"The spectatorship of video art installation as expansion of cinematic time - focused on (Installation art, Chantal Akerman, 2001)"

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 359-376
Author(s):  
Mi Hwa Jang
2006 ◽  
pp. 5-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis Wood

Artists make maps. Inspired by maps made by the Surrealists, by the Situationists, by Pop Artists, and especially by Conceptualists of every stripe, artists in increasing numbers have taken up the map as an expressive medium. In an age less and less enamored of traditional forms of representation – and increasingly critical – maps have numerous attractions for artists. Beyond their formal continuities, maps and paintings are both communicative, that is, constructs intended to affect behavior. As the energy of painting has been dispersed over the past half century into earth art, conceptual art, installation art, performance art, video art, cyber art, and so on, it has dispersed the map as a subject along with it. The irresistible tug maps exert on artists arises from the map’s mask of neutral objectivity, from its mask of unauthored dispassion. Artists either strip this mask off the map, or fail to put one on. In either case artists simultaneously point to the mask worn by the map, while they enter unmasked into the very discourse of the map. In so doing map artists are erasing the line cartographers have tried to draw between their form of graphic communication (maps) and others (drawings, paintings, and so on). In this way map artists are reclaiming the map as a discourse function for people in general. The flourishing of map art signals the imminent demise of the map as a privileged form of communication. The map is dead! Long live the map!


Author(s):  
Johanna Gosse

While at first, “video installation” would seem to refer to a particular medium and mode of display, in practice, the term is applied to a range of intersecting media, histories and genres, including but not limited to experimental and expanded cinema, video art, installation art, digital and new media art, and the emergent category of artists’ moving image. In short, “video installation” encompasses an expansive field of moving image practices, formats, and configurations, from multichannel film projection to video sculpture to immersive and interactive media environments. The term can apply to moving images that emanate from or are projected onto screens, monitors, or mobile devices, and are displayed in spaces outside of a conventional cinematic context. In terms of historical periodization, the rise of video installation coincided with the emergence of analog video technology in the mid- to late 1960s and the concomitant emergence of installation art during this same period. Up until the 1980s, video installation took shape predominantly as gallery-based displays of CRT monitors. Often configured into sculptural arrangements that self-reflexively acknowledge their physical support, “video sculptures” invoke and comment upon video’s genetic ties to broadcast television. Yet, other, more feedback-driven modes of installation, such as Nam June Paik’s TV-Buddha (1974) or Bruce Nauman’s Live-Taped Video Corridor (1970), emphasize the instantaneity of real-time closed circuit video over the sculptural presence of the monitor, and thus privilege surveillant over the televisual optics. By the 1990s, as video projectors improved in quality and decreased in cost, the bulky CRT gave way to the projected moving image, which in turn has emerged as a dominant mode within contemporary artistic production. Since it can adapt to a variety of spaces and surfaces—wall, ceiling, floor, screen, objects, even viewers’ bodies—projection opens up a multitude of experiential possibilities. Projection can also be sculptural, as in the work of Tony Oursler and Krystof Wodizcko, who generate uncannily embodied video portraits by projecting moving images onto free-standing objects, buildings, and monuments. Video projection can also be immersive or environmental, such as in Anthony McCall’s Solid Light Works (2005–2010), a suite of monumental, linear beams of white light projected into darkened gallery spaces, which act as updated, digital variations of his influential expanded cinema work, Line Describing a Cone (1973). In response to its dominant position within contemporary artistic practice, scholarship and criticism devoted to moving image installation, curation, and distribution have spiked since the 1990s. This bibliography offers a selection of relevant literature on this topic. Beginning with an overview of key scholarship on the history of video art and contemporary artists’ moving image, the bibliography transitions to more focused, thematic investigations of and significant prehistories, including topics like expanded cinema, video aesthetics and ecologies, and installation art. Finally, it includes a selection of key exhibition catalogues, including specialized sections on video projection and video sculpture. In tracing the entwined emergence of video and installation art since the 1960s, this bibliography also limns another historical intersection, that of video art and experimental film. While typically, these practices have been framed as historically distinctive, aesthetically autonomous and driven by medium-specific concerns, this bibliography takes inspiration from and highlights more recent scholarly, critical, and curatorial perspectives that align and cross-reference these traditions, and in doing so, situate themselves at the disciplinary intersection of art history and film and media studies.


