Flea Market Painting

Abstract

In criminology, the ‘Broken Windows Theory’, introduced in 1982 by social scientists Wilson and Kelling, proposes that visible signs of disorder create an urban environment that encourages further disorder. There is an implication that the urban landscape allows a communication of lack of authority and this, in turn, proliferates a disregard for social norms and law. A new social geography emerges leading to a continuous deterioration of culture and community, as disorder becomes more common. The works scrutinize the nuanced relationship between causality and correlation and advocate a complex response to how the urban landscape ultimately can become a site of resistance of marginalised communities and how disorder reflects the complexities of class dynamics. Disorder is reframed as a complex phenomenon, imbued with transformative potential and latent opportunities for societal renewal and magical opportunities. The work submitted to the 'Le Salon D’Echangiste' show aims to not only support STudnet endeavours, and curatorial practices that are interesting, but to also allow itself (as a photograph) to move away from simple representation and to instead consider itself as exchange currenc

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Glasgow School of Art: RADAR

    redirect
    Last time updated on 27/03/2025

    This paper was published in Glasgow School of Art: RADAR.

    Having an issue?

    Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.