Results for 'photography, modernism'

973 found
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  1.  9
    Photography: Modernism's Stepchild.Diana Emery Hulick - 1992 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 26 (1):75.
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  2.  37
    Why photography matters to the theory of history.Michael S. Roth - 2010 - History and Theory 49 (1):90-103.
    Georges Didi-Huberman's study is concerned with epistemological and ethical questions that arise from visual representations of the Shoah, while Michael Fried's is concerned with the ontological possibilities explored by contemporary art photography. The books have two things in common: an argument against postmodern skepticism, and an insistence that photography has become a field in which questions of history, truth, and authenticity are being explored with particular acuity. Rather than reject even the possibility that photographs have something to tell us about (...)
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  3.  17
    (1 other version)On Photography: A Philosophical Inquiry.Diarmuid Costello - 2016 - Routledge.
    What is photography? Is it primarily a source of knowledge about the world or an art? Many have said the former, because it records the world automatically, others the latter because it embodies human subjectivity. Can it photography be both or must we choose? In On Photography: A Philosophical Inquiry Diarmuid Costello examines these fascinating questions and more. In so doing he introduces some of the fundamental topics and debates about the nature of photography, with the help of photographic images (...)
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  4.  9
    How Not To Read Pictures: The History of Grain Elevators in Buffalo, Photography, and European Modernist Architecture 1900 to 1930.William J. Brown - 1993 - Communications 18 (2):223-234.
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  5.  26
    Photography at a crossroads: Studio as genealogy, dispositif, spur.Shepherd Steiner - 2013 - Philosophy of Photography 4 (2):243-260.
    The article focuses on the work of Ian Wallace, Jeff Wall and Rodney Graham, in particular, a notion of the studio that provides both an anchor and departure for the work of all three. This genealogy turns primarily on Wallace’s photo-conceptual work from the 1970s, which establishes the space of the studio as an allegory of painting or the modernist tradition, and as the topological equivalent of the museum and street. Using Wallace’s model of post-studio practice as an analytic, the (...)
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  6.  21
    Applied Modernism.Paul K. Saint-Amour - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (7-8):241-269.
    This article is about a period of technology transfer – the late 1910s and 1920s – when wartime aerial reconnaissance techniques and operations were being adapted to a range of civilian uses, including urban planning, land use analysis, traffic control, tax equalization, and even archaeology. At the center of the discussion is the ‘photomosaic’: a patchwork of overlapping aerial photographs that have been rectified and fit together so as to form a continuous survey of a territory. Initially developed during the (...)
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  7.  15
    (1 other version)Photography as a machine organism: The cyberneticization of the photographic and techne as ethics.Mark Martinez - 2015 - Philosophy of Photography 6 (1):61-72.
    This article proposes a cybernetic photographic theory that takes seriously the philosophical claim that cameras, images and human beings exist as evolving systems of machines-organisms. It provides an epistemological challenge to the modernist problematic of representation – namely, the emergence of human consciousness outside and above nature, and a rationalist distinction between an active, visual-reasoning subject and a passive object. I utilize the philosophy of Francois Lauruelle in order to foreground and deepen the understanding of the ethical thought in cybernetics. (...)
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  8.  53
    Photography and Cinema from Birth to Death.Damian Sutton - 2001 - Film-Philosophy 5 (1).
    Garrett Stewart _Between Film and Screen: Modernism's Photo Synthesis_ (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1999) ISBN 0226774120 (pbk) xi + 386 pp. (inc. illustrations).
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  9.  22
    The Literate Eye: Victorian Art Writing and Modernist Aesthetics.Rachel Teukolsky - 2009 - Oup Usa.
    Rather than focusing on German philosophy or the French avant-gardes, as many books on the history of aesthetics do, Teukolsky takes up British responses to modern art controversies, thus providing a unique view on the development of artistic forms and art history. She considers the plentiful archive of Victorian "art writing"-essays addressed to the visual arts- to reveal the key role played by nineteenth-century writers in the rise of modernist Anglo-American aesthetics. Though Victorians are most often associated with realism, certain (...)
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  10.  8
    History of a Shiver: The Sublime Impudence of Modernism.Jed Rasula - 2016 - Oxford University Press USA.
