A collection of essays and a critical attempt to rethink and improve the relationship between artists and art institutions and to give visibility to the precarious, complex, and very often existential reality of the art workers.
	"Beneath the glamorous surface of the art world—the openings and   dinner parties, the record-breaking auction prices, the media   attention—lies a reality that is precarious, complex, and very often   existential: only a tiny minority of artists support themselves with   their work and fewer still manage to do so throughout their lives. This   book tells those other stories, for example of artistic practices   grounded in performance, research, and political activism. These   practices are not necessarily oriented toward producing marketable   objects. Thousands of artists around the world, at all latitudes,   struggle every day under precarious work conditions, in the absence of   shared rules, and with a debilitating sense of insecurity caused not   only by the threat of global pandemics but also by war and political   oppression, resurgent nuclear threat, competition for dwindling   resources, and perhaps most pressing of all, the climate crisis.
  The economic challenge of supporting oneself as an artist immediately turns into an ethical one."
 
Andrea Bellini
  
  Produced by the 
Centre d'Art Contemporain Genève, this collection of   essays was conceived as a critical attempt to rethink and improve the   relationship between artists and art institutions, cultivate awareness   of other people's vulnerabilities, and courageously embrace one's own   responsibilities.