Confronting the work of widely celebrated photographers Annie Leibovitz, Gregory Crewdson and Andreas Gursky, Photography’s Neoliberal Realism examines how these artists produce capitalism’s equivalent of the Soviet Union’s socialist realism by giving photographic form to widely held and rarely questioned beliefs and ideas. The ideological framework that Colberg terms ‘neoliberal realism’ serves to cement an economic system whose many fault lines are becoming increasingly clear, such as staggering inequality and racial disparities. This extended essay provides an alternative reading of photographic works laden with artifice, and argues how focusing on this artifice misses the more far-reaching ways such images operate in our visual economy.

DISCOURSE is a series of small books in which a cultural theorist, curator or artist explores a theme, an artwork or an idea in an extended illustrated text.
Silkscreen paperback with flaps
40p

Tools #04 – Couper / To Cut
Denver Mosaic 1961 - René Heyvaert
Typologie – La tente de camping
Science of the secondary #11 - Banana
Ar(t)chitectures situées - Étienne Delprat
the Ghost of Weaving - Coll.
Hybrid heads - Daniela Dossi
Absorber les fantômes - coll
Photographic Fields - Joël Van Audenhaege
Pectus Excavatum - Quentin Yvelin
Dans la Lune - Fanette Mellier
Wayfaring - Patrick Messina, André S. Labarthe 





