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Private view? The organisational performance of ‘privateness’ and ‘publicness’ at an art gallery

Private view? The organisational performance of ‘privateness’ and ‘publicness’ at an art gallery
Private view? The organisational performance of ‘privateness’ and ‘publicness’ at an art gallery
This article takes a cultural approach to analysing the profound privatisation of the public in one of the many places in which it manifests: an art gallery. I argue that, as well as categories of political and economic bearing, ‘privateness’ and ‘publicness’ are cultural categories through which lived experiences are made meaningful. They are therefore performable by organisations that have dual public and private accountabilities. I draw on the cultural pragmatics understanding of ‘performance’ as well as a mesosociological attention to groups to study a private view as one example of such a performance. Through the manipulation of arenas, relations and histories I show how the art gallery staff managed to uphold the meanings of both privateness and publicness at this occasion, and manipulate them according to the different desired outcomes of social contexts. In conclusion, I argue that organisational performances of privateness and publicness are in a dynamic tension with one another; that the performative balancing act is a central part of the day-to-day work of such organisations; and that the cultural approach can help us unravel organisational strategies to paper over the social exclusions that characterise their ‘publics’.
art gallery, mesosociology, performance, private, public
1749-9755
Harris, Laura
400fa14a-eb29-4d11-9377-97680f5401d4
Harris, Laura
400fa14a-eb29-4d11-9377-97680f5401d4

Harris, Laura (2023) Private view? The organisational performance of ‘privateness’ and ‘publicness’ at an art gallery. Cultural Sociology. (doi:10.1177/17499755221147610).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article takes a cultural approach to analysing the profound privatisation of the public in one of the many places in which it manifests: an art gallery. I argue that, as well as categories of political and economic bearing, ‘privateness’ and ‘publicness’ are cultural categories through which lived experiences are made meaningful. They are therefore performable by organisations that have dual public and private accountabilities. I draw on the cultural pragmatics understanding of ‘performance’ as well as a mesosociological attention to groups to study a private view as one example of such a performance. Through the manipulation of arenas, relations and histories I show how the art gallery staff managed to uphold the meanings of both privateness and publicness at this occasion, and manipulate them according to the different desired outcomes of social contexts. In conclusion, I argue that organisational performances of privateness and publicness are in a dynamic tension with one another; that the performative balancing act is a central part of the day-to-day work of such organisations; and that the cultural approach can help us unravel organisational strategies to paper over the social exclusions that characterise their ‘publics’.

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More information

In preparation date: 28 November 2022
Accepted/In Press date: 7 December 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 April 2023
Published date: 17 April 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/W007002/1). Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2023.
Keywords: art gallery, mesosociology, performance, private, public

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 472128
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472128
ISSN: 1749-9755
PURE UUID: e188606e-45be-4619-b7ec-e0e74b9d07b9
ORCID for Laura Harris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9146-1168

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Date deposited: 28 Nov 2022 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17

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Author: Laura Harris ORCID iD

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