Geometer magazine calls for essays responding directly or obliquely to the theme of politics and art - whether historical or contemporary, subversive or establishment.
www.geometer.org.uk

Art and Politics have long had an uneasy relationship - from Plato's dismissal of the artists from his republic, through the dangerous politics that infused literary modernism, right up to recent revelations and accusations concerning the tangled involvements of Gunter Grass and Milan Kundera in their respective countries' darker days.
When we think about political art we tend to pick out specific involvements and often see political art as a separate species - the preserve of protest singers, polemicists, and self-proclaimed social "realists" - but to some degree it has to be true that all art is political. In what it assumes as much as what it questions, and in what it makes visible as much as in what it conceals art cannot but involve itself in the conditions of the wider world. Does the properly political role of art lie in the intricate working out and tracing of these tangled interconnections - as in J.H. Prynne's mingling of the etymologies of economics, science, love, and desire, or is it enough to testify to the conditions of our immediate experience without such heavy excavation?

And what of supposedly abstract art? What are we to think of the promotion of Jackson Pollock and abstract expressionism by the CIA? Weren't the furthest extremes of John Coltrane's interstellar free jazz inspired by dreams of liberation? Even so celebratedly abstract an art form as music cannot escape it's roots in the world. From Bartok and Ralph Vaughan Williams through to Black Metal, musicians have mobilised folk forms in the service of nationalism and ethnic identity, American tanks rolled into Baghdad blaring out Metallica's Enter Sandman, and musicians and thinkers as diverse as Adorno, Brecht, Cardew, Black Flag and the rave sound systems of the 90s have questioned the politics of the site, means and material of musical performance. To quote the title of Eddie Prevost's most recent book - "No Sound is Innocent".

The questions proliferate endlessly: If the relationship between politics and art is inevitable, structural, innate, then what does that mean for the artist, or for the reader. Can art's past transgressions in the political arena be redeemed – should they be, how and on what terms? Most political art is characteristically revolutionary, but need this be the case - is it necessary and is it desirable that it be so?

Geometer Magazine calls for submissions in any format and from any discipline engaging with these and related questions, whether directly as issues in your own personal practice, or indirectly through discussion of the work of particular artists, writers, musicians or movements. We welcome essay, artwork, interview, fiction and poetry.
Please send a brief summary of your proposed submission to [log in to unmask]
Closing date for proposals: 30rd November. Closing date for submissions: 21st December
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