Review: Screens: Viewing Media Installation Art, by Kate Mondloch and Rethinking Curating: Art After New Media, by Beryl Graham, Sarah Cook and foreword by Steve Dietz

2010 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 33-33
Author(s):  
Romy Hosford
Author(s):  
Mohsina Aaftab

Present study focuses on the new media Installation Art in India, its present scenario, and backgrounds. Essentially installation art has taken its heritage from conceptual art, which came into prominence in 1970s, when the concept or idea was prominent – when an artist uses a conceptual form of art which means that all of the arrangement and conclusion are made previously and the implementation is an obligatory concern. So, spontaneously idea became a machine that makes the art. An idea suddenly pops in his mind and he just implemented it, in his very own way. This kind of art does not narrow itself to gallery spaces and can refer to any materials intervention in everyday public or private spaces. After India became independent, art began to change here. considerately several movements and group bounced up all over the country headed by ambitious young artists with vision of bringing modern art to India. Now the art of India is totally changed. Contemporaries are not bound to use paper and canvas, wall or any other art surfaces. They are not bound to make mythological paintings or sculptures but they are free to do anything, they are free to use any medium, material and space they want. After a European artist Marcel Duchamp’s “ready-mades artist” started exploring the margin of art, trying to eliminate the contrast between art and life. For conceptual artists art need not look like a traditional work of art. Presented study focuses on the installation work of Indian artists. Four artists were selected by the researcher viz. Subodh Gupta, Shilpa Gupta, Bharti Kher and ChintanUpadhaya. Researcher investigates the concepts behind the art work of selected artists, their methods and materials they have used in their art work. The selection of artist in current study is on the bases of their fame and popularity. Method of the current study is analytical.


2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-175
Author(s):  
David Sterritt

Leonardo ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Welsby

The author began making films and installations in the early 1970s. Although he has worked across a range of media, he has always concentrated on one particular theme that he conceptualizes as a two-sided question: How do we see ourselves in relation to the natural world, and how should we position our selves and our technologies within it? This essay traces some of the threads of these seminal ideas through a selection of works made in the years between 1974 and 2009. The author concludes with a detailed description of Tree Studies, a large-scale new media installation powered by real-time data from weather stations around the planet.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 148-156
Author(s):  
Satriana Didiek Isnanta ◽  
Much. Sofwan Zarkasi ◽  
Asmoro Nurhadi Panindias

This research was designed as an experimental study of intermedia art creation based research by reinterpretingthe loro blonyo statue as a source of ideas for creating works. Loro Blonyo is a pair of wooden sculpturesconsisting of a female statue and accompanied by a man wearing a Javanese traditional wedding dress in asitting position. Broadly, the meaning of the Loro Blonyo statue for the Javanese people is the unity of thecouple as a reflection of the harmony of the Javanese mind and harmony. The meaning of the loro blonyostatue is then analyzed, elaborated and reinterpreted. This research is an artistic study with a focus on thestudy of the creation of intermedia art creation using various media based on conceptual thinking with aninterdisciplinary approach. The purpose of this creation is to create a multi-media installation art that usesvisual, motion and sound elements. This artistic research method uses Dharsono’s Creative Creation (2016):research with are ethic and emic approach, exploration, experimentation and formation approach. The resultsof the research were concluded and became the basis for the concept of space-based intermedia artwork,namely multi-media installation art with a visual form of local culture as a strengthening of national identity.


2019 ◽  
pp. 59-96
Author(s):  
Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli

“Uncanny Affect” examines ghostly gestures that we cannot consciously experience but only perceive through digital technologies. The work of Bill Viola, one of today’s best-known video artists, focuses on the intersections of new media and the metaphysics of human experiences like death, consciousness, spirituality, and emotion. Many of his recent installations manipulate our sense of time by using a “Phantom camera” that is able to create an extreme slow-motion effect when played back at normal speed. These high-definition installation art works produce the simultaneous disappearance of the readable (intentional movements, iconic gestures, and performative emotions) and the appearance of previously imperceptible micro-movements (facial tics and gestural twitches). They visualize what we cannot experience as embodied perception. This generates uncanny visceral affects. Rather than offering us a new understanding of human interiority (suffering, elation, anger and spirituality), Viola’s work leaves us only with uncertainty as a visceral affect.


Leonardo ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Steinkamp

The author discusses her interactive architectural installation art. As an artist who works with new media, she finds herself refitting existing genres and creating new languages for her particular art form. Her artwork consists of projected interactive computer animation installations. She investigates illusions that transform the viewer's perception of actual space in a synthesis of the real and the virtual.


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