Painting: Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

Standard

Painting : Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory. / Petersen, Anne Ring.

Mal’ba v postmediálnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age. ed. / Jana Geržová. Vol. 1 1. ed. Bratislava : VŠVU, 2012. p. 66-83 (engelsk).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

Harvard

Petersen, AR 2012, Painting: Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory. in J Geržová (ed.), Mal’ba v postmediálnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age. 1 edn, vol. 1, VŠVU, Bratislava, pp. 66-83 (engelsk).

APA

Petersen, A. R. (2012). Painting: Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory. In J. Geržová (Ed.), Mal’ba v postmediálnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age (1 ed., Vol. 1, pp. 66-83 (engelsk)). VŠVU.

Vancouver

Petersen AR. Painting: Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory. In Geržová J, editor, Mal’ba v postmediálnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age. 1 ed. Vol. 1. Bratislava: VŠVU. 2012. p. 66-83 (engelsk)

Author

Petersen, Anne Ring. / Painting : Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory. Mal’ba v postmediálnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age. editor / Jana Geržová. Vol. 1 1. ed. Bratislava : VŠVU, 2012. pp. 66-83 (engelsk)

Bibtex

@inbook{be6d96cbbd0c4e7e945b8a61c30fa7c7,
title = "Painting: Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory",
abstract = "The ongoing struggle of painting – leading to recurrent announcements of its {\textquoteleft}demise{\textquoteright} and subsequently of its {\textquoteleft}return{\textquoteright} – serves as point of departure for an examination of {\textquoteleft}expanded painting{\textquoteright}. The article suggests that contemporary painting is not only a field of incessant disciplinary and discursive battles over the essentially self-reflective question of “What is painting?” Over the last decades it has also become an intermedial laboratory in which artists experiment with developing a connective aesthetic in the interface between painting and other media. Accordingly, it is has become a commonly held opinion that painting has transformed itself into an expanded field and thus renewed itself – again. The article argues that in recent decades a remarkable number of painters have explored the possibility of developing painting by redefining what {\textquoteleft}space{\textquoteright} is in relation to painting. Much energy has been put into expanding painting physically by exploring painting{\textquoteright}s relations to objects, space, place, and {\textquoteleft}the everyday{\textquoteright}. The text focuses on works of art that are conceived as an installation based on the medium of painting, including works by Slovak artists Dorota Sadovsk{\'a} and Daniel Fischer. Its discussion of the ways in which the transformation of painting into installation affects the relationship between the work and its contexts eventually leads to a consideration of how Slovak art is positioned in relation to the Western artworld understood as a system of centres and peripheries.Text in English (pp. 66-83) and Slovak (pp. 44-65).",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, Maleri, global art, installationskunst, painting, installation art, global art, globalisation",
author = "Petersen, {Anne Ring}",
note = "Bogens udgivelses{\aa}r er angivet til 2012, men den er f{\o}rst blevet trykt i 2013.",
year = "2012",
language = "Flere sprog",
isbn = "978-80-556-0881-5",
volume = "1",
pages = "66--83 (engelsk)",
editor = "Jana Ger{\v z}ov{\'a}",
booktitle = "Mal{\textquoteright}ba v postmedi{\'a}lnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age",
publisher = "V{\v S}VU",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Painting

T2 - Discursive Battlefield and Intermedial Laboratory

AU - Petersen, Anne Ring

N1 - Bogens udgivelsesår er angivet til 2012, men den er først blevet trykt i 2013.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - The ongoing struggle of painting – leading to recurrent announcements of its ‘demise’ and subsequently of its ‘return’ – serves as point of departure for an examination of ‘expanded painting’. The article suggests that contemporary painting is not only a field of incessant disciplinary and discursive battles over the essentially self-reflective question of “What is painting?” Over the last decades it has also become an intermedial laboratory in which artists experiment with developing a connective aesthetic in the interface between painting and other media. Accordingly, it is has become a commonly held opinion that painting has transformed itself into an expanded field and thus renewed itself – again. The article argues that in recent decades a remarkable number of painters have explored the possibility of developing painting by redefining what ‘space’ is in relation to painting. Much energy has been put into expanding painting physically by exploring painting’s relations to objects, space, place, and ‘the everyday’. The text focuses on works of art that are conceived as an installation based on the medium of painting, including works by Slovak artists Dorota Sadovská and Daniel Fischer. Its discussion of the ways in which the transformation of painting into installation affects the relationship between the work and its contexts eventually leads to a consideration of how Slovak art is positioned in relation to the Western artworld understood as a system of centres and peripheries.Text in English (pp. 66-83) and Slovak (pp. 44-65).

AB - The ongoing struggle of painting – leading to recurrent announcements of its ‘demise’ and subsequently of its ‘return’ – serves as point of departure for an examination of ‘expanded painting’. The article suggests that contemporary painting is not only a field of incessant disciplinary and discursive battles over the essentially self-reflective question of “What is painting?” Over the last decades it has also become an intermedial laboratory in which artists experiment with developing a connective aesthetic in the interface between painting and other media. Accordingly, it is has become a commonly held opinion that painting has transformed itself into an expanded field and thus renewed itself – again. The article argues that in recent decades a remarkable number of painters have explored the possibility of developing painting by redefining what ‘space’ is in relation to painting. Much energy has been put into expanding painting physically by exploring painting’s relations to objects, space, place, and ‘the everyday’. The text focuses on works of art that are conceived as an installation based on the medium of painting, including works by Slovak artists Dorota Sadovská and Daniel Fischer. Its discussion of the ways in which the transformation of painting into installation affects the relationship between the work and its contexts eventually leads to a consideration of how Slovak art is positioned in relation to the Western artworld understood as a system of centres and peripheries.Text in English (pp. 66-83) and Slovak (pp. 44-65).

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - Maleri

KW - global art

KW - installationskunst

KW - painting

KW - installation art

KW - global art

KW - globalisation

M3 - Bidrag til bog/antologi

SN - 978-80-556-0881-5

VL - 1

SP - 66-83 (engelsk)

BT - Mal’ba v postmediálnom veku/Painting in the Postmedial Age

A2 - Geržová, Jana

PB - VŠVU

CY - Bratislava

ER -

ID: 48904812