety of perspectives are considered: the economics of art in early modern times, discussed in the context of both humanist and scholastic approaches; the pricing of pictures based on a study of the Smith-Reynolds connection; and the relationships between Otto Nuerath, graphic art, and the social order.
The first collaborative and historical treatment of the connection between art and economics, Economic Engagements with Art will appeal to people across, from history and economics to art history.

Contributors
. Márcia Balisciano, William J. Barber, Neil de Marchi, Bertil Fridén, Crauford D. Goodwin, Guido Guerzoni, Robert J. Leonard, Harro Maas, Ernest Mathijs, Steven G. Medema, Bert Mosselmans, Zarinés Negrón, Marcia Pointon, Helen Rees, Toon van Houdt, Annabel Wharton, Sara Zablotney

Editorial Reviews

Review

""Economic Engagements with Art" . . . serves as a reminder that post-modernism's sometimes self-important-sounding critique of art as a commodity has long roots. Artists, critics, buyers, and sellers have long recognized that artworks are products whose values and meanings shift in relation to laws of supply and demand, to the changing contexts in which they are experienced, or simply to fashion's perennial, passing fancy."
--Edward M. Gomez," Duke Magazine"

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
When Francisco Pacheco died in 1644 he left behind a treatise significant to the development of art theory in Spain. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, National Gallery, United States, Great Britain, Adam Smith, Cambridge University Press, Otto Neurath, James Cox, John Rylands University Library, Roger Fry, Van Houdt, House of Representatives, National Art-Collections Fund, Royal Academy, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Export of Works of Art, Government Printing Office, Istanbul Hilton, Descriptive Inventory, John Ruskin, Neil De Marchi, William Stanley Jevons, World War, Collection of Various Extracts, Hilton International
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