Worldly feelings made material : cosmopolitan aesthetics, affect and recent relational art


Autoria(s): Gaffney, Kiley
Data(s)

01/12/2012

Resumo

The openness and compassion implicit in the social transaction of recent philosophies of cosmopolitanism is reflected in the aims of the body of interpersonal, process-driven artworks commonly referred to as relational art. In attempting to bring art into life, specifically as a point of intervention in the lives of its spectators, the affective power required to realize the communal and participatory aims of many of these artworks is central. Relational art practices invite the individualising distinctiveness of the spectator yet ultimately seek the collective affect of the artwork’s formulated community. Like cosmopolitanism, this is a felt community where the obligatory affective investment is imagined as open and empathic built on mutual exchange and generosity. They suggest that it doesn’t matter so much what we feel about art but what and how we feel through art. The artworld’s public spheres have become increasingly affective worlds, where the artwork’s coerced and managed human relations are conceived as interstices for a more open exchange with art and each other. With reference to Sydney Biennale’s recent All My Relations exhibition, this paper will interrogate how worldly feelings are made material by the requisite emotional and aesthetic labour of feeling for and with others in relational art.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/65405/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/65405/2/65405.pdf

Gaffney, Kiley (2012) Worldly feelings made material : cosmopolitan aesthetics, affect and recent relational art. In Cultural Studies Association of Australasia Annual Conference 2012 : Materialities: Economies, Empiricism & Things, 4 - 6 December 2012, University of Sydney, Australia. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2012 Kiley Gaffney

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; Music & Sound

Palavras-Chave #190100 ART THEORY AND CRITICISM #200200 CULTURAL STUDIES
Tipo

Conference Paper