1st Edition

Contemporary Art and Digital Culture

By Melissa Gronlund Copyright 2017
    230 Pages
    by Routledge

    230 Pages
    by Routledge

    Contemporary Art and Digital Culture analyses the impact of the internet and digital technologies upon art today. Art over the last fifteen years has been deeply inflected by the rise of the internet as a mass cultural and socio-political medium, while also responding to urgent economic and political events, from the financial crisis of 2008 to the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East.

    This book looks at how contemporary art addresses digitality, circulation, privacy, and globalisation, and suggests how feminism and gender binaries have been shifted by new mediations of identity. It situates current artistic practice both in canonical art history and in technological predecessors such as cybernetics and net.art, and takes stock of how the art-world infrastructure has reacted to the internet’s promises of democratisation.

    An invaluable resource for undergraduate and postgraduate students of contemporary art – especially those studying history of art and art practice and theory – as well as those working in film, media, curation, or art education.

    Melissa Gronlund is a writer and lecturer on contemporary art, specialising in the moving image. From 2007–2015, she was co-editor of the journal Afterall, and her writing has appeared there and in Artforum, e-flux journal, frieze, the NewYorker.com, and many other places.

    Introduction: Beyond the Visible Image

    Chapter One: Reproducibility and Appropriation in the Twentieth Century: Precursors to the Digital Age

    Chapter Two: Cybernetics and the Posthuman: The Emergence of Art Systems

    Chapter Three: Challenges to Immateriality: Posthumanist Thought and Digitality

    Chapter Four: Violence and the Surveilled Internet

    Chapter Five: Identity, Language and the Body Online

    Chapter Six: The Art World Infrastructure Post-Internet

    Biography

    Melissa Gronlund is a writer and lecturer on contemporary art, specialising in the moving image. From 2007–2015, she was co-editor of the journal Afterall, and her writing has appeared there and in Artforum, e-flux journal, frieze, the NewYorker.com, and many other places.

    "Contemporary Art and Digital Culture succeeds in tracing a lineage for contemporary digital art and in more broadly contextualizing its defining practices in digital culture."

    - Lindsay LeBlanc, Prefix Photo Magazine