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This collection explores the cultural fascination with social media
forms of self-portraiture, "selfies," with a specific interest in
online self-imaging strategies in a Western context. This book
examines the selfie as a social and technological phenomenon but
also engages with digital self-portraiture as representation: as
work that is committed to rigorous object-based analysis. The
scholars in this volume consider the topic of online
self-portraiture—both its social function as a technology-driven
form of visual communication, as well as its thematic,
intellectual, historical, and aesthetic intersections with the
history of art and visual culture. This book will be of interest to
scholars of photography, art history, and media studies.
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Darrel Ellis (Hardcover)
Darrel Ellis; Text written by Steven G Fullwood, Derek Conrad Murray, Tiana Reid; Contributions by Sadie Barnette, …
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R1,029
Discovery Miles 10 290
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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What impact do sexual politics and queer identities have on the
understanding of 'blackness' as a set of visual, cultural and
intellectual concerns? In Queering Post-Black Art, Derek Conrad
Murray argues that the rise of female, gay and lesbian artists as
legitimate African-American creative voices is essential to the
development of black art. He considers iconic works by artists
including Glenn Ligon, Kehinde Wiley, Mickalene Thomas and Kalup
Linzy, which question whether it is possible for blackness to evade
its ideologically over-determined cultural legibility. In their own
unique, often satirical way, a new generation of contemporary
African American artists represent the ever-evolving sexual and
gender politics that have come to define the highly controversial
notion of 'post-black' art. First coined in 2001, the term
'post-black' resonated because it articulated the frustrations of
young African-American artists around notions of identity and
belonging that they perceived to be stifling, reductive and
exclusionary. Since then, these artists have begun to conceive an
idea of blackness that is beyond marginalization and sexual
discrimination.
Mapplethorpe and the Flower: Radical Sexuality and the Limits of
Control is the first dedicated book-length critical study of the
late artist Robert Mapplethorpe's flower photographs. The book is
an interdisciplinary investigation into the symbolism of the flower
as envisioned by a photographer whose production was mired in
controversy - triggered in large part by his thematic exploration
of radical sexuality and queer subcultural life. Mapplethorpe came
into international prominence due to the public response to his
polarizing retrospective exhibition, The Perfect Moment
(1989-1990), a ground breaking collection of images exploring three
largely traditional genres of photography: the still life, the
portrait, and the human figure. If there is one characteristic that
unifies the artist's approach to these genres, however, it is his
meticulous attention to the materiality of the photograph as
object. Mapplethorpe was a dedicated formalist, committed to
locating what is most beautiful about his chosen subject-producing
work under carefully controlled studio conditions that enabled the
development of a unique and singular aesthetic vision. Bearing this
in mind, Mapplethorpe and the Flower is dedicated to unpacking how
the artist's unique brand of formal sophistication and discipline,
combined with his conceptual bravado, interpenetrates all of his
photographs - and reaches its formal and conceptual maturation in
his flower images. There has been significant critical attention
paid to the artist's more notorious photographs, namely the S&M
imagery, and his now infamous persona as provocateur and sexual
renegade. Fixation on this dimension of the artist's mythology
overshadows the formal details and interlocking representational
and political commitments crosscutting the artist's oeuvre.
Mapplethorpe and the Flower is a recuperative effort: one that
seeks to locate persistent threads running through the artist's
seemingly disparate aesthetic and conceptual investigations.
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