“The John Dewey that emerges from Mary Jane Jacob’s introspective and affirmative study speaks directly to the artist of the twenty-first century by insisting on the poetry of everyday experience, the necessity of making as a process of worldly understanding, and the universal significance of art as an essential form of human knowledge. Move over, Joseph Beuys, there is a century-old theorist of socially engaged art to contend with who—thanks to Jacob’s compelling and accessible writing, as well as her deft use of specific contemporary art works as models of Dewey’s progressive-era ideas—springs forth to surprise and challenge us today.”
— Gregory Sholette, author of Delirium and Resistance: Activist Art and the Crisis of Capitalism
"This book is a welcome reintroduction of John Dewey’s progressive ideas in relation to the work of contemporary artists trying to escape the ‘elitist’ reputation of the commercial art world. Nobody is better qualified than Mary Jane Jacob to craft such an intriguing fusion of Dewey’s democratic philosophy and the work of artists devoted to social interaction and social change—all the more pertinent in these dark times. Dewey for Artists, like the self-help book the title wittily mimics, is a rousing challenge to artists who perceive their work as shared experience, an integral factor in everyday life."
— Lucy R. Lippard
"This entirely accessible reflection on art and experience is a small masterpiece. In exploring John Dewey’s passionate, lifelong engagement with the various arts and with the meaning of democracy, Mary Jane Jacob revitalizes his unique insights for a new generation, and illustrates how we might unleash our social imaginations and dance that dialectic today. This book is for artists, yes, but also for a much broader public, including anyone concerned with the practice of living artfully in these terribly troubling times."
— William Ayers
"The ways in which Jacob finds in Dewey new and important ways to socialize and politicize experience is extremely valuable, as it is here that we find many arguments in favor of the continued understanding of the uses of art that often elsewhere have run out of philosophical and interdisciplinary steam."
— Andrea Phillips, Baltic Professor and Director of BxNU Research Institute, University of Northumbria
"The social activities of John Dewey and the contemporary artists discussed by Jacob show us that art can influence society actively. As the author explains, these art actions might be radical, but they also have value as human responses; what is important is to not ignore what is going on around us. . . .This book speaks not just to art. It is about something more essential: how a human being can live life well."
— Korean Society of Media and Arts
"Dewey's progressive politics and their relationship to art, more specifically how they illustrate social practice art as an aesthetic experience, are the focus of Chicago-based curator Mary Jane Jacob's new book, Dewey for Artists. Written in an easy-to-digest manner, the book establishes Jacob among a small group of artists and art professionals—notably Tom Finkelpearl and Greg Sholette—who have long looked to Dewey as a theoretical foothold. . . . Jacob interprets Dewey's ideas through a myriad of experiential and participatory artworks by international artists with whom she has interacted or whose work she has curated including Tania Bruguera's activist workshop space for immigrants in Queens, the poetic installations of wafting fabric by Ann Hamilton, Thomas Hirschhorn's Bronx housing estate construction dedicated to Gramsci, a film by Jeon Joonho of his father remembering a particularly beautiful sunset, and the Norwegian forest planted to print books for Katie Paterson's Future Library project.. . . . [Dewey's] belief in living life as an artful practice and focus on fostering rational debate and creativity as a means to achieve a more just society remains a worthy lesson for artists and citizens alike."
— Cara Jordan, The Brooklyn Rail
"Following a discussion of Dewey’s conception of the creative process, Jacob builds her case with chapters on aesthetic experience, practice, democracy, participation, and communication, with each chapter logically building on the previous. . . . She shows the possibilities aesthetic experience and engagement have for democratic practice and participation by reconnecting, in Deweyian fashion, the creative process to the everyday lived experiences of contested social and political spaces. This illuminating work will be of great interest to students, artists, and scholars alike."
— CHOICE
"Not only does this book explain Dewey's philosophy at a more understandable level than his publications, such as "Art as Experience," but also it aims to speak to the public in that this book connects art to essential aspects of human beings."
— Lee Joo-won, The Korea Times
"Any philosopher interested in the relation of theory to practice will find this text an interesting case study on how philosophy is relevant to the arts, even if that relevance is limited and specific.
For those unfamiliar with social practice, this book is an excellent introduction to many of the most important pieces and artists working in this mode. . . . Philosophers interested in how philosophy interacts with thought outside the discipline should read this book, which is surely required reading for anyone interested in social practice art. Dewey for Artists enlivens aspects of Dewey’s writing for a significant group of contemporary artists working today. It doesn’t speak to all artists working today, but instead of suffering from this sin of omission, it gains strength in its specificity, and, in doing so, Jacob models a practical way for art and philosophy to come together."
— Alex Robins, The Pluralist
"...Jacob models a practical way for art and philosophy to come together."
— The Pluralist
"Jacob draws on Dewey to argue emphatically that art is not set apart for spectators. A work of art, a creative act of making, becomes fully itself only in engagement with the world through the experience of those who interact with it. . . . For Dewey, art gives us agency in our lives and the shared lives of our communities. Art arises from the poetry of everyday life, and conversely, making our lives every day in itself is an art and a practice. . . . close the book thinking, 'Mary Jane Jacob would have been a transformative faculty member at Black Mountain College.'"
— Journal of Black Mountain College Studies