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- Volume 9, Issue 1, 2018
Philosophy of Photography - Volume 9, Issue 1, 2018
Volume 9, Issue 1, 2018
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Aberrant flight paths: The uncertain bearings of Malaysian Airlines flight MH370
More LessAbstractThis article examines the disappearance of Malaysian Airlines MH370 through the lens of its varied non-human witnesses. By employing Harun Farocki’s notion of operative images in conjunction with the process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead it plots a radically dispersed and autonomous image-making apparatus that captured the event of the aircraft’s disappearance and accelerated the expansion of the event itself. Crucially, this article proposes that these images cannot be understood in terms of vision but must be read instead as a series of tactile or synaesthetic practices between materials. Through examining contemporary image-making technologies employed in the search for the aircraft, it charts an ontological tactility within image making, one that – it is argued – has been present since the birth of the medium itself.
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Lyric images, everlasting instants: The photographic works of Tacita Dean and Roni Horn
More LessAbstractOf the most recent turn to literary practices in contemporary art, this article studies one facet: that which relates to the lyric tradition. It hopes to make a case for ‘lyric images’, drawing on the works by artists Tacita Dean, Day for Night (2009), and Roni Horn, Still Water [...] (1999). Read around poems by Emily Dickinson, John Fuller and Margaret Atwood, how these artworks utilize photography’s natural capacity to mirror both the recursive syntactic structure and the blending of instantaneity with immortality common to the lyric poem is explored. Particularly, the article considers notions of cyclical seriality – as composed of singular moments, yet tending towards the infinite – both formally and referentially. Whether these qualities provoke an imaginative and/or emotive looking that contrasts with our response to previous assumptions of the written form in conceptual art practices (e.g. Art and Language) is also reflected upon, in order to contemplate why this particular hybridising may be current in photographic practice.
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Vision, revelation, violence: Technology and expanded perception within photographic history
By Tom SlevinAbstractThis article considers photography’s role as a visual technology and the consequent effects of expanded frames of knowledge. At the very moment human vision and memory were called into profound doubt, photography provided a mechanical, prosthetic extension to perceptual experience. However, as a technology, it contains the potential for both revelation and control. In this article, photography is considered as a technique that: expands human perception; inscribes its own mechanical operations into new visual forms, therefore enframing and encoding visible knowledge; and can be harnessed as a disciplinary instrument and technique of power. As a consequence, photography’s revealing of hitherto invisible dimensions of reality unfolds within a history of revelation, spectacle and power.
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Reinventing the body on the photographic stage: Theatricality, identity, and figural writing in the work of Helena Almeida
Authors: Miguel Mesquita Duarte and Bruno MarquesAbstractThe fictional regime of the photographic image allows Helena Almeida to stage a theatrical metamorphosis of her own body through displacements, expansions and dissimulations, placing photography at the heart of a pictorial transgression that undermines the disciplinary boundaries of visual media: the artist becomes ink, inhabits the empty canvas space, multiplies herself in mirror games that produce the unfolding of a body in deep crisis, thrown beyond its physical limits and identity. Moreover, in multimedia works such as Feel me, Hear me and See me (1979–1980), as well as in some images of the series entitled The House (1982–1983), Almeida seems to move towards a radical linguistic and pictorial derangement, likely to break the traditional communicative and representative mechanisms. We seek to demonstrate, on the basis of these different aspects relating to photography’s effects of hybridization, and making use of the post-structuralist thought of Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze, that the artist moves towards the designation of a structural space that combines photography, writing and the reinvention of the body. Almeida’s work confronts us with a complex reconfiguration of ways of seeing, feeling and thinking the photographic act, as well as its discursive features.
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