    An abrupt break in the prevailing modes of artistic expression, for many, marks the advent of modernism in the early twentieth century, but revisionary attempts to pin down a precise moment of its emergence remain disputed. History of a Shiver proffers a different approach, tracing the first inkling of modernism instead to the nineteenth century's fascination with music.As Jed Rasula deftly shows, melomania--the passion for music--gave rise to concepts like Richard Wagner's "endless melody" and the Gesamtkunstwerk, or total (...)
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  11. Photo-Opportunity.Patrick Maynard - 1991 - Canadian Review of American Studies 22 (3):501-528.
    Review of literature and independent essay on the 1989 sesquicentennial of photography, winner of Canadian Association for American Studies 1991 award for paper that "best exemplifies the discipline of American Studies".
     
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  12. Review of Barbara Savedoff, Transforming Images: How Photography Complicates the Picture. [REVIEW]Patrick Maynard - 2001 - Modernism and Modernity 8 (2):338-340.
     
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  13. Roland Barthes's myth of photography.Jean-Michel Rabaté - 2023 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Žižek, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  14. Roland Barthes's myth of photography.Jean-Michel Rabaté - 2023 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Žižek, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  15.  5
    To Possess Other Eyes.Dominic McIver Lopes - 2015 - In Four Arts of Photography. Wiley. pp. 36–47.
    The first art of photography best aligns with the production of photographers like Henri Cartier‐Bresson, Edward Weston, Andre Kertesz, and Diane Arbus. Modernism is the moniker that tends to be applied to these photographers and their peers in retrospect, usually by art historians, especially in connection with the writings of John Szarkowski. As curator of photography at the Museum of Modern Art in New York from the 1960s through the 1980s, Szarkowski commanded attention and used it to lead the (...)
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  16.  10
    The off-modern.Svetlana Boym - 2017 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing.
    The Off-Modern charts a fresh path beyond the categories of modernism and postmodernism, center and periphery, artistic theory and practice.
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  17.  7
    Abstraction.Dominic McIver Lopes - 2015 - In Four Arts of Photography. Wiley. pp. 114–124.
    The critic Dominic Eichler recently described some abstract photographs by Wolfgang Tillmans as exposing a forgotten reservoir of unseen pictures, a kind of mysterious, enormous underbelly of photography past and present. Modernist period abstract photography shared the ambition of the classic tradition to open up a window into a hitherto unseen reality. Photography's having made realistic depiction a trivial achievement, painters tacked toward an exploration of light and form. The effects of this new direction first made their mark on figurative (...)
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  18.  13
    Philosophizing the everyday: revolutionary praxis and the fate of cultural theory.John Roberts - 2006 - Ann Arbor, MI: Pluto Press.
    After modernism and postmodernism, it is argued, the everyday supposedly is where a democracy of taste is brought into being - the place where art goes to recover its customary and collective pleasures, and where the shared pleasures of popular culture are indulged, from celebrity magazines to shopping malls. John Roberts argues that this understanding of the everyday downgrades its revolutionary meaning and philosophical implications. Bringing radical political theory back to the centre of the discussion, he shows how notions (...)
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  19.  36
    Martine Sonnet, Atelier 62.Michelle Zancarini-Fournel - 2009 - Clio 29:267-268.
    Historienne moderniste, spécialiste de l’éducation des filles, Martine Sonnet nous offre ici un ouvrage sensible sur le parcours professionnel de son père, passé en 1951 de la campagne où il était artisan-forgeron à l’usine de Renault à Boulogne-Billancourt dans un poste d’OS et, finalement, dans un des ateliers parmi les plus durs, l’atelier 62, celui des forges. Tel qu’il apparaît sur la photographie de couverture, « le père » – haut, massif, mains dans les poches et cigarette au bec, enca...
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  20.  15
    Postmodernism, Postsocialism and Beyond.Aleš Erjavec - 2008 - Cambridge Scholars Press.
