Bloomsbury Home
- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Art & Visual Culture
- Art and Visual Culture - Other
- Art as Far as the Eye Can See
Art as Far as the Eye Can See
This product is usually dispatched within 3 days
- Delivery and returns info
-
Free CA delivery on orders $40 or over
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
Paul Virilio puts art back where it matters - at the centre of politics. Art used to be an engagement between artist and materials. But in our new media world art has changed, its very materials have changed and have become technologized.
This change reflects a broader social shift. Speed and politics - what Virilio defined as the key characteristics of the twentieth century - have been transformed in the twenty-first century to speed and mass culture. And the defining characteristic of mass culture today is panic.
This induced panic relies on a new, all-seeing technology. And the first casualty of this is the human response. What we are losing is the very human 'art of seeing', one individual's engagement with another or with an event, be that political or artistic. What we are losing is our sense of the aesthetic. Where art used to talk of the aesthetics of disappearance, it must now confront the disappearance of the aesthetic.
Table of Contents
1. Expect the Unexpected
2. An Exorbitant Art
3. The Night of the Museums
4. Art as Far as the Eye Can See
Notes
Product details
Published | Jan 01 2010 |
---|---|
Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 144 |
ISBN | 9781847885401 |
Imprint | Berg Publishers |
Illustrations | index |
Dimensions | 189 x 134 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
An exceptional, even visionary mind.
Leonardo Digital Reviews
-
If Walter Benjamin had one true intellectual descendant who extended his inquiries into the second half of the twentieth century, this must be Paul Virilio.
Lev Manovich, author of The Language of New Media
-
Virilio is an impressive commentator on the conditioning power of the mass media. .... He flits from image to image like a poet and usually builds to a profound climax.
The Guardian
-
[Paul Virilio is] the zestfully polemical French philosopher of speed [who] no doubt hopes to ruffle a few complacent feathers with his Art As Far As the Eye Can See.
Seven Poole, Guardian Unlimited
-
For those interested in particular and current problems with art, the visual, and art as an institution, I think this book is certainly worth the read.
M/C Reviews