Author(s):  
Maureen Turim ◽  
Michael Walsh

This article appears in theOxford Handbook of New Audiovisual Aestheticsedited by John Richardson, Claudia Gorbman, and Carol Vernallis. This chapter is a comprehensive survey of sound practices in avant-garde film, video art, and installation art since the 1960s. It addresses a series of artistic approaches to sound: silence, tone and drone, antic and aleatory, multilayering and cacophony, work with voices, legacies of cinematic exhibition, and resonant spaces in galleries and museums. It is broadly chronological, beginning with major figures of the 1960s and ending with artists currently working. The chapter does not deny medium specificity, but moves easily among celluloid film, video formats, and gallery installation. Theoretical perspectives derive from the debate between Deleuze and Badiou on the nature and frequency of “the event,” a restaging of the discussion on the value of experiment and innovation. The chapter is wide-ranging enough to be synoptic, but also provides detailed discussion of works by Larry Gottheim, Abigail Child, Andy Warhol, Christian Marclay, Janet Cardiff, and Bruce High Quality Foundation.


Author(s):  
Celia Riboulet

<p>Resumen</p><p>¿Cuál sería la función de los cineastas y videastas en relación con la imagen televisiva y de otros medios de comunicación? La cuestión política del videasta comprometido podría ser la siguiente: ¿Cómo despertar en cada espectador las dudas y las crisis que el espectáculo (mediático) tiene como meta rechazar y alejar? El artículo describe características básicas del uso de la violencia en la televisión y su respectivo manejo en el arte del video. A partir de las obras de dos videastas- cineastas: Chantal Akerman (Bélgica) y Eliane Chiron (Francia), se analizan cuestiones de poder, imagen e intimidad, relacionadas con el tema y con la representación de la violencia.</p><p>Palabras claves</p><p>Imagen, violencia, paisaje, tiempo, videoarte.</p><p> </p><p>Chagra sachakunapi wañuskakunawamanda rimangapa kawarikuiawa mana sugrigcha munagata Sugllapi ¿ima ruraitaka uikankuna cineastakuna videastakuna chi kawachidirukunawa sugkunapi televisionpi?videastapi compromiso politikapi kasachar karrinsha. ¿Imasa kawachingapa kawadurta kai kawachikunawa kawangami kawangapamanapa? Kaipi willakumi imasapi llakuchingapa televisionpi imasa video manejangapa munaskasina iskai videaskakuna: Chantal Akerman (Belgikamanda) Eliane Chiron (Franciamanda), kawankuna imasa chi jiru kawachikuna jiru. Ima suti Rimai Simi: kawari llakichinakui sumakawari pucha, tiempo, video kawari.</p><p> </p><p>On Fields and Trees to Speak of the Dead: Video Art against the Indifference of Media Representations. Abstract</p><p>What would the role of film and video makers be regarding the TV image and the image from other media? The political question of the committed video maker could be as follows: how to raise in every viewer the doubts and crises that the (media) spectacle aims to reject? The article describes the basic characteristics of the use of violence on television and how these characteristics are managed in video art. Issues of power, image and intimacy are discussed in connection to the above and to the depiction of violence, guided by the works of two video artists/filmmakers: Chantal Akerman (Belgium) and Eliane Chiron (France).</p><p>Keywords</p><p>Image, violence, landscape, time, video art.</p><p>Des champs et des arbres pour parler des morts : La videoarte contre l´indifférence des représentations de médias. Résumé</p><p>Quelle pourrait être la fonction des cinéastes et vidéastes par rapport à l’image télévisuelle et autres moyens de communication ? La question politique du vidéaste engagé pourrait être la suivante : comment réveiller dans chaque spectateur les doutes et les crises que le spectacle (médiatique) a pour but de rejeter et d’éloigner ? L’article décrit les caracté- ristiques de base de l’usage de la violence à la télévision et son maniement dans l’art de la vidéo. À partir des oeuvres de deux vidéastes-cinéastes : Chantal Akerman (Belgique) et Eliane Chiron (France), nous analysons les questions du pouvoir, de l’image et de l’intimité, mises en relation avec le sujet et avec la représentation de la violence.</p><p>Mots clés</p><p>Image, violence, paysage, temps, art vidéo. Campos e árvores para falar dos mortos: vídeo-arte</p><p>contra a indiferença das representações das mídias. Resumo</p><p>Qual seria o papel de cineastas e vídeo sobre a imagem de TV e outras mídias? A questão política de cinegrafista comprometido poderia ser o seguinte: como despertar em cada espectador dúvidas e crises que o show (mídia ) pretende rejeitar e fora? O artigo descreve características básicas do uso da violência na televisão e respectiva gestão em video-arte. A partir das obras de dois cineastas videastas: Chantal Akerman (Bélgica) e Eliane Chiron ( França), são discutidas questões de poder, imagem e intimidade de, relacionado com o tema e a representação da violência.</p><p>Palavras chaves</p><p>Imagem, violência , paisagem, tempo, vídeo-arte.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Aloisi

