Temporalitet i visuell kultur. Om samtidens heterokrona estetiker
Abstract
In contemporary society temporalities in different scales coexist, cooperate and collide.
Clock time serves as a main reference for time, although a lot of processes have nothing to
do with clock time and can’t be measured by its scales. One of the dissertation’s points of
departure is that temporal narratives is a key factor for affecting how people act and think,
and therefore there is a need for visualizations, conceptual figurations and cognitive
objects for complex forms of time. The dissertation evolves around art works,
visualizations and theories that deal with today’s multiple temporal forms and narratives.
One of the questions the dissertation sets out to answer concerns how temporality is
visualized in contemporary art and visualizations. It also aims to demonstrate the
relevance of visual studies in the new field of environmental humanities. A number of
temporal concepts are explored in relation to art works. One such concept is heterochrony,
a term referring to a multifaceted temporality, that art theorist Nicolas Bourriaud claims is
common in contemporary art. Another is timescapes, a term for an entangled temporality,
described by sociologist Barbara Adam, and chronoscopy coined by philosopher Paul
Virilio, referring to an extremely short-termed perspective. Space of flows and space of places
are concepts formulated by sociologist Manuel Castells, denoting the spatiotemporal
logics that have emerged in the network society, where citizens simultaneousley can exist
in physical and virtual spacetimes. Also two concepts for a vast time span are discussed:
anthropocene, a suggested new geological era, and the long now, a perspective formulated
by the artist and musician Brian Eno. One conclusion is that complex and sensous
understandings of temporality can be accomplished through art works and visualizations.
Artistic expressions have the potential to inspire, worry and affect viewers and produce
narratives of the multiple temporalities embedded in climate changes. Multiple forms of
temporality can be found in the discussed works, and the narratives that emerge are
entangled and heterogenous and speak of heterochrony, chronoscopy, and anthropocene,
that is, of temporal forms that cannot easily be related to a human lifetime or to everyday
understandings of time.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Arts
Institution
Department of Cultural Sciences ; Institutionen för kulturvetenskaper
Disputation
Fredagen den 9 september 2016, kl. 13.15, Institutionen för kulturvetenskaper, Vera Sandbergs allé 8
Date of defence
2016-09-09
View/ Open
Date
2016-08-15Author
Sandahl, Ann-Louise
Keywords
temporality, heterochrony, chronoscopy, anthropocene, the long now, timescapes, space of flows, space of places, environmental humanities.
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-883-1
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Art and Architecture
35
Language
swe