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Video Art Theory: A Comparative Approach demonstrates how
video art functions on the basis of a comparative media approach,
providing a crucial understanding of video as a medium in
contemporary art and of the visual mediations we encounter in daily
life.
A critical investigation of the visual media and selected video
artworks which contributes to the understanding of video as a
medium in contemporary art
The only study specifically devoted to theorizing the medium of
video from the perspective of prominent characteristics which
result from how video works deal with time, space, representation,
and narrative
The text has emerged out of the author's own lectures and
seminars on video art
Offers a comparative approach which students find especially
useful, offering new perspectives
Auteur
Helen Westgeest is Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art History at Leiden University, the Netherlands. Her most recent publication is Photography Theory in Historical Perspective: Case Studies from Contemporary Art (*co-authored with Hilde Van Gelder, Wiley-Blackwell, 2011). Westgeest is also editor and a contributor of *Take Place: Photography and Place from Multiple Perspectives (*2009) and joint editor of *Photography between Poetry and Politics (with Hilde Van Gelder, 2008).
Texte du rabat
Video Art Theory: A Comparative Approach demonstrates how video art functions on the basis of a comparative media approach, providing a crucial understanding of video as a medium in contemporary art and of the visual mediations we encounter in daily life.
Having a highly elusive character from the outset, video art has also evolved strongly as a form of art in the five decades of its existence. This transformation notably gave rise to exciting changes in its relationships to other media. These concerns serve as the starting point for this study. Throughout the four chapters of the book, the author demonstrates why it is impossible to capture video art in a single, all-inclusive definition. Rather than searching for medium-specificity or a general theory, this study proves that it is more useful to develop a theoretical interdisciplinary framework for research into video art. Video artworks are compared with television and performance art (with regard to immediacy); installation art (dealing with space); photography and painting (related to representation); and cinema (with importance of narrative). This methodology not only yields new perspectives, but crucially provides students with a much-needed context for understanding the evolution and paramount importance of video as a medium.
Contenu
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1
1 Immediacy versus Memory: Video Art in Relation to Television, Performance Art, and Home Video 20
Gillian Wearing's Trauma (2000) Juxtaposed to Joan Jonas's Vertical Roll (1972) 23
Video Art Dealing with the Constant Movements of Audio-Visual Electronic Media, and the Immediacy and Socio-Cultural Aspects of Television 25
The Appeal of Immediacy: Video in Performance Art and Performance in Video Art 45
The Application of the Mnemonic Ability of Video and the Relationship with Activist-Videos and Home Video 60
2 Immateriality versus Three-Dimensionality: Video Art as Sculpture, Installation Art, Projection, and Virtual Medium 79
Lynn Hershman's Tillie the Telerobotic Doll (1995) Juxtaposed to Andy Warhol's Outer and Inner Space
(1965) 82
Television as an Object: Sculpture or Part of Architecture 85
Spatial Video Installations and the Relationship with the Space of the Visitor 91
Projections on Spatial Positioned Screens, the Space of Sound, and Interaction with the Visitor 96
Immaterial Projections Interfering in Darkened Sites and Immersing the Viewer 104
Interacting in the Merged Physical and Digital Space 109
3 Moving Images Mediating as Contemplative Images: Video's Challenge of Photography, Drawing, and Painting 121
Kudzanai Chiurai's Iyeza (2012) Juxtaposed to Thierry Kuntzel's E´te´ double vue (1988) 125
Video Art and Photography 130
Video Art and Drawing 140
Video Art and Painting 147
4 Repetition and Fragmentation in Narrative: Video's Appropriation and Subversion of Classical Cinema 164
Candice Breitz's Mother + Father (2005) Juxtaposed to Rodney Graham's Vexation Island (1997) and Keren Cytter's Corrections (2013) 166
Aspects of Narrative in Video Art Reacting to Hollywood Films, and Views on Compulsive Repetition 169
The Tension between Images and Verbal Language as Dialog, Voice-over, Voice-off, or Text 180
In Lieu of a Conclusion 193
Index 199