Occasioning cultural patronage: A mesosociological approach
Occasioning cultural patronage: A mesosociological approach
Across non-commercial, state-funded cultural organisations in the UK it is a common practice to host exclusive events with a view to producing feelings of attachment within patrons or potential patrons. These are often part of ‘friends of’ schemes. This happens against a discursive backdrop which promotes broadening access to arts and culture to an ever wider public. In this paper, I interrogate how cultural organisations perform multiple identities in order to solicit patrons while retaining credibility as a publically-minded organisation. My analytical approach is broadly mesosociological, with an attention to small groups as a unit of analysis and to events as containers of grouped activities. I stress that these events are highly crafted and carefully managed in order to generate the desired social outcome, a process I call ‘occasioning.’ Data are drawn from an ethnographic study of an opening night of a visual art exhibition which had two aspects: an invite-only ‘friends of’ event, and a ‘public’-facing event. This occasion therefore condensed in time and place the gallery’s performance of multiple and conflictual identities in the pursuit of different organisational benefits. I structure the analysis under the headings arenas, relations, and histories. In conclusion, I suggest further research programmes engaging with ‘friends of’ schemes, such as a cross-art form comparison and an exploration of what happened to such schemes and their attached events in the pandemic context.
Harris, Laura
400fa14a-eb29-4d11-9377-97680f5401d4
7 August 2022
Harris, Laura
400fa14a-eb29-4d11-9377-97680f5401d4
Harris, Laura
(2022)
Occasioning cultural patronage: A mesosociological approach.
American Sociological Association: Bureaucracies of Displacement, , Los Angeles, United States.
05 - 09 Aug 2022.
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Abstract
Across non-commercial, state-funded cultural organisations in the UK it is a common practice to host exclusive events with a view to producing feelings of attachment within patrons or potential patrons. These are often part of ‘friends of’ schemes. This happens against a discursive backdrop which promotes broadening access to arts and culture to an ever wider public. In this paper, I interrogate how cultural organisations perform multiple identities in order to solicit patrons while retaining credibility as a publically-minded organisation. My analytical approach is broadly mesosociological, with an attention to small groups as a unit of analysis and to events as containers of grouped activities. I stress that these events are highly crafted and carefully managed in order to generate the desired social outcome, a process I call ‘occasioning.’ Data are drawn from an ethnographic study of an opening night of a visual art exhibition which had two aspects: an invite-only ‘friends of’ event, and a ‘public’-facing event. This occasion therefore condensed in time and place the gallery’s performance of multiple and conflictual identities in the pursuit of different organisational benefits. I structure the analysis under the headings arenas, relations, and histories. In conclusion, I suggest further research programmes engaging with ‘friends of’ schemes, such as a cross-art form comparison and an exploration of what happened to such schemes and their attached events in the pandemic context.
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ToW Occasioning cultural patronage L Harris
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Published date: 7 August 2022
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American Sociological Association: Bureaucracies of Displacement, , Los Angeles, United States, 2022-08-05 - 2022-08-09
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Local EPrints ID: 474648
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474648
PURE UUID: 8c391a82-36a1-4346-b565-f75f9c9401ab
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Date deposited: 28 Feb 2023 17:43
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Author:
Laura Harris
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