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LUX/ICA Biennial Student Symposium: Contemporary Currents

LUX/ICA Biennial Student Symposium: Contemporary Currents

27 May 2012

In addition to the talks programme, the students of the LUX/Central Saint-Martins MRes Art: Moving Image course have co-produced a two-day student symposium for UK-based MA and PhD students to present their research into artists’ moving image.

Programme

  • Keynote address: Maeve Connolly, Television, Cultural Legitimation and Contemporary Art

    Maeve Connolly is a writer, lecturer and research fellow at Internationales Kolleg für Kulturtechnikforschung und Medienphilosophie (IKKM), Weimar Bauhaus University.

    The past decade has been marked both by proclamations of the ‘end of television’ and by the cultural validation of ‘quality television’. But while the cultural status of shows such as The Sopranos and Mad Men is often asserted through reference to concepts associated with art discourse (such as authorship, distinction and preservation), contemporary artists and curators have actually been drawn toward genres that are usually excluded from the ‘quality’ discourse, such as reality TV, sitcoms and soaps. Informed by these contradictions, this paper explores recent and ongoing televisual currents in exhibition-making and art practice.

  • Katy Connor: From Solid Light to Satellite: the materiality of the moving image as broadcast signal and data

    Considering the age of electromagnetic networks, broadcast and invisibility as necessary context, this paper will discuss the material qualities of the live, digital video signal embedded within satellite telecommunications; how this shares a profound relationship with light, space, sound and noise.

    Drawing on a rich history of conceptual moving-image practice, specific reference will be made to PURE FLOW (2011), a live moving image APP that visualises the noise in networked GPS data; exploring audiovisual disturbance in its aesthetic value.

    EMERGE, Bournemouth University Media School

  • Christopher C de Selincourt: Where is the Mind of the Media Editor?

    As new technologies claim cognitive territories previously identified by humans as human, some would argue that it becomes increasingly difficult to locate where the human mind stops and the rest of the world begins (Clark & Chalmers, 1998). Moving image editors occupy a key position with respect to this enquiry, one that is situated between both human and machine, actual and virtual, self and other, and will be used in this paper to examine the boundaries between mind and world.

    Cardiff School of Art and Design

  • Rebecca Birch: Field Montage

    This paper looks at immediacy and the montage of disparate 'presents' in the live broadcast moving image artwork, as enacted by the project Field Broadcast, where moving image artworks are sent directly from remote locations to the viewer's computer. The production of the broadcast is affected by contingent factors such as location weather and light, whilst the viewer receives the broadcast as an individual montage within their computer desktop, and wider surroundings: radio, email and film. In this simultaneous production and reception, the ‘now’ of the artist co-habits unexpectedly with the ‘now’ of the viewer.

    Loughborough University School of the Arts

  • Marialaura Ghidini: Working through and beyond web-based video platforms: towards a redefinition of moving image

    The wide access to web tools, which have progressively become user-friendly, has produced an increase in the number of artistic operations which employ (or exploit) web-based video platforms as modes of distributing work. Working with such online sites has also affected artistic strategies of production; generating a realignment between distribution and content creation that might require a renewed look at the merging of form, content, context and channels of dissemination. Through a brief investigation into selected moving image projects and works, this paper aims to highlight the idea of ‘working through and beyond’ web-based video platforms, suggesting a tendency to move between online and offline dimensions.

    CRUMB, University of Sunderland

Resources

When

E.g., 31-07-2021
E.g., 31-07-2021