This is a very interesting and useful piece of writing, Marc - I hadn’t come 
across Pritchard’s work before. A helpfully clear eyed and sober look at 
magical thinking art-world players, neo-liberal wolves in sheep’s clothing and 
the many careerists in between! Perhaps if we’re really interested in 
regeneration then spending enough money on the huge quantity of quality housing 
that’s needed, under proper public control might be the ticket with durability, 
sustainability, space and comfort coming well before art, but I’m sure that’s 
‘old fashioned thinking’ .Thanks for posting the piece here :)
michael 

Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone


On Saturday, September 21, 2019, 12:05 pm, marc.garrett via NetBehaviour 
<netbehaviour@lists.netbehaviour.org> wrote:

Complexity, uncertainty & scalability: How Assemble's Granby 4 Streets won 2015 
Turner Prize.

Stephen Pritchard.

"Did Assemble really play such a big part in Granby 4 Streets?  How 
'community-led' was the project?  What was the role of the Community Land 
Trust?  How did Assemble come to win the Turner Prize 2015?  Who were the 
private social investors and what did they do to help make the project happen?

The intention here is to blow open the façade behind Granby 4 Streets, Assemble 
and the Turner Prize 2015 win.

This is a long read and part of my research into art-led regeneration projects 
that are often far more complex than is often portrayed.

I argue that the media and art world picture of Assemble is overly simplistic 
and masks a far more complex and uncertain set of events that, ultimately, 
relied on 'mystery' private social investors to force local government to act 
in support of the project and to lever money from national grant funders."

http://tiny.cc/dqq4cz
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