    The book focuses on three interrelated issues: the relationship between modernism and postmodernism; visuality and visual culture; and the relation between the East (former European socialist countries) and the West as regards aesthetics, globalization, culture, and the mechanisms of the presentation and representation of contemporary visual art. In the first part the author reflects upon some of the less noticed issues of modernism and its dominant theoretical narratives regarding art: its privileging of truth and its obfuscation of some (...)
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  21.  33
    Topographies of Class: Modern Architecture and Mass Society in Weimar Berlin.Owen Hatherley - 2010 - Historical Materialism 18 (2):177-194.
    The Weimar-Republic, and the modernist architecture and planning that was born there, is still a contested place, from whence liberals, reactionaries and Marxists can all trace their lineage. Sabine Hake’s Topographies of Class attempts to clarify this contestation, through an interdisciplinary study of the modernist geography of the interwar-capital, Berlin. The book offers many new insights into the Weimar-era city, countering a tendency on the Left to reject the twentieth-century city in favour of the romanticised ‘capitals of the nineteenth century’, (...)
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  22.  49
    The idea of the postmodern: a history.Johannes Willem Bertens - 1995 - New York: Routledge.
    Han Bertens' The Idea of the Postmodern is the first introductory overview of postmodernism to succeed in providing a witty and accessibile guide to the sometimes befuddling subject. In clear, straight forward, and always elegant prose, Bertens sets out the interdisciplinary aspects, the critical debates, the historical development and the key theorists of postmodernism. He also explains, in thoughtful and illuminating language, the relationship between postmodernism and poststructuralism, lucidly distinguishing modernism from postmodernism through an examination of the fields of (...)
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  23.  14
    Technology and Transparency as Realist Narrative.Chad Vincent Harris - 2011 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 36 (1):82-107.
    Since the early 1990s, high-resolution satellite imagery and imagery data, made by a vast system of architectures that were formally developed and monopolized by the U.S. military—industrial command economy, have become more widely available to the civilian public through a combination of declassified data sets, commercial satellite operators and imagery vendors, and value-added resellers of imagery data. In the various discourses surrounding imagery and the systems that collect, interpret, and construct them, this wider availability is associated with an increasing ‘‘global (...)
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  24.  37
    Le pop art américain : répétition ou différence.Didier Dauphin - 2011 - Nouvelle Revue d'Esthétique 7 (1):105-116.
    Résumé Que cela soit dans l’approche d’Arthur Danto ou dans celle de Jean Baudrillard, le pop’art américain a souvent été assimilé à une reproduction à l’identique par la peinture d’images empruntées au flux médiatique de la culture de masse. En donnant « droit de cité » dans le domaine du Grand-Art à des photographies de presse, des images publicitaires ou bien à celles de comics bon marché, le pop’art américain aurait ouvert la voie à une expression artistique enfin libérée de (...)
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  25. Music and the aural arts.Andy Hamilton - 2007 - British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (1):46-63.
    The visual arts include painting, sculpture, photography, video, and film. But many people would argue that music is the universal or only art of sound. In the modernist era, Western art music has incorporated unpitched sounds or ‘noise’, and I pursue the question of whether this process allows space for a non-musical soundart. Are there non-musical arts of sound—is there an art phonography, for instance, to parallel art photography? At the same time, I attempt a characterization of music, contrasting acoustic, (...)
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  26.  10
    Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture.Philip Sicker - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    Although Joyce was losing his sight when he wrote Ulysses, Stephen's and Bloom's visual experiences are extraordinarily rich and complex. Absorbing the influences of popular visual attractions such as dioramas, stereoscopes and mutoscopes, their perceptions of Dublin are shaped by what Walter Benjamin calls 'unconscious optics'. Analyzing closely the texture of their impressions and of Joyce's prismatic narrative styles, Philip Sicker explores the phenomenon of sight from a wide-ranging set of perspectives: eighteenth-century epistemology, theories of the flaneur, Italian Futurist art, (...)
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  27.  13
    Time Passing: Modernity and Nostalgia.Jody Gladding (ed.) - 2003 - Cambridge University Press.
    What do we mean when we say time passes? How do contingency and anachronism and other philosophical concepts bearing on time affect the more concrete realities of our political and cultural lives? In ways small and great, personal and cultural, we all experience the mutability of time. We feel it expand and contract, speed up and slow down, as it bends to the imperatives of memory, money, and the media. In our own time we have witnessed a disengagement with the (...)
