The mass of the visual: Developments in the early Soviet Union as post-imaginary experience?
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The mass of the visual : Developments in the early Soviet Union as post-imaginary experience? / Michelsen, Anders Ib.
2021. Abstract from Homo Imaginans, København, Denmark.Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research › peer-review
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TY - ABST
T1 - The mass of the visual
AU - Michelsen, Anders Ib
N1 - Paper, præsenteres i skrevet form på Material Imagination, UCPH, 23-24 April 2021,
PY - 2021/4/24
Y1 - 2021/4/24
N2 - The paper introduces the trans-visual project, developed in the past decade as a response to the focus on discourse critique in visual culture studies. The project approaches the visual as a dynamic and transformative sensibleness: what is defined as an ordered doing of matter; a mattering – something it contends, that is still not really understood.One interesting inroad to the visual as mattering can be found in the development of visual art in the 20th century; its attempt to surmount representation, its involvement in direct meaning per the visual eg. in Marcel Duchamp’s ‘manifestations’ and ideas of “infrathin separation,” and its attitude of a profusive and direct social relevance; all of which becomes signatories of art after WW2 and the astounding success of what is now termed contemporary art. The paper argues – on this background – that it is high time art history and visual culture leave the age old binary of image/imagination including its problematic and establishes a new notion of the imaginary, here suggested to be found in Gilbert Simondon’s work.The paper exemplifies this in an analysis of the role of visual art of the agit prop movement, “a new way for culture propaganda” (Iakov Okunev), which seemed to amass the visual for revolutionary ends. It concludes with a remark on Dziga Vertov’s conception of “the Kino-Eye”.
AB - The paper introduces the trans-visual project, developed in the past decade as a response to the focus on discourse critique in visual culture studies. The project approaches the visual as a dynamic and transformative sensibleness: what is defined as an ordered doing of matter; a mattering – something it contends, that is still not really understood.One interesting inroad to the visual as mattering can be found in the development of visual art in the 20th century; its attempt to surmount representation, its involvement in direct meaning per the visual eg. in Marcel Duchamp’s ‘manifestations’ and ideas of “infrathin separation,” and its attitude of a profusive and direct social relevance; all of which becomes signatories of art after WW2 and the astounding success of what is now termed contemporary art. The paper argues – on this background – that it is high time art history and visual culture leave the age old binary of image/imagination including its problematic and establishes a new notion of the imaginary, here suggested to be found in Gilbert Simondon’s work.The paper exemplifies this in an analysis of the role of visual art of the agit prop movement, “a new way for culture propaganda” (Iakov Okunev), which seemed to amass the visual for revolutionary ends. It concludes with a remark on Dziga Vertov’s conception of “the Kino-Eye”.
M3 - Conference abstract for conference
Y2 - 23 April 2021 through 24 April 2021
ER -
ID: 367314814