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Media Primitivism – Technological Art in Africa: The Visual Arts of Africa and its Diasporas

Autor Delinda Collier
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 8 oct 2020
"MEDIA PRIMITIVISM is a major work of media theory centering Africa. In order to redefine ideas of the medium and mediation, Delinda Collier deconstructs terms that have been formative in the conceptualization of African art (in particular, the fetish), rethinking them in light of another abstraction that shaped the media, art, and anthropological theory circulated in the twentieth century: Africa itself. Collier responds to the long preoccupation with Africa as the home of art that is "natural," non-technological, non-philosophical, exploring mediated African artworks that do not fit into these narratives. She argues that ideas about "African media" must be understood in relation to other modes of transfer and transmutation that have significant colonial and postcolonial histories, such as extractive mining and electricity. This new history demonstrates how pivotal artworks transcend the distinctions between the "made" and the "natural," thereby expanding ideas about mediation and about what African art can do. Each chapter considers the substances and concepts of a different technology-light, electricity, metals-to connect old and new media. Chapter 1, for example, provides an elemental reading of the canonical film work of Souleymane Cissâe, arguing that his classic film Yeelen (1987) centers light and wind themselves as mediums. Chapter 2's discussion of one of the first pieces of electronic music, Halim El-Dabh's "Ta'abir Al-Zaar" (1944), shows how the role of electricity in African art cannot be understood only in relation to other new media forms that utilize electrified media. Punning on the multiple meanings of "medium" (zaar is a type of all-female spirit possession ceremony), El-Dabh's work brings together the technical and the spiritual. Chapter 4 turns to work by white South African artists to consider the relationship between (settler) colonial extraction and abstraction and the impossibility of standing outside of systems of oppression. Ultimately, Collier's book connects longstanding questions of art to the earliest moments of contact and cosmopolitan Africa"--
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781478009696
ISBN-10: 1478009691
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 79 illustrations, incl. 16 in color
Dimensiuni: 154 x 230 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Seria The Visual Arts of Africa and its Diasporas


Notă biografică


Cuprins

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction. African Art History and the Medium Concept 1
1. Film as Light, Film as Indigenous 31
2. Electronic Sound as Trance ad Resonance 61
3. The Song as Private Property 93
4. Artificial Blackness, or Extraction as Abstraction 119
5. "The Earth and the Substratum Are Not Enough" 153
6. The Seed and the Field 183
Afterword 211
Notes 215
Bibliography 237
Index

Descriere

Delinda Collier finds alternative concepts of mediation in African art by closely engaging with electricity-based works since 1944.