October 15, 2009

The Architecture of the Visible » Treasureland of Heroturko

The Architecture of the Visible » Treasureland of Heroturko: "
 The Architecture of the Visible

The Architecture of the Visible: Technology and Urban Visual Culture By Graham Macphee
Continuum International Publishing Group 2002-07 240 Pages ISBN: 0826459269 PDF 11.7 MB

Visual technology now saturates everyday life. Theories of the visual - now key to debates across cultural studies, social theory, art history, literary studies and philosophy - have interpreted this condition as the beginning of a dystopian future, of cultural decline, social disempowerment and political passivity. This book presents a wide-ranging critical reassessment of contemporary visual culture through an analysis of pivotal technological innovation from the telescope, through photography to film. A range of theorists - from Baudelaire to Merleau-Ponty, Debord, Benjamin, Virilio, Jameson, Baudrillard and Derrida - have explored how technology not only reinvents the visual but also changes the nature of culture itself. The heartland of all such cultural analysis has been the city, from Baudelaire's flaneur to Benjamin's Arcades. Drawing on the examples of Paris and New York - two key world cities since the 19th century - the book analyses how visual technology is revolutionising the landscape of modern thought, politics and culture.


Your Ad Here


"
Share/Save/Bookmark

the cloud

9/11 (2) Abbema_Jelte van (1) action heros (2) Afghanistan (1) Africa (1) African-American (4) Akakce_Haluk (1) Amorales_Carolos (1) Anderson_Pam (1) Anger_Kenneth (1) animation (1) anime (1) Arab (1) Arata_Michael (1) archaeology (1) architecture (2) Arranz-Bravo_Eduardo (1) art_market (1) avant garde (2) Aztatlan culture (1) Baier_Nicolas (1) Bailey-Beezy (1) Baldessari_John (1) Ballard_ J.G. (1) Balthus-Greg (1) Banerjee_ Sunandini (1) baroque (1) Bataille (1) beauty (1) Bell_Jonathan (1) Beloff_Zoe (1) Bergman_Robert (1) Black Atlantic (1) Bottero_Fernando (1) Burton_Time (1) C Magazine (1) Cai Guo-Qiang (1) Caravaggio (1) Castillo_Victor (1) Castro-Kelley (1) China (4) Christie's (1) Coching_Francisco (1) collage (1) Collins_Phil (1) comics (5) conceptual art (1) Condo_George (1) consumer_culture (1) cultural capital (1) culture_hacking (1) Cumberland_Sturart (1) Dali_Zhang (1) darklorddisco (1) Darwin (1) Davis-Stuart (1) death (1) Der Blaue Reite (1) design (1) digital (4) Dikovitskaya_Margaret (1) dolls (1) drawing (2) drawings (1) Dzama_Marcel (1) eco_culture (1) EcoMag (1) Eggleston_William (1) Egypt (2) El-Siwi_Adel (1) Emberley_Ed (1) Ethiopia (1) ethnography (1) Fairey_Shepard (1) Falnama (1) Fauxreel (1) feminist (6) film (12) film_score (1) Flickr (1) FlowTV (1) Folkert (1) food (2) Ford-Michael Lee (1) Fosik-AJ (1) Fournier_Marie (1) Furedi-Lily (1) gaphic design (1) gender (3) Genesis Beyer P-Orridge (1) Gentry_Nick (1) Germany (1) Giacometti_Alberto (1) global culture (1) Goltzius_ Hendrick (1) Gordon_Douglas (2) graffiti (2) graphic (9) graphic design (6) Gysis-Nicholaos (1) Harlem (1) Harris-Charles "Teenie" (1) Hass-Philip (1) Hirschhorn_Thomas (1) Hirst_Damien (1) history (1) Hitchcock (1) Hman_Jonathan (1) Holzer_Jenny (1) Hopper_Edward (1) Hulk-the Incredible (1) illustrated manuscripts (1) illustration (1) images (1) impressionism (1) India (3) Indonesia (1) installation (9) intersex (1) Iranian (2) Jalali_Bahman (1) Japan (2) Jongeleen_Jeroen (1) Kakebeeke_Karijn (1) Kandinsky_Wassily (1) KAWS (1) Kiefer_Anselm (1) Koelbl-Herlinde (1) Kritkos (1) Kuniyoshi_Utagawa (1) Lady GaGa (1) Landy_Michael (1) Latin America (2) Levin-Golan (1) Lewis_Ben (1) Lewis_Dave (1) Lewis_Wyndham (1) Linder_Richard (1) lithographs (1) low brow (2) Lozano_Lee (1) Macleod_Steve (1) Macphee_Graham (1) Manga (1) Marly-Pierre (1) Marvel Comics (1) Matta Clark_ Gordon (1) Maya (1) McCullin_Don (1) Meckseper_Josephine (1) media (1) medieval (1) Metrick-Chen_Lenore (1) Mexico (1) minimalism (1) Miss Van (1) modernism (1) Mooi Indie (1) Mottalini_Chris (1) Mueck_Ron (1) Murakami_Takashi (1) Museum of Contemporary Art (1) music animation (1) Muybridge_Eadwearch (1) network culture (1) new media (1) Obama (1) oil (1) Olav_Westphalen (1) Ortiz-Santiago (1) painting (28) Panton_Verner (1) paparazzi (1) Paranormal Activity (1) pep art (1) Philippine (1) photography (36) photoshop (2) Pilson_John (1) Pollock_Jackson (1) pop art (18) Portuguese (1) prints (1) Provost_Nicolas (1) public art (1) punk (1) Quinto_Felice (1) ready-made (1) recycling (1) recyled art (1) religion (1) Richardson-Earle (1) Richter_Gerhard (1) Roehr_Peter (1) Romantic art (1) Rostovsky_Peter (1) Rudolph_Paul (1) Ruff_Thomas (1) ruins (1) Russia (1) sculpture (2) seriality (1) Shaden-Brooke (2) Shonibare-Yinka (2) Singh Twins (1) Smith_Kiki (1) Sotheby (1) sound (1) Soviet style art (1) Spain (1) Spanish (1) story telling (1) Stout_Renee (1) street art (1) Suerkemper_Caro (1) Superman (1) Suriname (1) Swerman_Marshalll (1) tattoos (1) Te Wei (1) technology (1) territoriality (1) text (1) Thomas_Harnk Willis (1) Titian (1) Tolan_Canan (1) Tomic-Milica (1) Tommy Ga-Ken Wan (1) Turkey (1) TV (1) Twombly_Cy (1) ubran screens (1) vanities (1) Vertigo (1) Victorian (1) video (6) Violette_Banks (1) visuality (8) waste (1) weddings (1) Wessel-Henry (1) White-Charles (1) wiki (1) Wikipedia (1) Willardson_David (1) Wilson_Jane (1) Winterling_Sussane (1) work (1) Zeid_Fahrelnissa (1) Zero Art (1)

search this blog

Superfamous is the studio of interaction designer Folkert Gorter, primarily engaged in graphic and interactive design with a focus on networks and communities. Folkert holds a Master of Arts in Interactive Multimedia and Interaction Design from the Utrecht School of Art, faculty Art, Media & Technology, The Netherlands. He lives in Los Angeles, California."

Click on any text below to see Folkert's remarkable posts from the blog "but does it float."

but does it float