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Hybrid Practices: Art in Collaboration with Science and Technology in the Long 1960s [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 329 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x25 mm, weight: 953 g, 85 b-w images
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Nov-2018
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • ISBN-10: 0520296591
  • ISBN-13: 9780520296596
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 329 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x25 mm, weight: 953 g, 85 b-w images
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Nov-2018
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • ISBN-10: 0520296591
  • ISBN-13: 9780520296596
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
In Hybrid Practices, essays by established and emerging scholars investigate the rich ecology of practices that typified the era of the Cold War. The volume showcases three projects at the forefront of unprecedented collaboration between the arts and new sectors of industrial society in the 1960s and 70s—Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.), the Art and Technology Project at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (A&T), and the Artist Placement Group (APG) in the UK. The subjects covered include collaborative projects between artists and scientists, commercial ventures and experiments in intermedia, multidisciplinary undertakings, effacing authorship to activate the spectator, suturing gaps between art and government, and remapping the landscape of everyday life in terms of technological mediation. Among the artists discussed in the volume and of interest to a broad public beyond the art world are Bernd and Hilla Becher, John Cage, Hans Haacke, Robert Irwin, John Latham, Fujiko Nakaya, Carolee Schneemann, James Turrell, Yvonne Rainer, Robert Rauschenberg, and Robert Whitman. Prominent engineers and scientists appearing in the book’s pages include Elsa Garmire, Billy Klüver, Frank Malina, Stanley Milgram, and Ed Wortz. This valuable collection aims to introduce readers not only to hybrid work in and as depth, but also to work in and as breadth, across disciplinary practices where the real questions of hybridity are determined.

Recenzijos

"The hybrid practices featured in this collection speak to collaboration and participation, between disciplines and between presenters and audiences. They speak to a fluidity of working in and across scientific, artistic, and performance disciplines." * Leonardo * "...[ a] welcome addition to the field of hybrid practices."  * Espace * "Specialists interested in inhabiting a range of situated environments from new points of view will find many rewards in Hybrid Practices." * Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society * "This book. . . . show[ s] how interdisciplinarity allowed each community to reflect and find its place in a changing world. . . .[ it] is well edited and allows a relevant understanding of all the case studies." * Technology and Culture *

Foreword vii
Saralyn Reece Hardy
Rebecca Blocksome
Introduction: Reassessing Hybrid Practice 1(20)
David Cateforis
Steven Duval
Shepherd Steiner
PART I FALLOUT: CREATIVITY AND INVENTION IN, AS, OR BETWEEN ART, SCIENCE, AND GOVERNMENT
21(90)
1 Launching "Hybrid Practices" in the 1960s: On the Perils and Promise of Art and Technology
23(22)
Anne Collins Goodyear
2 Identity, Rhetoric, and Method in the Collaborations of Experiments in Art and Technology, the Artist Placement Group, and the Art and Technology Program at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
45(16)
Steven Duval
3 Fallout and Spinoff: Commercializing the Art-Technology Nexus
61(18)
W. Patrick McCray
4 Beyond Method and without Object: Subject as Inquiry in the Irwin-Wortz Collaboration
79(12)
Dawna Schuld
5 Monuments to the Period We Live In
91(20)
Craig Richardson
PART II AFFECTIVE FEEDBACK: TIME, PLAY, AND CONTAGION AS SYSTEMS OF PARTICIPATION
111(52)
6 Sounding Snows: Bodily Static and the Politics of Visibility during the Vietnam War
113(12)
Erica Levin
7 Contagious Creativity: Participatory Engagement in the Magic Theater Exhibition (1968)
125(16)
Cristina Albu
8 Programming and Reprogramming the Institution: Systems Politics in Hans Haacke's Photoelectric Viewer-Programmed Coordinate System
141(22)
John A. Tyson
PART III THRESHOLDS OF THE VISIBLE: TECHNOLOGIES OF THE EVERYDAY
163(64)
9 Technologies of Indeterminacy: John Cage Invents
165(22)
Sandra Skurvida
10 Dramaturgical Devices and Stanley Milgram's Hybrid Practice
187(22)
Maya Rae Oppenheimer
11 Prostheses or Technical Extensions: Rereading the Work of Bernd and Hilla Becher
209(18)
Shepherd Steiner
Supplement: The Hale Experiments: Object-Oriented Ventriloquy during the Cold War An ESTAR(SER) project by the Prosopopoeia Working Group 227(30)
Acknowledgments 257(2)
List of Contributors 259(4)
List of Illustrations 263(2)
Index 265
David Cateforis is Professor and Chair of Art History at the University of Kansas. He has published widely on twentieth-century American art and international contemporary art. He is the editor of Rethinking Andrew Wyeth and Decade of Transformation: American Art of the 1960s and coeditor of Albert Bloch: Artistic and Literary Perspectives.   Steven Duval is an artist and researcher based in Buffalo, New York, who has shown work in the Gwangju biennale, Nuit Blanche Paris, Apexarts New York, and the Fruitmarket Gallery in Edinburgh. He also runs the Independent Arts Research project.    Shepherd Steiner is Associate Professor of Contemporary Art and Theory at the University of Manitoba. He is the coeditor of Cork Caucus: On Art, Possibility and Democracy and The New Criticism: Formalist Literary Theory in America and Abroad. He is the author of Rodney Graham: Phonokinetoscope and the editor of Mosaic, an Interdisciplinary Critical Journal.