ArtLeaks

It is time to break the silence!

ArtLeaks is collective platform initiated by an international group of artists, curators, art historians and intellectuals in response to the abuse of their professional integrity and the open infraction of their labor rights. In the art world, such abuses usually disappear, but some events bring them into sharp focus and therefore deserve public scrutiny.  Only by drawing attention to concrete abuses can we underscore the precarious condition of cultural workers and the necessity for sustained protest against the appropriation of politically engaged art, culture and theory by institutions embedded in a tight mesh of capital and power.

ArtLeaks

ArtLeaks

1st ArtLeaks Working Assembly, Berlin 2012

1st ArtLeaks Working Assembly, Berlin 2012

3rd ArtLeaks Working Assembly - Belgrade

3rd ArtLeaks Working Assembly - Belgrade

MAYDAY: Art Workers? Pride Visual Archive

MAYDAY: Art Workers? Pride Visual Archive

'Freedom for the Hungarian Art'

'Freedom for the Hungarian Art'
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Namely, we have experienced first-hand how critical thinking and dialogue can be compromised through repressive maneuvers - and turned against those workers who bring into question art institutions' mission, politics or their engagement with corporate benefactors. By co-opting cultural activity, these sponsors obtain social credibility which they then proceed to mis-use:  by refusing decent conditions for cultural workers through oppressive measures - the same workers whose labor makes their subsistence possible.

In response to blacklisting and continued abuse conjoined with unbridled exploitation, we considered it our civic and political duty to bring to light the mechanisms of corruption and inspire others to do so as well. Instead of letting singular protests succumb to anonymity, gossip or institutional hush-hush, we began working to extract from situations of inequality, general conditions that affect the social and political mission of workers and establishments for art and culture.

Implicit in this collective protest is a radical form of institutional critique - through which we emphasize the urgent need to make visible and counteract all forms of repression, abuse, mistreatment and arrogance that have been normalized through the practices of many cultural managers.  While each case of abuse may be different, the increasing amount of power vested in art institutions controlled by corporate players, calls out for a collective struggle for equal rights and fair treatment of cultural workers.

Concretely, we will expose common-currency practices of slander, intimidation and blackmail as they are. Further, through this working platform we seek to enable like-minded people to stand together against instances of mistreatment related to cultural labor, repression channeled through dishonest management or blatant censorship. We seek to create a strong network of art systems' whistleblowers - through which we support and protect each other in critical moments as much as possible. Through the power of facts, first-hand testimonies and visual information we seek to deconstruct the politics of who, what and how is invited into the exhibition space, and most importantly the circumstances under which one is ousted and then blacklisted.

We believe in the power of sustained artleaking  to turn the tables on corruption and exploitation, to force art and culture institutions to publicly account for their politics and their actions. To mafia tactics and authoritarian tendencies, we answer with openness, angriness and solidarity. The tools that we continue to build together are geared towards empowering - to work with dignity and articulate our positions without obstruction and to exchange information and ideas beyond national borders.

We initiate and provide the community with online tools - http://art-leaks.org/ and the facebook page "ArtLeaks" - which are open for use by anyone ready to share this or that case. Each case will be archived, building a comprehensive index of repression. We believe retroactive artleaking is just as important as early-warning leaking in the present. Thus, we welcome cultural workers to publish reports on the situation inside of the institution in any form. Both anonymous and signed reports are welcome. We only ask to submit each case with collective evidence, such as first-hand reports and documentation such as e-mail correspondence, internal regulations and documents, video recordings and so on. We welcome the submission of evidence in the original language and we will do our best to make it available to international audiences. Our moderator will guarantee the objectivity of each case in a wiki style of communication with each contributor. For more information on submitting your case see Artleak Your Case or Contact.

It is time to break the silence.


ArtLeaks represents the collective efforts of:

Corina L. Apostol, Ph.D student, Rutgers University, NJ, USA
Dmitry Vilensky and David Riff of Chto Delat?, artist collective based in St. Petersburg, Moscow and Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
Jean-Baptiste Naudy of Société Réaliste, artist collective based in Paris, France
Postspectacle, artist collective based in Bucharest, Romania
Raluca Voinea, independent curator and art critic based in Bucharest, Romania
Stefan Tiron of Paradis Garaj, artist collective based in Bucharest, Romania
The Bureau of Melodramatic Research, artist collective based in Bucharest, Romania
Valentina Desideri, freelance performer and choreographer based in Italy and the Netherlands
Vlad Morariu,  philosopher and art critic based in London, U.K.
 
with graphics by Zampa di Leone

Source:
http://art-leaks.org/about/

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