https://networkcultures.org/ourcreativereset/2021/11/13/4-demands-for-economically-responsible-art-education/
 
<https://networkcultures.org/ourcreativereset/2021/11/13/4-demands-for-economically-responsible-art-education/>

4 Demands for Economically Responsible Art Education
By Sepp Eckenhaussen (s...@networkcultures.org 
<mailto:s...@networkcultures.org>)

Our future generations of artists deserve to be prepared for the unruly reality 
of the labor market of the cultural sector. We therefore find it hard to 
understand why many art students graduate without knowledge of the Fair 
Practice Code or the Guideline for Artists’ Fees; have no idea about the trade 
unions and professional organizations that represent them; hardly dare say ‘no’ 
to underpaid labor; have not thought about whether and how they want to sell 
their work; have no experience with funding applications, (salary) 
negotiations, or filing their tax returns; have never heard of bread funds or 
cooperatives; not know the mores of patronage; are unaware of the fact that 
many artists live on income from side jobs; do not know what (public and 
private) money flows exist in the cultural sector or even what the average 
income of an artist in the Netherlands is.

We know that art academies have long since lost the status of progressive, 
avant-gardist institutions, and that the opposite it true today – that society 
is changing, and academies have a hard time catching up. We see the reports are 
appearing around social unsafety at academies. We support the efforts of 
students politicizing institutional spaces, and the teachers who take action 
against false self-employment, revolving door contracts and the excessive 
workload. To this list of demands for change, we add: art schools should adjust 
their curriculum to prepare students for their professional future. 
Post-precarity starts in education, and art schools should take their 
responsibility. In order to do so, art schools must:

1. Implement post-precarity courses in the curriculum. Alumni feel the current 
gap in art school curriculums every day. Programs should be expanded to include 
real-life budget simulation role-plays; collaborative application-writing; 
experiments with the establishment of bread funds and NFT banks; and other 
explorations into solidarity and survival mechanisms.

2. Support social engagement and self-organization. Students deserve support in 
strategizing, petitioning, organizing, squatting, reading groups, and community 
kitchens. Art academies should embrace initiatives like Cultural Workers Unite 
and No More Later, and foster the discussions they bring up around labor, 
gentrification, internationalization and marketization.

3. Inform students about what to expect after graduation. Academies should 
inform students of the existing funding structures, the housing market, and the 
kinds of jobs that alumni typically have – and the possible alternatives to all 
of those. Invite organizers of self-organized studio spaces; hold Q&As with 
gallery owners and philanthropists; pay group visits to alumni; discuss how to 
divide time between art and side-jobs; explore gig-working platforms and how 
(not) to use them.

4. Involve students in institution-building. Precarity, in the end, is a 
political and ideological problem, which needs political solutions. Art 
academies should acknowledge and support this political struggle. They should 
encourage and financially support participation councils to get in touch with 
students and include them in discussions with the unions; improve the position 
of student councils; involve students in the development of policy planning; 
and other forms of political and institutional involvement.

It’s a lot, but it’s the least art academies can do. Because these topics are 
urgent, especially after two years of corona. Continuing negligence of 
professional competences is detrimental to the whole cultural sector. Right 
now, the only alumni able to sustain being an artist, are the market darlings 
and the ones with a strong (financial) support structures. Those with less 
privilege, unsurprisingly, choose a different career path. This is especially 
true for the growing number of international students, who pay very high 
tuition fees and often face problems around visas, housing and limited income 
opportunities. The fact that the management of art academies are so full of 
ideals around equality and inclusion, should lead them to a very simple 
conclusion. If we do not want art to be an elitist bastion, art educations 
should put more care into the future careers of all students – with or without 
privilege, with or without market success.

Even though this urgency is so obvious, we see that art academies still find 
justification to neglect labor conditions in their curriculum. There are two 
different excuses in sway.

Some art academies believe they are already fighting precarity by stimulating 
‘cultural entrepreneurship’. They are wrong. The concept of ‘cultural 
entrepreneurship’ is too limited to capture the reality of working conditions 
in the cultural sector. It is true that the percentage of freelancers – 
technically all entrepreneurs – in the cultural sector is extremely high: 70%, 
and in the visual arts even 90%. But this is not the result of artists’ desire 
to be entrepreneurs. This is simply how labor it the art world works. Artists 
and cultural workers almost always work on a project basis, with many small 
institutions, relatively small teams and (extremely) small budgets. In this 
situation, wage employment at cultural institutions sometimes undesirable 
(because artists like the flexibility), but nearly always impossible. So 
instead of entrepreneurship, what we have here is the fragmented and flexible 
character of labor in the cultural sector, which lacks social security.

Whereas some art academies have an unhealthy focus on cultural entrepreneurship 
and therefore forget to address actual issues of labor, other academies refrain 
from discussing the reality of work altogether, so as to not infringe on the 
students’ autonomy. We emphasize that the above has nothing to do with the 
tricky discussion around autonomy. We subscribe to the idea that freedom is 
essential in art education, but so are basic survival skills. To those who 
argue that focusing on professional competencies undermines the artistic 
freedom of students is undermined, we answer: the opposite is true. But 
professional ignorance does not lead to artistic freedom. Freedom comes from 
social awareness of one’s own position and the ability to control it. An 
academy with a heart for autonomous art must therefore pay attention to 
professionalism.

We demand that art academies take better responsibility for the future of their 
students.  They must devote time and attention to professionalization. They may 
not lapse into clichés about cultural entrepreneurship or autonomy but should 
be honest about labor conditions in the art world. Only then can graduates 
autonomously determine their social position.

This text is an outcome of the Post-Precarity Autumn Camp: How to Survive as an 
Artist? 
<https://networkcultures.org/ourcreativereset/2021/09/16/post-precarity-autumn-camp-how-to-survive-as-an-artists/>,
 that the HvA Institute of Network Cultures organized with Hotel Maria Kapel 
and Platform BK in Hoorn (The Netherlands) in the fall of 2021. It was 
fantastic and inspiring to explore the professional aspects of being an artist 
together with 20 recent alumni for during five intensive days of workshops and 
activities. Still, we were left with a bitter aftertaste. With hardly any 
exception, participants wondered: ‘Why did we never learn this during art 
school?’ We truly hope that art academies will pick up on this responsibility 
in the near future – it’s urgent.

Read more about our ideas around post-precarity and the INC research strand Our 
Creative Reset here <https://networkcultures.org/ourcreativereset/>.


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