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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Contemplative Video Art Interview, Joanna Spitzner
Contemplative Video Art Interview, Joanna Spitzner
Anne Beffel
Media Art: Mediality And Art Generallly, Brogan S. Bunt
Media Art: Mediality And Art Generallly, Brogan S. Bunt
Brogan Bunt
The wide ranging, trans-disciplinary interest in technological media suggests the possibility of a new discipline concerned with the history, implications and practice of mediation. Within this context, the field of media art gains a new sense of coherence and identity. Given the lingering tension between media art and mainstream contemporary art, this may lead the latter to assert its disciplinary autonomy. This paper argues against such a move. Media art is better positioned as an integral strand within contemporary art and, more particularly, as a key space of creative enquiry and practice within a generally conceived contemporary art education.Keywords: media …
Can There Be A Critical Collaborative Ethnography?, Rachel Breunlin, Helen A. Regis
Can There Be A Critical Collaborative Ethnography?, Rachel Breunlin, Helen A. Regis
Rachel Breunlin
In this article we wrote for Collaborative Anthropologies, Helen and I use a case study of a participatory poster project to explore the intersections of "community art" and collaborative ethnography, and to consider how to engage in critical issues of race, class, and culture while working with a diverse group of artists and community activists in New Orleans.
Eschatalogicallandscape, Kirby Farrell Prof
Eschatalogicallandscape, Kirby Farrell Prof
kirby farrell
Nazi obsession with art can be understood as a strategy for managing death-anxiety. The venerable trope of "immortal art" took on fetishistic qualities in the fantasies of the Nazi leadership. For many of them, art compensated for the trauma of World War I by framing idealized vitality invested with visionary self-expansiveness, as in the hyperbolic nudes of Thorak and Brekker, combined with a nostalgic recuperation of lost Victorian-era authority. In Ernest Becker’s terms, as creaturely motives, the manic looting of art works described in Lynn Nicholas’ The Rape of Europa acts out greed for life, appropriating hypostatized vitality as the …