Rumour and Radiation: Sound in Video Art
This is a book about video art, and about sound art.

The thesis is that sound first entered the gallery via the video art of the 1960s and in so doing, created an unexpected noise. The early part of the book looks at this formative period and the key figures within it - then jumps to the mid-1990s, when video art has become such a major part of contemporary art production, it no longer seems an autonomous form.

Paul Hegarty considers the work of a range of artists (including Steve McQueen, Christian Marclay, Ryan Trecartin, and Jane and Louise Wilson), proposing different theories according to the particular strategy of the artist under discussion. Connecting them all are the twinned ideas of intermedia and synaesthesia. Hegarty offers close readings of video works, as influenced by their sound, while also considering the institutional and material contexts. Applying contemporary sound theory to the world of video art, Paul Hegarty offers an entirely fresh perspective on the interactions between sound, sound art, and the visual.
1117327612
Rumour and Radiation: Sound in Video Art
This is a book about video art, and about sound art.

The thesis is that sound first entered the gallery via the video art of the 1960s and in so doing, created an unexpected noise. The early part of the book looks at this formative period and the key figures within it - then jumps to the mid-1990s, when video art has become such a major part of contemporary art production, it no longer seems an autonomous form.

Paul Hegarty considers the work of a range of artists (including Steve McQueen, Christian Marclay, Ryan Trecartin, and Jane and Louise Wilson), proposing different theories according to the particular strategy of the artist under discussion. Connecting them all are the twinned ideas of intermedia and synaesthesia. Hegarty offers close readings of video works, as influenced by their sound, while also considering the institutional and material contexts. Applying contemporary sound theory to the world of video art, Paul Hegarty offers an entirely fresh perspective on the interactions between sound, sound art, and the visual.
39.95 In Stock
Rumour and Radiation: Sound in Video Art

Rumour and Radiation: Sound in Video Art

by Paul Hegarty
Rumour and Radiation: Sound in Video Art

Rumour and Radiation: Sound in Video Art

by Paul Hegarty

Paperback

$39.95 
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Overview

This is a book about video art, and about sound art.

The thesis is that sound first entered the gallery via the video art of the 1960s and in so doing, created an unexpected noise. The early part of the book looks at this formative period and the key figures within it - then jumps to the mid-1990s, when video art has become such a major part of contemporary art production, it no longer seems an autonomous form.

Paul Hegarty considers the work of a range of artists (including Steve McQueen, Christian Marclay, Ryan Trecartin, and Jane and Louise Wilson), proposing different theories according to the particular strategy of the artist under discussion. Connecting them all are the twinned ideas of intermedia and synaesthesia. Hegarty offers close readings of video works, as influenced by their sound, while also considering the institutional and material contexts. Applying contemporary sound theory to the world of video art, Paul Hegarty offers an entirely fresh perspective on the interactions between sound, sound art, and the visual.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781623562694
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/18/2014
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Paul Hegarty teaches Philosophy and Visual Culture at University College Cork, in Ireland. He is the author of Noise/Music (Continuum, 2007). He jointly runs the experimental record label dotdotdotmusic, and performs in the noise bands Safe and La Société des Amis du Crime.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction: How Video Works and How It Sounds
1 Expanding Cinema
2 Bruce Nauman and the Audiospatial
3 Body as Screen
4 Gary Hill, Seeing Language
5 Bill Viola, Elemental Ambience
6 Dan Graham, Stan Douglas, Laurie Anderson, Dara Birnbaum: Performing Musically
7 Christian Marclay, The Medium as multiple
8 Pipilotti Rist, Immersing
9 Pierre Huyghe, Repurposing Sound
10 Steve McQueen, The Destabilizing Ground
11 Jane and Louise Wilson, An Other Index
12 Total Screen (Ryoji Ikeda, Carsten Nicolai, Granular Synthesis
13 Ryan Trecartin, Videocore
End: Elizabeth Price, Noise Capture
Bibliography
Index

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