Embodied vulnerabilities : responding to violent encounters through installation practices
Data(s) |
2009
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Resumo |
This practice-led research was initiated in response to a series of violent encounters that occurred between my fragile installations and viewers. The central focus of this study was to recuperate my installation practice in the wake of such events. This led to the development of a ‘responsive practice’ methodology, which reframed the installation process through an ethical lens developed from Emmanuel Levinas’ ethical phenomenology. The central propositions of this research are the reconceptualisation of ‘violent encounters’ in terms of difference whereby I accept viewers responses, even those which are violent, destructive or damaging, and secondly that the process operates as a generative excess for practice through which recuperative strategies can be found and implemented. By re-examining this process as it unfolded in the three phases of the practical component, I developed strategies whereby violated, destroyed or damaged works could be recuperated through the processes of reconfiguration, reparation and regeneration. Therefore my installations embody and articulate vulnerability but also demonstrate resilience and renewal. |
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application/pdf application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Queensland University of Technology |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27663/1/Rachael_Haynes_Thesis.pdf http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27663/2/Rachael_Haynes_Citation.pdf Haynes, Rachael Anne (2009) Embodied vulnerabilities : responding to violent encounters through installation practices. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology. |
Fonte |
Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering |
Palavras-Chave | #installation, ephemeral artworks, destruction and art, paper art, ethical response , responsive practice Eva Hesse , Emmanuel Levinas, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Sarah Sze |
Tipo |
Thesis |