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  28.  56
    Time Passing: Modernity and Nostalgia.Sylviane Agacinski - 2003 - Columbia University Press.
    What do we mean when we say time passes? How do contingency and anachronism and other philosophical concepts bearing on time affect the more (seemingly) concrete realities of our political and cultural lives? In ways small and great, personal and cultural, we all experience the mutability of time. We feel it expand and contract, speed up and slow down, as it bends to the imperatives of memory, money, and the media. In our own time (itself a pregnant phrase) we have (...)
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  29.  11
    Stanley Cavell and the arts: philosophy and popular culture.Rex Butler - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    In the late 1990s, Rosalind Krauss, one of the principal theorists of post-modernism in the arts, began using the term "post-medium" in her work. It was a nod to the American "ordinary language" philosopher Stanley Cavell, who had been thinking through a concept of medium in art for 30 years. Today with the decline of post-modernism, Stanley Cavell has emerged as one of the most important figures for thinking again about the visual arts, film and theatre. Stanley Cavell (...)
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  30.  5
    Mondrian's Philosophy of Visual Rhythm: Phenomenology, Wittgenstein, and Eastern thought.Eiichi Tosaki - 2017 - Dordrecht: Imprint: Springer.
    This volume investigates the meaning of visual rhythm through Piet Mondrian's unique approach to understanding rhythm in the compositional structure of painting, drawing reference from philosophy, aesthetics, and Zen culture. Its innovation lies in its reappraisal of a forgotten definition of rhythm as 'stasis' or 'composition' which can be traced back to ancient Greek thought. This conception of rhythm, the book argues, can be demonstrated in terms of pictorial strategy, through analysis of East Asian painting and calligraphy with which Greek (...)
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  31.  13
    The popular avant-garde.Renée M. Silverman (ed.) - 2010 - New York, NY: Rodopi.
    The avant-garde has been popular for some time, but its popularity has tended to fly under the radar. This ¿popular avant-garde,¿ conceived as the meeting ground of the avant-garde and popular, avoids the divorce of art and praxis of which the avant-garde has been accused. The Popular Avant-Garde takes stock of the debates about both the ¿historical¿ (¿modernist¿) and posterior avant-gardes, and sets them in relation to popular culture and art forms. With a critical introduction that examines the concepts of (...)
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  32.  25
    Recent PhD Abstracts.Sheena Calvert & Nigel Green - 2010 - Philosophy of Photography 1 (2):241-245.
    [Un]disciplined Gestures and [Un]common sense: The Sensual, Acoustic Logic[s] of Paradox and Art Photography and the Representation of Modernist Architectural Space: From the Melancholy Fragment to the Colour of Utopia.
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  33.  10
    Jacques Henri Lartigue: The Invention of an Artist.Kevin D. Moore - 2004 - Princeton University Press.
    As a young boy, Jacques Henri Lartigue set about passionately recording his life in photographs, first documenting his domestic circle and later capturing the auto races, air shows, and fashionable watering holes of the Belle époque. His images have so bewitched modern viewers that even scholars have failed to see them clearly. In Jacques Henri Lartigue: The Invention of an Artist, Kevin Moore puts to rest the long-held myth of Lartigue as a naïve boy genius whose creations were based on (...)
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  34.  45
    Re-presenting racial reality:Chicago’s new (media) Negro artists of the depression era.Richard A. Courage - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 10 (2-3):309-318.
    Since literary historian Robert Bone published his seminal essay ‘Richard Wright and the Chicago Renaissance’ in 1986, scholars have created new cartographies of previously unexplored terrain in American cultural history. The earliest studies focused on literature, but more recently attention has turned to other disciplines, including visual arts. Recent publication of The Muse in Bronzeville: African American Creative Expression in Chicago, 1932–1950 (2011) by Robert Bone and Richard A. Courage promises to decisively broaden scholarly understandings of the scope and significance (...)
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  35.  25
    Documentary.Julian Stallabrass (ed.) - 2013 - MIT Press.