Perpetual Shift, a responsive art installation, exists at the intersection of digital media, art and architecture, bearing a range of connections to the realm of ubiquitous computing and adding to evolving perspectives in the fields of installation art and interactive architecture by proposing a new mode of engaging with data through the physical built environment. The physical embodiment of the sculpture has the functional properties of a Tangible User Interface and employs an innovative approach to material application to generate multi-modal dynamic output (sight and sound). Though as a device Perpetual Shift is capable of being programmed to function as a form of data-physicalization, this artwork is a form of data-sculpture whereby location of the human body is interpreted as data which drives the actuation of the built environment.


Author(s):  
Hilary Radner ◽  
Alistair Fox

This chapter demonstrates how Bellour’s work on video art (or what was later termed moving-image installation art), while a product of his own preoccupations, is situated firmly within more general speculations about spectatorship. Confronting this new medium, or media, as it turned out, Bellour introduced the notion of “le spectateur pensif,” the pensive spectator, or the spectator engaged in thought – who is not an entirely rational spectator, nor one who is completely sutured into the narrative as some scholars felt was the case with the spectator of classical cinema. He also sees the emergence of new relations between images which he calls “l’entre-images,” the between-images, complicating his initial ideas about the “défilement,” a concept, at least initially, referred to the movement of the celluloid print through the projector’s mechanism and the filing past of the cinema images in front of the spectator. In this same period, Bellour, along with film critics such as Serge Daney and filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard, began to speculate about the death of cinema due to the changing situations (or dispositifs) in which the spectator encounters the moving image. An important influence on his thinking as this time was the film theorist turned video artist Thierry Kuntzel.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Aloisi

Perpetual Shift, a responsive art installation, exists at the intersection of digital media, art and architecture, bearing a range of connections to the realm of ubiquitous computing and adding to evolving perspectives in the fields of installation art and interactive architecture by proposing a new mode of engaging with data through the physical built environment. The physical embodiment of the sculpture has the functional properties of a Tangible User Interface and employs an innovative approach to material application to generate multi-modal dynamic output (sight and sound). Though as a device Perpetual Shift is capable of being programmed to function as a form of data-physicalization, this artwork is a form of data-sculpture whereby location of the human body is interpreted as data which drives the actuation of the built environment.


Literator ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rita M.C. Swanepoel

This article offers a philosophical overview of conceptual art. I argue that, since the project Transgressions and boundaries of the page transgresses and conceptually extends the boundaries of the concept of the book, it can be viewed in its entirety as a language-based installation art, consisting of various components, viz. artists’ books. Due to its interdisciplinary nature, this conceptual art installation challenges the boundaries of conceptual art. The project and exhibitions confirm that artists’ books constitute an ideal medium to involve artists from divergent disciplines in the play with and discovery of the possibilities of the book. The project as a whole can be categorised as conceptual art, as it reconsiders, reinvents and theorises the concept book.


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