Not now! Now! Chronopolitics, art & research / Renate Lorenz (ed.).
Material type: TextSeries: Schriften der Akademie der Bildenden Künste Wien ; v.15.Publisher: Berlin : Sternberg Press, [2014]Copyright date: ©2014Description: 187 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour) ; 22 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9783956791086
- 3956791088
- Not now! Now! Chronopolitics, art and research
- 701.8 23
- N8253.T5 N67x 2014
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | City Campus City Campus Main Collection | 701.8 NOT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A556165B |
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701.8 MOD Module symmetry proportion / | 701.8 MYE The language of visual art : perception as a basis for design / | 701.8 NAT The Nature and art of motion / | 701.8 NOT Not now! Now! Chronopolitics, art & research / | 701.8 ODO Inside the white cube : the ideology of the gallery space / | 701.8 SIG Sign, image and symbol. | 701.8 TIM Time / |
Includes bibliographical references.
As if time could talk / Nana Adusei-Poku -- Queer archive and queer memory : chronopolitical reflections on the family album / Ana Hofer -- Temporal relations / Sharon Hayes -- Kissing historically : a performance lecture / Mara Lee Gerdén -- Far now : the fugitive archetype of resistance and her ever-changing now (aka 'we go back to the future to tell our stories') / Jamika Ajalon -- A minus suitcase / Yva Jung -- Veils/folds/events : production of face in space-time / Suzana Milevska -- A reeducation / Andrea Ray -- Untitled / Ingrid Cogne -- Dormancy : Notes on sleep, criticality, and the poetics of suspension in and around Henriette Heise's Darkness machines / Mathias Danbolt -- 7' / Yasmine Eid-Sabbagh.
The newest issue from the ongoing publication series out of the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, this book engages the politics of time in art by examining historical narratives and memory, the unforeseen rhythms of time and the idea of visualizing time. The book connects postcolonial and queer debate around chrono-politics with artistic strategies involving temporal gaps and breaks, stutter time, citations and anachronisms, and collapses between time and meaning. An international group of art theorists, artists and artistic researchers highlight how temporal norms organize our biographies and intimate relations, as well as the handling of capital and cultural relations and suggest alternatives to entrenched concepts of what constitutes progressive and regressive cultures. A selection of artworks and recent debates in postcolonial and queer studies create the premise for this challenging conversation.
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