
Crowdfunding or Funding the Crowds
Author(s) -
Renée Ridgway
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
a peer-reviewed journal about --
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2245-7755
DOI - 10.7146/aprja.v2i1.121127
Subject(s) - crowds , commodification , negotiation , agency (philosophy) , balance (ability) , affect (linguistics) , public relations , business , sociology , political economy , law and economics , political science , economics , market economy , law , psychology , social science , computer security , neuroscience , computer science , communication
Instead of governmental support, increasingly more and more art workers and cultural organisations are being forced to engage with crowdfunding as a legitimate means to finance artistic practice by draw- ing on their networks, primarily their friends, family, neighbours and colleagues. While this reliance on distributed networks is celebrated, there is very little attention paid to the balance of trade-offs and returns in this model. The excessive reliance on colleagues or ‘friends’ entails other dynamics in these tit-for-tat exchanges, which need to be unpacked: affect, exploitation, and indebtedness. Relationships with people become even more entangled and, unlike money, which is anonymous, brokering agency for artistic projects results in a negotiation of social relations. Will crowdfunding en masse lead to a new model for the distribution of wealth as is claimed or is it a commodification of one’s very own social relations?