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Simon Teune: Manifesto—Manifest—Manifestation: The Creation of Collectivity Through Text
Manifesto—Manifest—Manifestation: The Creation of Collectivity Through Text
(S. 161 – 170)

Simon Teune

Manifesto—Manifest—Manifestation: The Creation of Collectivity Through Text

PDF, 10 Seiten

  • Aktivismus
  • Gegenwartskunst
  • Öffentlichkeit
  • Institutionenkritik
  • Performance-Kunst
  • Künstlerische Praxis

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Deutsch

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Deutsch

Simon Teune

Simon Teune is a postdoctoral researcher at the Collaborative Research Center 1512 “Intervening Arts” at Free University Berlin. His research focuses on protests and social movements in general, and the cultural embedding of protest movements in particular. He has worked on the visual representation as well as the media coverage of protests. Within CRC 1512, he works on the project “Expectations of the Impact of Artistic Intervention: An Enquiry into Self-Understanding, Practices, and Receptions.”
Anna Kipke (Hg.), Iryna Kovalenko (Hg.), ...: Drafts in Action

How do practices of artistic intervention engage with conceptual frameworks, in particular when it comes to location, institutional context, as well as human and non-human relations? What are the historical and theoretical references that fuel current approaches within the arts—performative, participatory, intervening—and in what ways do these references infer a certain tension between concepts and actions, between objectives and practices? And in what ways do these debates provide possible tools for the analysis of artistic intervention today?

This volume addresses the potentials and challenges of different forms of intervention at the intersection of activism and artistic fields and practices. The contributions, written by scholars from art history, sociology, literary and performative studies as well as art practitioners, present case studies that shed light on artistic practices that respond to geopolitical, socio-cultural, and ecological crises, as well as on curatorial projects, the organization of collectives and the role of institutions within the art field and academia. Individual contributions are accompanied by short interviews that give room to dialogues among the authors.

 

Taking a multidirectional approach that accounts for the positionality of perspectives and highlights the non-directional formation of the interventions at hand, the anthology presents and discusses current tools, methods, and analytical frameworks to address artistic interventions.

 

With contributions by Raphael Daibert, Agata Jakubowska, Amelia Jones, Anna Kipke, Iryna Kovalenko, Premesh Lalu, Natalia Moussienko, Alia Rayyan, Laura Rogalski, María Laura Rosa, Franka Schäfer, Paula Serafini, Valeria Schulte-Fischedick, Simon Teune, and Mimmi Woisnitza.

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