Introduction to Electronic Art Through the Teaching of Jacques Lacan: Strangest Thing

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1991a
1991b
A-flat Major
A01=David Bard-Schwarz
Acousmatic Voice
acoustic
Acoustic Mirror
Adobe Illustrator CS4
Author_David Bard-Schwarz
Black Wires
Candice Breitz
Category=ABA
Category=AFKV
Category=JMAF
Chopin
contemporary visual culture
critical theory applications
digital aesthetics
documentation
Dotted Eighth Note
Eduardo Kac
Electronic Art
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ideological Interpellation
interactive installations
Lacan 1991b
Martha Argerich
media perception
mirror
Mirror Stage
objet
Objet Petit
online
Osborn's Work
Pe Lang
Peripheral Rhythm
petit
Play Back
Portrait Of A Man
psychoanalysis in electronic art
psychoanalytic theory
Punta Della Dogana
sonorous
Sonorous Envelope
Specular Exchange
stage
Tiller Girls
Wooden Mirror

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415500586
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Dec 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Electronic art offers endless opportunities for reflection and interpretation. Works can be interactive or entirely autonomous and the viewer's perception and reaction to them may be challenged by constantly transforming images. Whether the transformations are a product of the appearances or actions of a viewer in an installation space, or a product of a self-contained computer program, is a source of constant fascination. Some viewers may feel strange or unnerved by a work, while others may feel welcoming, humorous, and playful emotions. The art may also provoke a critical response to social, aesthetic, and political aspects of early twenty-first-century life. This book approaches electronic art through the teachings of Jacques Lacan, whose return to Freud has exerted a powerful and wide-ranging influence on psychoanalysis and critical theory in the twentieth century.

David Bard-Schwarz draws on his experience with Lacanian psychoanalysis, music, and interactive and traditional arts in order to address aspects of the works the viewer may find difficult to understand. Dividing his approach over four thematic chapters—Bodies, Voices, Eyes, and Signifiers—Bard-Schwarz explores the links between works of new media and psychoanalysis (how we process what we see, hear, touch, imagine, and remember).

This is a fascinating book for new media artists and critics, museum curators, psychologists, students in the fine arts, and those who are interested in digital technology and contemporary culture.

David Bard-Schwarz is an Associate Professor of Music Theory in the College of Music at the University of North Texas, USA, where he works on the arts and psychoanalysis in modern culture.

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