Title: Creative Cities: The Warhol Economy
1Creative Cities The Warhol Economy
- Elizabeth Currid
- University of Southern California
2Some basic questions
- Is there a role for creativity in urban centers?
- Why should we care?
- If it matters, how does creativity work in
cities?
3First, art and culture matter.
- 4th Largest Employer in NYC and LA (2000 Census)
- 3rd Largest Employer in London (Arts Council of
England) - Most represented of all industries in NYC and LA
- 21 billion impact on New York Citys economy.
- 50-60 billion annually in revenues for Londons
economy. - Cultural industries were responsible for 1 in 4
jobs in London from 1995-2000 - Source Bureau of Labor Statistics, Alliance from
the Arts, NYC, Arts Council of England and GLA -
4The creative industries Art, culture and media
(Location Quotient)
- Occupation NYC Boston SF LA
Chicago - Fashion Designers 15.98 0.00 2.01 4.78 0.43
- Fine Artists 4.98 3.39 2.01 1.47 1.59
-
- Musicians and Singers 6.79 0.97 3.19 3.41 1.18
-
- Art Directors 4.90 1.98 2.96 1.83 1.70
- Writers and Authors 2.89 1.48 2.10 2.98 0.00
-
- Film and Video Editors 6.09 1.44 1.75 8.79 0.57
-
- Producers and Directors 4.15 0.00 2.46 6.21 0.69
-
- Overall Creative LQ 4.48 1.30 2.09 3.26 1.12
5Data and methods
- Census and Bureau of Labor Statistics data
collection - Participant observation
- 80 semi-structured, open-ended qualitative
interviews with New York City-based cultural
producers and those who work in cultural
industries - Cultural producers fashion designers, artists,
musicians, graphic designers, graffiti artists - Gatekeepers Curators, gallery owners,
fashion/art critics, editors, nightclub and
entertainment venue owners
6The social milieu
- One night these dudes invited me out for drinks.
I didnt - want to go, then I said to myself go, so
youre in their - sites, thats business for me but its fun
Ricky Powell, photographer - Three types of social milieu that facilitate
the cultural economy - Nightlife
- Industry Events
- In situ interactions Spatial Proximity
(Neighborhoods)
7The importance of the scene
- Andy Warhol, Janis Joplin, Tim Buckley, at Max's
Kansas City, NYC, 1968. -
8The social milieu
- Cultural producers use their social lives for
career mobilization (sometimes consciously,
sometimes not) - The social milieu offers the perpetual
possibility to advance their careers - In this respect, cultural producers expressed
ambivalence towards their social lives.
9Social mechanisms
The clustering of cultural industries and their
accompanying workers indirectly facilitates (via
the milieu) three types of micro-social
mechanisms
- Networking and weak ties (Granovetter 1972)
- Crossover between interlocking art worlds
(Becker 1982) - Transaction costs
10I. Networking
The concentration of labor pools, firms,
gatekeepers allows for an efficient and
instantaneous means of mobilizing people around
projects
- Getting a job use of weak ties
- Access to gatekeepers
- Assessing taste in a highly uncertain
environment (Hirsch 1972)
11Networking Getting a job
- I was out on a date three weeks ago, I was
really bored. I went to get another drink and
ran into someone from Creative Time a public art
organization and he put me in touch with a music
house, a place I was going to contact. I got in
touch with them and now I am going to send a
demo.Where you socialize, your social life
completely determines your worklife and vice
versaWe all go to the same places after a
gallery opening, we go to the artists dinner
etc.. a DJ
12Networking Access to gatekeepers
- Artists go to shows to meet people who write
about art, meet them again and again at gallery
openings and shows, pretty soon call them up and
invite them to their show. artist - I was really hoping Jeffery Deitch would be here
tonight so that I could talk to him about my
upcoming show. - artist
13NetworkingAccessing taste, observing fads
and fashions
-
- A lot of designers were coming to our
neighborhood Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Hedi
Slimane at Dior, Dolce and Gabanna, John Galliano
would come to look at the crowd and dancecatch
the vibe, because thats their job, to see whats
going on in the air Larry T, DJ
14II. Interlocking art worlds
Agglomeration allows cultural industries to
constantly engage each other across separate
fields resulting in new combinations of jobs,
products and evaluation.
