Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?

In 1928, some young artists living in Bordeaux decided to create a local market for contemporary art, as an alternative to the Salon des Amis des Arts of their own city, on the one hand, which they considered retrograde and conservative, and to the centralized and centripetal Parisian world on the o...

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Main Author: Léa Saint-Raymond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/114
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spelling doaj-09ca5b60b1bf4883b5dc9b760aa2add12020-11-25T04:09:08ZengMDPI AGArts2076-07522020-11-01911411410.3390/arts9040114Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?Léa Saint-Raymond0Ecole Normale Supérieure, 75005 Paris, FranceIn 1928, some young artists living in Bordeaux decided to create a local market for contemporary art, as an alternative to the Salon des Amis des Arts of their own city, on the one hand, which they considered retrograde and conservative, and to the centralized and centripetal Parisian world on the other. They joined forces to create the group of the “Artistes indépendants bordelais” (AIB) and they organized an annual exhibition in which they could sell their works, in Bordeaux. This article aims to understand the functioning of this so-called “provincial” alternative to Paris and to measure its potential success, both as a market and as an arbiter of taste. The analysis proves that the AIB exhibitions happened to be a semi-failure, since this local initiative could not detach itself from Paris. In order to gain legitimacy, the AIB invited avant-garde painters and sculptors and they left the door open to Parisian dealers and art critics but all these actors, in turn, overshadowed the artists from Bordeaux. This economic and symbolic domination stemmed from the lack of a strong artistic identity for this group, the absence of domestic galleries specializing in contemporary art and the low demographics of Bordeaux collectors.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/114art marketdecentralizationArtistes indépendants bordelaisBordeauxParis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Léa Saint-Raymond
spellingShingle Léa Saint-Raymond
Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?
Arts
art market
decentralization
Artistes indépendants bordelais
Bordeaux
Paris
author_facet Léa Saint-Raymond
author_sort Léa Saint-Raymond
title Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?
title_short Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?
title_full Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?
title_fullStr Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?
title_full_unstemmed Bordeaux vs. Paris: An Alternative Market for Local and Independent Artists?
title_sort bordeaux vs. paris: an alternative market for local and independent artists?
publisher MDPI AG
series Arts
issn 2076-0752
publishDate 2020-11-01
description In 1928, some young artists living in Bordeaux decided to create a local market for contemporary art, as an alternative to the Salon des Amis des Arts of their own city, on the one hand, which they considered retrograde and conservative, and to the centralized and centripetal Parisian world on the other. They joined forces to create the group of the “Artistes indépendants bordelais” (AIB) and they organized an annual exhibition in which they could sell their works, in Bordeaux. This article aims to understand the functioning of this so-called “provincial” alternative to Paris and to measure its potential success, both as a market and as an arbiter of taste. The analysis proves that the AIB exhibitions happened to be a semi-failure, since this local initiative could not detach itself from Paris. In order to gain legitimacy, the AIB invited avant-garde painters and sculptors and they left the door open to Parisian dealers and art critics but all these actors, in turn, overshadowed the artists from Bordeaux. This economic and symbolic domination stemmed from the lack of a strong artistic identity for this group, the absence of domestic galleries specializing in contemporary art and the low demographics of Bordeaux collectors.
topic art market
decentralization
Artistes indépendants bordelais
Bordeaux
Paris
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/114
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