    Documentary has undergone a marked revival in recent art, following a long period in which it was a denigrated and unfashionable practice. This has in part been led by the exhibition of photographic and video work on political issues at Documenta and numerous biennials and, since the turn of the century, issues of injustice, violence and trauma in increasing zones of conflict. Aesthetically, documentary is now one of the most prominent modes of art-making, in part assisted by the linked transformation (...)
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  36.  61
    Arthur Wesley Dow's Address in Kyoto, Japan.Akio Okazaki - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (4):84.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.4 (2003) 84-93 [Access article in PDF] Arthur Wesley Dow's Address in Kyoto, Japan (1903) Researchers concerned with the historical development of American art education cannot help but acknowledge Arthur Wesley Dow's significant contribution to the field. Although many writers have recognized him as one of greatest figures in art education, 1 it was not until the end of the twentieth century that art (...)
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  37.  6
    The Cinematic.David Campany (ed.) - 2007 - MIT Press.
    Key writings by artists and theorists chart the shifting relationship between film and photography and how the rise of cinema forced photography to make a virtue of its stillness. The cinematic has been a springboard for the work of many influential artists, including Victor Burgin, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Stan Douglas, Nan Goldin, Douglas Gordon, Cindy Sherman, and Jeff Wall, among others. Much recent cinema, meanwhile, is rich with references to contemporary photography. Video art has taken a photographic turn into pensive slowness; (...)
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  38.  28
    Editor's Introduction: I. Writing Modern Art and Science – An Overview; II. Cubism, Futurism, and Ether Physics in the Early Twentieth Century.Linda Dalrymple Henderson - 2004 - Science in Context 17 (4):423-466.
    This issue of Science in Context presents a sampling of current work by art historians examining modern artists' engagement with science as well as the relationship of photography to both science and art. The essays' topics span the mid-to-later nineteenth century to the 1960s and, thus, in a series of case studies provide an introduction to aspects of artistic modernism. Indeed, it is impossible to understand fully many of the radical innovations of modern art without some knowledge of an (...)
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  39. Aesthetics in the 21st Century: Walter Derungs & Oliver Minder.Peter Burleigh - 2012 - Continent 2 (4):237-243.
    Located in Kleinbasel close to the Rhine, the Kaskadenkondensator is a place of mediation and experimental, research-and process-based art production with a focus on performance and performative expression. The gallery, founded in 1994, and located on the third floor of the former Sudhaus Warteck Brewery (hence cascade condenser), seeks to develop interactions between artists, theorists and audiences. Eight, maybe, nine or ten 40 litre bags of potting compost lie strewn about the floor of a high-ceilinged white washed hall. Dumped, split (...)
     
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  40.  21
    Signs of the Sky, Signs of the Times.John Beck - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (7-8):123-139.
    From Alfred Stieglitz to Trevor Paglen, photographs of the sky have engaged with the relationship between abstraction and representation. This article argues that Stieglitz’s attempt to convert the ‘natural’ abstraction of the sky into the ‘cultural’ abstraction of the modernist image opens a space through which recent photographers have moved to use the sky photograph as a means of interrogating issues of openness and concealment that are at once aesthetic and political. The invisibility of signs of military-industrial power embedded within (...)
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  41.  32
    Photographic Architecture in the Twentieth Century.Claire Zimmerman - 2014 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Photographic Architecture and the Spread of German Modernism is a “picture anthropology” of modern architecture, showing how photography shaped its development, its reception, and its history in the 20th c. At first, architects used photography to promote their practices, even as they doubted its value and efficacy as a means of representation. Unlike other representations, photographs were both too real, and not real enough. Furthermore, the photographic image acted on its subject like an alchemical agent. Photography altered the material (...)
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  42.  8
    Eva Besnyö: Budapest - Berlin - Amsterdam.Marion Beckers & Elisabeth Moortgat (eds.) - 2011 - Hirmer Publishers.
    "Eva Besnyö was not only an exceptionally gifted photographer but was also politically active during her lifetime: she acquired her photographic skills in the studio of József Pécsi in Budapest, became aware of the aesthetics of modern photography in the early 1930s in Berlin and became a respected master photographer in Amsterdam. Eva Besnyö's life and work were not only influenced by Modernism the arts but also by the dramatic political movements and events of 20th century Europe such as (...)
