Ebook: Gestures of Seeing in Film, Video and Drawing
- Tags: Performing Arts, Dance, Individual Directors, Magic & Illusion, Reference, Theater, Arts & Photography, History, History & Criticism, Arts & Photography, Movies, Adaptations, Amateur Production, Biographies, Direction & Production, Documentaries, Encyclopedias, Genre Films, Guides & Reviews, History & Criticism, Industry, Reference, Screenplays, Screenwriting, Theory, Video, Humor & Entertainment, Aesthetics, Philosophy, Politics & Social Sciences, Aesthetics, Philosophy, Humanities, New Used & Rental Textbooks, Specialty Bouti
- Series: Routledge Advances in Art and Visual Studies
- Year: 2016
- Publisher: Routledge
- Language: English
- pdf
The first book of its kind, Gestures of Seeing in Film, Video and Drawing engages broadly with the often too neglected yet significant questions of gesture in visual culture. In our turbulent mediasphere where images – as lenses bearing on their own circumstances – are constantly mobilized to enact symbolic forms of warfare and where they get entangled in all kinds of cultural conflicts and controversies, a turn to the gestural life of images seems to promise a particularly pertinent avenue of intellectual inquiry. The complex gestures of the artwork remain an under-explored theoretical topos in contemporary visual culture studies. In visual art, the gestural appears to be that which intervenes between form and content, materiality and meaning. But as a conceptual force it also impinges upon the very process of seeing itself. As a critical and heuristic trope, the gestural galvanizes many of the most pertinent areas of inquiry in contemporary debates and scholarship in visual culture and related disciplines: ethics (images and their values and affects), aesthetics (from visual essentialism to transesthetics and synesthesia), ecology (iconoclastic gestures and spaces of conflict), and epistemology (questions of the archive, memory and documentation). Offering fresh perspectives on many of these areas, Gestures of Seeing in Film, Video and Drawing will be intensely awaited by readers from and across several disciplines, such as anthropology, linguistics, performance, theater, film and visual studies.