One of the best academic books I've read this summer. Art Workers is concerned with a specific moment in the 1960s and 70s, when politically-concerned artists began to define themselves as workers. This moniker ushered in a series of contradictions: that their art, conceptual/minimalist/dematerial, appeared as the abandonment of traditional labor; their uncertain class position; America’s economic transition to a postindustrial/managerial economy; their tactic of withholding production and participation; and their ambivalent, even hostile, views on the working class, in comparison to their affinity towards the student movements. Julia Bryan-Wilson highlights four artists involved in the Artists Workers Coalition-- Carle Andre, Robert Morris, Lucy Lippard, and Hans Haacke-- to illustrate the origins of this identity, the variations of art workers, and the different political embedded in the identity of the art worker.