1st Edition

Collective Creativity Art and Society in the South Pacific

By Katherine Giuffre Copyright 2009
    182 Pages
    by Routledge

    182 Pages
    by Routledge

    Collective Creativity offers an analysis of the explosion of artistic creativity currently taking place on the South Pacific island of Rarotonga. By exploring the construction of this art-world through the ways in which creativity and innovation are linked to social structures and social networks, this book investigates the social aspects of making fine art in order to present a ’collective’ theory of creativity. With a close examination of tourism, galleries and, of course, the artists themselves, Katherine Giuffre presents a detailed picture of a complex and multi-faceted community through the words of the art-world participants themselves. Theoretically sophisticated, yet grounded with rich empirical data, this book will appeal not only to anthropologists with an interest in the South Pacific, but also to scholars concerned with questions of ethnicity, creativity, globalization and network analysis.

    Chapter 1 Networks and Creativity; Chapter 2 Te Enua Ou Tumu Te Varovaro: “The Misty Land Whence Comes the Thunder”; Chapter 3 Developing an Art Market at Home and Abroad; Chapter 4 The Artists I: Local, Foreign, and Foreign Locals; Chapter 5 The Artists II: Social Networks and Making Art1; Chapter 6 Re-evaluating Creativity in a Changing World;

    Biography

    Katherine Giuffre is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Colorado College, USA

    'Guiffre combines shrewd participant observation with network analysis to capture the emergence of an art world in Rarotonga. Identities vie with ethnicity for dominance, as do paintings with crafts, during a decade of contentions on and off the island. Central to her analysis is the paradoxical interplay of canons with collectors across auctions and galleries, all triggered by tourism plus exchange with New Zealand.' Harrison White, Columbia University, USA 'Drawing theoretical and methodological inspiration from sources as varied as Becker, Bourdieu, and social network research, Katherine Giuffre opens up new avenues for the analysis of artistic creativity. An inquiry richly informed by historical, ethnographic, and documentary research, this book reaffirms the collective nature of artistic innovation and uncovers in remarkable detail the social and relational processes at its core. This wonderful book will become an indispensable point of reference for cultural analysts, students of art worlds, social network researchers, and sociologists of modernity and globalization.' Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA 'Overall there is no doubt that the author has carried out meticulous fieldwork and generated a great deal of interesting and detailed observations and findings about the internal workings of the art market...' Journal of Tourism Consumption and Practice