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  43.  78
    Exalting Points of View A Discussion of Michael Fried's Interpretation of Wittgenstein's Contribution to Aesthetic Thought.Cato Wittusen - 2012 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 23 (43).
    This paper discusses how Wittgenstein’s thinking informs recent conversations about art and aesthetic practice by examining his influence on the work of the noted modernist art critic, Michael Fried. Fried considers an excerpt from Wittgenstein’s Culture and Value, with a puzzling thought experiment, to help us see more clearly the Canadian artist Jeff Wall’s photographic vision and aesthetic. I consider Fried’s account of the photographic practice of Jeff Wall, especially his photograph Morning Cleaning, Mies van der Rohe Foundation (1999).
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  44.  25
    Transmediation: Tracing the social aesthetic.Andrew Dewdney - 2011 - Philosophy of Photography 2 (1):97-113.
    This article discusses how the use of mobile media in digital culture is ushering in a new set of conditions for the realization of the social reception of art. This is to say that mobile media practices present a renewed challenge to major national art museums in their organization and practices of display and exhibition. The problematic explored here is that between the art museum's continued attachment to aesthetic abstraction in the modernist trope and the clamouring and tumultuous world of (...)
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  45. the Process-Relational Vision'and reply.Confessional Post-Modernism - 1989 - Process Studies 18:83-94.
     
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  46.  41
    (1 other version)Evidence and Graham Harman’s Third Table.Peter Ainsworth - 2015 - Philosophy of Photography 6 (1):36-50.
    In this article I discuss Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel’s Evidence, 1977 contextualized by Graham Harman’s text, produced for ‘dOCUMENTA’, The Third Table, 2012. It is my contention that, although Evidence may have been produced to subvert the modernist tropes of authorship and narrative, or to draw our attention to visual material, which is ‘ready-to-hand’, the photographs can also be explored as a visual metaphor for Graham Harman’s approach to Object-Orientated Ontology. I seek to demonstrate that there is significance in (...)
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  47.  50
    Technical Image. Opaque Apparatus of Programmed Significance.Anaïs Nony - 2022 - In Jaffe Aaron (ed.), Understanding Flusser Understanding Modernism. London: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 302-304.
    With the concept of the technical image, Flusser indicates a historical shift in the structure of Western society.1 Technical images, as found in photographs, films, videos, computer terminals, and television screens, designate images produced by an apparatus designed to create programmed information. Contrary to traditional images which carry significance through representation as seen in paintings, technical images are surfaces that operate according to “inverted vectors of meaning.”2 The meaning of a technical image is not found in what the image signifies (...)
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  48.  31
    (1 other version)The Promise of Pragmatism: Modernism and the Crisis of Knowledge and Authority.John Patrick Diggins - 1994 - University of Chicago Press.
    The book also draws on an alternative set of American thinkers to explore the blind spots in the pragmatic temper."—William Connolly, New York Times Book Review "An extraordinarily ambitious work of both analysis and synthesis. . .
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  49.  43
    Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism.Ewa Płonowska Ziarek - 2012 - Columbia University Press.
    Ewa Ziarek fully articulates a feminist aesthetics, focusing on the struggle for freedom in women's literary and political modernism and the devastating impact of racist violence and sexism. She examines the contradiction between women's transformative literary and political practices and the oppressive realities of racist violence and sexism, and she situates these tensions within the entrenched opposition between revolt and melancholia in studies of modernity and within the friction between material injuries and experimental aesthetic forms. Ziarek's political and aesthetic (...)
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  50.  20
    No maps for these territories: exploring philosophy through photography.Alun Kirby - 2021 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 64:47-71.
    I begin by examining perception of photographs from two directions: what we think photographs are, and the aspects of mind involved when viewing photographs. Traditional photographs are shown to be mnemonic tools, and memory identified as a key part of the process by which photographs are fully perceived. Second, I describe the metamorphogram; a non-traditional photograph which fits specific, author-defined criteria for being memory. The metamorphogram is shown to be analogous to a composite of all an individual’s episodic memories. Finally, (...)
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