A Damning Appraisal of Art World Elitism

Author Hari Kunzru joins Kate Brown to discuss his new book 'Blue Ruin.'

Image by John Gall, courtesy of Knopf / Penguin Random House.


Few creative works ever managed to get the weird pathologies and unique characters of the art world quite right. But journalist and author Hari Kunzru’s newest novel Blue Ruin is definitely one of those works. Set in the early stages of the pandemic, Kunzru’s novel looks at how wealth and privilege function and fester in the art world.

It’s  an astonishing and incisive exploration of the power dynamics and value creation in art by an author who has been keenly observing the art world’s odd rituals for decades. Blue Ruin moves between lockdown in upstate New York where some art professionals are hiding out on a very nice property, and then moves back in time to the optimistic art scene of the 1990s in London. Between these places, we follow Jay, a British artist who makes a grand gesture of quitting art in his twenties, only to find himself ramped back into the art world and the people who haunted it, all of which he had tried to leave behind.

Originally from Britain and based in New York. Kunzru is the author of seven novels, including White Tears and Red Pill. Blue Ruin is the third of this trilogy.  He’s also a regular contributor to the New York Review of books and the New York Times and writes a column for Harpers. Kunzru also teaches in the creative writing program at New York University and is the host of the podcast Into the Zone.

—Kate Brown