|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewComprehensive overview of a highly influential contemporary artist’s work Victor Burgin counts among the most versatile figures within art and visual culture since the late 1960s. His artwork both connects with and reacts to minimalism, conceptual art, staged photography, appropriation art, video art and, more recently, computer-based imaging. As a scholar his thinking is informed by phenomenology, semiotics, poststructuralism, feminist theory, and psychoanalysis. This monograph provides a comprehensive and unique overview of Victor Burgin’s body of work over the past five decades. Identifying the concept of ‘psychical realism’ as an overarching umbrella term, Alexander Streitberger traces back the artist’s parallel unfolding of practice and theory, while situating this process within various historical contexts and critical debates. Five chapters link insightful case studies to key issues such as conceptual art and situational aesthetics, the relationship between representation and politics, postmodernist concepts of space, and the digital environment of media images. The book is richly illustrated and includes a sequence from the major work Dear Urania (2016) especially designed by the artist for this book. This publication is GPRC-labeled (Guaranteed Peer-Reviewed Content). Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alexander StreitbergerPublisher: Leuven University Press Imprint: Leuven University Press Volume: 28 Dimensions: Width: 17.00cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.865kg ISBN: 9789462702462ISBN 10: 9462702462 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 22 October 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction 1. Situational Aesthetics 1.1. Beyond Minimalism: From Object to Perception 1.2. Role-playing: Behavior and Memory 1.3. Photography between Reflection and Recollection 1.4. Serial Art and Systems 1.5. The Text Works and the Perceptual Field 1.6. Linguistic Art and Ideology 2. Toward a Politics of Representation 2.1. The Politicization of Art in Britain 2.2. Guerrilla Rhetoric: The Antanaclastic Works 2.2.1. The Discordance of Ideologies 2.2.2. Semiotic Theory and Artistic Practice 2.2.3. Heroes Don’t Smell Very Nice! 2.3. The Author as Producer 2.3.1. Work Outside and Inside the Gallery 2.3.2. The Tradition of Political Photocollage 2.3.3. The Author as Producer 2.4. Toward a Rhetoric of the Unconscious 2.4.1. The Rhetoric of Art Photography and Advertising 2.4.2. Framing Sexual Difference 2.4.3. Scopophilia and Surveillance 3. Tales from Freud 3.1. Toward a Psychical Realism 3.2. From Socio-history to Psycho-history 3.2.1. A Socio-historical “Psychodrama” 3.2.2. The Shattered Composite 3.2.3. Visual Pleasure and the Photographic Fetish 3.3. The Rebus as a Model of “Critical Seeing” 3.3.1. The Suspended Peripeteian Moment 3.3.2. Voyeurism, Masculinity, and the Uncanny Dance of Ideology 3.4. Between: From Intertext to Masquerades in the Gallery 3.4.1. Hetero-optic Writing 3.4.2. Between Gallery and Cinema 3.4.3. Between the Masks 4. Psychotopologies 4.1. The Discursive Spaces of Postmodernism 4.2. Epistemophilia 4.3. Psychical Space and Postmodernism 4.4. The Paranoiac Space of the City 4.5. Third Space. The Interstitial Location of Culture 4.6. Fiction Films 4.7. The Teletopological Puzzle 5. The Psychomediatic 5.1. The Uncinematic 5.2. The Psychomediatic: Remembering, Repeating, and Working Through 5.3. Photofilmic Psycho-panoramics 5.4. Panorama and Sequence-Image 5.5. Paths through the Virtual Sphere 5.6. Monuments of Melancholia 5.7. The Peripatetic Mode of Spectatorship 5.8. Afterlife Dear Urania Plates Notes BibliographyReviewsAu cours de cette traversée érudite de l’oeuvre de Burgin, ce sont trois domaines historiographiques qui sans cesse entrecroisent leurs problématiques : une histoire des images qui fait de ce livre une contribution importante aux études visuelles ; une histoire des idées qui permet de parcourir un enchaînement de courants intellectuels marquants ; une histoire des technologies, enfin, indissociable de l’avènement du capitalisme mondialisé. Ce qui ressort d’une telle densité réflexive et expérimentale, c’est l’indéfectible intelligence critique qui meut l’oeuvre de l’artiste. - Valérie Mavridorakis, Focales, 8 | 2024, 1 June 2024, DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/11r5o Author InformationAlexander Streitberger is professor of modern and contemporary art history at the UCLouvain and director of the Lieven Gevaert Research Centre for Photography, Art, and Visual Culture. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |