Agnieszka Polska
Constant Work Under Watchful Sun
On 28 December 1895, at their founding screening in Grand Café in
Paris, the Lumière brothers presented ten films, including “Employees
Leaving the Lumière Factory”. One of the very first motion camera shots
had focused on a stream of people leaving the factory: a mass of women
and men, rapidly and collectively vacating their place of work. Today,
this earliest cinematic image can strike us as somewhat subversive and
alien. Nowadays, this idea of “finishing” work has drifted away from our
individual and collective lives. Through the processes of commodification,
the meaty chunks of our daily existence were bitten off and digested
by the structures of extracting the surplus capital; the individual
creativity being one of the crucial frontiers of this new economies. In
this perspective, the author, as a producer, returns and imposes itself
whenever we are set to examine artists’ positions within the current
division of labour.
#32 non-work
Content
- ––– Editorial
- Editorial
- ––– Introduction
- Introduction
- ––– Project
- Linear Doom
- ––– Profiles
- Carrie Mae Weems
- Agnieszka Polska
- Jakub Jansa
- José Antonio Hernández-Diez
- Jan Pfeiffer
- Daniela & Linda Dostálkovy
- Martina Mullaney
- Shawn Maximo
- Oliver Ressler
- Michele Borzoni
- Céline Berger
- Jirka Skála
- Danilo Correale
- Lars Tunbjörk
- ––– Interview
- Jennifer Lyn Morone with Tereza Jindrová
- ––– Discoveries
- Ines Karčáková
- Egemen Tuncer
- Luise Marchand
- ––– Theory
- The Aspirational Tourist Photographer
- Allan Sekula: Photography Between Discourse and Document
- ––– Events
- Photographs by Camera Clickers and Serious Amateurs
- MISS READ: Berlin Art Book Festival 2018
- Sicilian Lemons Actually Come from Burma Manifesta 12: The Planetary Garden
- ––– Fotograf Gallery
- Veronika Bromová, Dagmar Bromová and Pavel Brom
- Ondřej Vinš
- Viktor Kopasz
- Daniela & Linda Dostálková
- ––– Reviews
- The Poetic World of Everyday Life
- The Returns of Josef Koudelka
- Inadvertent Images: A History of Photographic Apparitions
- French History of Photography for the Twenty-First Century
- Tillmans' Jahresring 64
- A tribute to an (art)historian of photography
- The Temporality of (New) Media
Archive
- #45 hypertension
- #44 empathy
- #43 collecting
- #42 food
- #41 postdigital photography
- #40 earthlings
- #39 delight, pain
- #38 death, when you think about it
- #37 uneven ground
- #36 new utopias
- #35 living with humans
- #34 archaeology of euphoria
- #33 investigation
- #32 Non-work
- #31 Body
- #30 Eye In The Sky
- #29 Contemplation
- #28 Cultura / Natura
- #27 Cars
- #26 Documentary Strategies
- #25 Popular Music
- #24 Seeing Is Believing
- #23 Artificial Worlds
- #22 Image and Text
- #21 On Photography
- #20 Public Art
- #19 Film
- #18 80'
- #17 Amateur Photography
- #16 Photography and Painting
- #15 Prague
- #14 Commerce
- #13 Family
- #12 Reconstruction
- #11 Performance
- #10 Eroticon
- #9 Architecture
- #8 Landscape
- #7 New Staged Photography
- #6 The Recycle Image
- #5 Borders Of Documentary
- #4 Intimacy
- #3 Transforming Of Symbol
- #2 Collective Authorship
- #1 Face