“Featuring brilliant ideas and sharp theoretical insights, <i>Universal Prostitution and Modernist Abstraction</i> makes a very important contribution to the understanding of key forms and genres in twentieth-century art in general as well as to the more pointed discussion of art’s relationship to the subsumption of life under capital. I know of no other book that traces painterly abstraction and other artistic approaches to abstraction in the broader sense of the term across the longer arc of modern and contemporary art.” - Ina Blom, author of (Houses to Die In and Other Essays on Art) “Drawing on Marx’s passage on ‘universal prostitution,’ Jaleh Mansoor develops an astute analysis of the economic unconscious of modern and contemporary art. Focusing on the dialectics between aesthetic and social abstractions, Mansoor spans an arc from Seurat’s <i>Models </i>to Picabia’s and Tiqqun’s <i>Young-Girl</i>s, referring to labor-reflective works by Hito Steyerl, Santiago Sierra, Hannah Black, and others. She guides us through the manifold ways art mediates the imperceptible totality of human life.” - Sabeth Buchmann, Professor of the History of Modern and Postmodern Art, Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction 1. Toward a Materialist Formalism 1
Introduction 2. Modernism’s Aesthetic Economy: An Art History of Labor’s Subsumption 25
1. Georges Seurat’s Muses, Abstracted: Abstract Anonymous Labor and the Beginnings of Aesthetic Abstraction 51
2. Francis Picabia’s Real Abstraction and the Beginnings of Futurist Cyborgs: The Prefigurative Avant-Gardes 78
3. The Future of the Futurists: The Young-Girl; En/gendering Real Abstraction 104
4. The [Young-Girl] Worker as Equipment: Yves Klein’s Living Paintbrushes 133
5. Surplus Bodies: Santiago Sierra’s Exploitive Remuneration 157
Conclusion 177
Notes 197
Bibliography 213
Index 225