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Tom Holert: Design and Shine

24 Mar

Image

In the context of the current seminar Imagining the Image, which this year focuses on the image as object or thing endowed with agency, VAMA welcomes the art historian, critic and artist Tom Holert for a reading seminar and presentation on April 16. This event is organized in collaboration with (and at) Casco, office for art, design and theory in Utrecht. We will focus on two of Holert’s projects as theorist and video maker: the essay Distributed Agency, Design’s Potentiality (2011) and the video installation The Labours of Shine (2012). The essay will be discussed in a VAMA reading seminar during the afternoon, whereas the video installation will be presented and discussed by Holert during a public Casco “open seminar” in the evening.

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The day begins with the closed VAMA reading seminar focusing on Distributed Agency, Design’s Potentiality. In this text, Holert acknowledges that the ubiquity of design in contemporary life “has long been bemoaned by cultural critics as the utmost symptom of the postmodernist loss of substance to surface,” but that this general presence of design marks a position of great potential. Analysing what he identifies as the “distributed agency” of design, Holert argues that “design can only be understood as an activity situated in an arena where ‘participation’, if at all, is happening under the condition of competition and conflict. Instead of glossing over social, cultural and economic inequalities, design, in its microprocessual capacity to engage with the local and the particular, is bent to acknowledge difference—not as distinction, but as struggle.”

Holert’s recent video installation The Labours of Shine, installed at Casco for the occasion,   answers the complains of the “loss of substance to surface” by investigating the substance of surface itself—more specifically the shine of various objects and the labour invested in its production. Holert zaps from everyday objects to high art and explores Hollywood’s representation and repression of political and racial struggles. In a surprising juxtaposition of the shoeshiner in classic movies with Brancusi’s polished metal sculptures, he examines how the labour of shine, of producing shining surfaces, generates its own contradictions and conflicts. The Labours of Shine will be screened and discussed by Holert with auIMG_0033IMG_0049dience members.

Tom Holert (* 1962) is an art historian, critic, curator and artist. A former editor of Texte zur Kunst and Spex, he currently lives and works in Berlin. Holert is honorary professor of art theory and cultural studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna where he, from 2008 to 2011, held the chair of Epistemology and Methodology of Art Production and co-coordinated the Center for Art/Knowledge (CAK) and the PhD in Practice. He also (with Johanna Schaffer) headed the WWTF funded research project „Troubling Research. Performing Knowledge in the Arts“ (2010-2011). Alongside his writings on contemporary art, Holert has (co-)authored books on visual culture, politics, war, mobility, glamour, and the governmentality of the present. Currently his research focusses on questions of art and knowledge (developing ideas first elaborated in his 1997 Künstlerwissen. Studien zur Semantik künstlerischer Kompetenz im Frankreich des 18. und frühen 19. Jahrhunderts); he is also working on a book on the visual culture of experimental psychology (The Diagnostic Modern). As an artist Holert recently participated in the 8th Gwangju Biennale 2010, Forum Expanded 2011 (Berlin Film Festival), Transmediale (Berlin, 2012) and Animismus (House of World Cultures, Berlin, 2012).

Updated with photos of the event. (Yes, good food is an essential ingredient of VAMA activities.)

Seminar with Caroline van Eck

8 Feb

On Monday February 18 we welcome Caroline van Eck of Leiden University for a VAMA reading seminar. We will discuss two recent texts by her on sculpture, agency and petrifaction: “Living Statues: Alfred Gell’s Art and Agency, Living Presence Response and the Sublime” and “Medusa as the Ultimate Sculptress: Stone, Petrifaction and Life.” This reading seminar complements this semester’s “Imagining the Image” course, which investigates the embodied image—the image as object and/or thing.

Caroline van Eck is professor in the history and theory of architecture and the arts to 1800 at Leiden University. Her homepage is at http://www.hum.leiden.edu/research/artandagency/staff/eckcavan.html

New Opportunities

31 Jan

A whole range of listings have just been added to the Opportunities page, from Kunstlicht‘s call for a digital whizzkid in the Internships section to new Ph.D. positions in architectural history listed in Future Prospects.

In addition, several Call for Papers have been added as well. Among them is a Call for Papers for a one-day symposium entitled Uneasy Alliances, which will be held by the OSK on May 23, 2013 at the University of Amsterdam. The symposium is organized to mark the foundation of the European Society for Nineteenth Century Art, a new working group in nineteenth-century art studies that has been formed under the auspices of the OSK’s Modern and Contemporary Art section. ESNA aims to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas between scholars, graduate students, and museum professionals based in the Netherlands whose research focuses on European art of the long nineteenth century. It also welcomes collaboration on events with similar working groups in other countries, including XIX: Werkgroep 19de-eeuwse Kunst based in Belgium.  

In other news, OSK is organizing several courses for Research Master students and Ph.D. Candidates this summer. In collaboration with the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Analysis (NICA), for instance, they will offer a summer school on Memory and the Museum. More information on this course, worth 4 ects, can be found here. For the complete overview of courses offered by OSK, please visit http://www.onderzoekschoolkunstgeschiedenis.nl/site/index.php?page=edu-researchmaster&lngg=nl

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Signing off for the Holidays…

20 Dec

It’s getting quiet in the hallways and it’s time to sign off for the holidays. But we’re not leaving you empty-handed!

Check out the Call for Papers section for two new and exciting graduate symposia that you can apply to. They are designed especially for young scholars, so they could be the perfect opportunity to get yourself and your research out there.

Be sure to check out the websites from our affiliated Research Schools, they may have some interesting courses and opportunities for you. You can find them at:
http://www.onderzoekschoolkunstgeschiedenis.nl/
http://www.nica-institute.com/
http://www.rmes.nl/

And to top things off: two new students will be joining the group of VAMA first-year students in January. Be sure to give Boris Cukovic and Alexandra Zimnicaru a warm welcome.

Enjoy the holidays, and we’ll see you in 2013, when courses include “Research Design I” and “Imagining the Image,” in addition to a wide range of other seminars to choose from.

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VAMA Seminar with T.J. Demos

13 Nov

Vincent Meessen, Vita Nova (still), 2009 

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On November 19, VAMA participants will convene for a reading seminar with T.J. Demos, focusing on his forthcoming book Return to the Postcolony: Spectres of Colonialism in Contemporary Art. In this book and in his other forthcoming volume, The Migrant Image: The Art and Politics of Documentary during Global Crisis, Demos assesses artistic responses to globalization and responds to the methodological challenges which these practices pose to the discipline of art history.

 T.J. Demos is reader in modern and contemporary art at UCL. If you want to know more about him, please consult http://www.ucl.ac.uk/art-history/about_us/academic_staff/dr_tj_demos

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Jonas Staal Reading Seminar

29 Oct

3rd FORMER WEST Research Congress, Part Two – Jonas Staal from Openwebcast.nl on Vimeo.

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This Wednesday, October 31, VAMA will welcome artist Jonas Staal for a new VAMA Reading Seminar. The artist will give a talk discussing his ‘artistic Ph.D.’ research on art and/as propaganda, his take on institutional critique, and most specifically his project for an ‘Ideological Guide to the Venice Biennial’. All of this will hopefully be followed by a lively discussion.

Non-VAMA students who are interested in Staal’s work and ideas can check out the video above or can visit De Appel (Amsterdam) or BAK (Utrecht) where some of his work is currently being shown in group shows. For even more information on his work and writings, visit the artist’s website: www.jonasstaal.nl

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