- Three approaches
- Flexible career paths
- Symbiotic peer review
- New forms of cultural goods (Hebdige 1979)
15Art worldsFlexible career paths
Just did a billboard on the LES. Not graffiti
but since Ive mastered graffiti, I can do
commercial jobsIt was a 5000 job so that will
hold me down for a couple of months Meres,
graffiti artist
- Cultural producers establish career trajectories
outside of their primary industry. Three
approaches - Add art to nonartistic industries
- Use artistic skills to contribute to other
cultural industries - Credibility in one industry transferred to
another - I make a living just being the Claw Claw,
graffiti artist - (e.g. Graffiti artists design sneakers for Nike,
hip-hop artists establish clothing lines)
16Flexible career pathAndre the Giant has a posse
- Shepard Faireys graffiti art has turned into a
major clothing, design and music conglomerate
17Art worldsSymbiotic peer review
- It used to be the real fashion press that makes
or breaks your career. Now its if Lindsey Lohan
wears your dress Cynthia Rowley, fashion
designer - Established and successful cultural producers
often act as gatekeepers in defining what good
art is - Occurs across industries (e.g. Marc Jacobs as
fashion designer and purveyor of cool music)
18Art worldsCultural referencing
- Cultural borrowing and referencing of various
different industries to generate new products - Subculture transformed into mainstream
commodities
19III. Transaction costs
- When I lived in San Diego and I would bring my
stuff to New York, no one would ever call. Its
so much by chance, by running into people.Its
quick when people need things they pick up the
phone and call but so much is just instantaneous
and they need it now and its just too much
work to contact that guy in San Diego.They may
have the sincerest effort to call me but why
would they when they can just find someone on the
street? graphic designer
20Transaction costs Less trouble is less trouble
- While it is only a small amount of trouble to
call that guy in San Diego theyre not going to
do it - Its not even necessarily an active choice to
pick someone in New York, but by virtue of being
there, in situ, these exchanges occur and are
by extension easier than making an effort even
a small one
21Transaction costs
- The chances of a SPIN a music-oriented
magazine writer being at a show in Kansas City
is unlikely but here he could be out with his
friends, not even working, and you can be heard
by him. The chances of being seen by the right
people is much higher. musician - Cultural industries rely on spontaneous ad hoc
project networks that involve a dense and diverse
network of firms and labor pools that can
constantly combine, recombine, connect and
disconnect - Being in the same place optimizes these dynamics.
Its just that much easier if the labor pool is
instantly available
22Why place (and thus policy) matters
- These mechanisms are unique to the clustering
of firms and labor pools in the same place. - Exactly the same person with exactly the same
skills would have dramatically different (and
limited) opportunities if located somewhere else - The mechanisms reinforce themselves More
people, more firms ? more potential for
networking, cross-fertilization less transaction
costs - These are the dynamics that build place-based
cultural reputation (New York fashion, London
artists, Hollywood films)
23Policy through practice Creating the places
where art and culture happen
241. Cultural industries matter to urban economies
- Should be supported as much as other industries
- Place is branded by the cultural production that
occurs there and benefits from this association
(e.g. tourism, attracting more of the same firms,
talent etc.)
252. Reconsidering how the arts are funded and
subsidized
- To support the arts, lets start with supporting
the artists themselves. -
- While the formal art world is important, many of
the important interactions within the cultural
economy occur in the informal milieu and across
various sub-sectors.
263. Place is the crucial node where it all happens
- Through zoning and housing subsidies,
policymakers can encourage the agglomeration that
encourages the dynamics associated with
successful cultural centers.
274. Too much of a good thingEconomic developers
as anti-gentrifiers
- Preventing certain types of growth that push out
cultural producers. - Proactive responses to the Soho effect or the
Hoxton effect.