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[ecrea] CfE: Avant-garde and Popular Forms between Music and Visual Media. - Cinema & Cie Spring 2019
Tue Jul 17 12:05:14 GMT 2018
*CfE: Avant-garde and Popular forms between Music and Visual Media.
**Intermedial and Transhistorical investigations*
*/Cinema&Cie International Film Studies Journal. /Special issue n. 33,
Spring 2019*
edited by Simone Dotto, Francois Muillot, Maria Teresa Soldani.
deadline for submission: September 15, 2018
In 1987, Simon Frith and Howard Horne’s/Art into Pop/questioned the rise
of British Post-War popular music within the context of art schools,
employing cross-terms such as “rock bohemians” and “pop situationists”.
The authors focused on the 1970s and the aftermath of punk, finding a
close relation between popular music forms and art forms in the contexts
of several British cities as well as in New York City. More recently,
Simon Reynolds traced the genealogy of an “artistic bias” in popular
music back to the post-punk period of the late 1970s, when “art ideas
affected actual musical practices” (2009: 365) due to the influence of
not musically trained artists coming from the NYC experimental scene
such as Yoko Ono and Brian Eno.
So far, scholarly investigations on the intersections between popular
music and culture and avant-garde arts have been mostly limited to the
social cultural milieu of only two decades (1960s/1970s) and two
countries (U.S.A./U.K.). Essay such as Bernard Gendron’s/Between
Montmartre and the Mudd Club/(2002) and Sytze Seenstra’s/We are the
noise between the stations/(2003) constitute two notable exceptions
through their reframing of the American punk scene and of David Byrne’s
work through a diachronical comparison with French modernism and
conceptual romanticism, respectively. They do not only reassess the
collapse of hierarchical distinction between the social function played
by high arts and mass culture with the advent of late
modernity/postmodernity, but also take into serious consideration the
relationships between different media domains.
Drawing on a similar methodological approach, this special issue
of/Cinéma&Cie/aims to address the context made up of works of art in
music, film and video by tracing the ongoing exchange between
avant-garde and popular forms from trans-historical and intermedial
perspectives. We are interested, for instance, in how art groups as the
No Wave in NYC between 1970s and 1980s represented a ‘turn’ in cinema,
media, and performing arts through their connection to the East Village
art scene and by working contemporaneously with several media and art
forms. Mainly inspired by fellow musicians, No Wave created mixed
media-productions blending performance, music, film, and video. Its
originality stemmed out its concern with the presence of the TV in daily
life, the rise of the videoclip form, the codes of film genres, and the
symbols of pop/rock disseminated in mass media that functioned as a
fertile common ground of popular culture. Such independent art projects
have transformed traditional forms of film, TV format, and music into
performative acts taking the form of fictional films, TV shows, or
pop-rock songs.
We invite theoretical comparisons as well as analyses of case studies
that challenge the limits of such strategies, forms, and contents shared
by avant-garde and popular form. In other words, this special issue aims
to analyze recurring “motifs” among aesthetic formats, artistic
practices, production strategies, cultural uses, and theoretical
understandings of visual and sound media that took place in different
times and within different cultural contexts. How is this relation
between avant-garde and popular forms articulated today in past and
present cinema, popular music, and video examples? Which case studies
make such a relation emblematic?
Article proposals may involve (but are not limited to) the following topics:
– examples of intersections of avant-garde and popular music and visual
media aesthetics in the 1970s/80s/90s period;
– the relation between avant-garde and popular forms in specific fiction
films or videoclips;
– the influence of avant-garde music within fiction films and, vice
versa, the presence of popular music genres within avant-garde films,
using distinct case studies;
– analyses of production strategies blending both traditional and
disruptive strategies, avant-garde and popular forms, experimental and
established forms (e.g. the song, the fictional film, the videoclip).
These analyses could specify the nature of such a relation (e.g. is it a
dialectic, a tribute to, a critique?) and the aims of such strategies;
– the hidden and intervolved relations between avant-garde and popular
media artistic practices: in which ways do they inform each other? Is it
a reciprocal relationship?
– tools and strategies adopted in the audiovisual storytelling to
represent or self-represent avant-garde musicians (e.g. how does a
documentary visual form articulate the representation of an avant-garde
phenomenon? In such audiovisual works, which is the relation between
avant-garde musicians and a codified documentary storytelling?);
– the uses and misuses of specific technologies and media to map
possible continuities and similitaries between avant-garde and popular
cultural contexts;
– the historical and theoretical tension between live and mediated
performance in avant-garde and popular contexts, plus their implications
on the actual preservation and historicization of the artworks (e.g. are
our documental mediated sources limiting or affecting our historical
awareness of these artistic phenomena in any sense?);
– the convergence between popular music and video (e.g. videoclip,
mono-channel video) and their interaction in “performative” contexts
(e.g. multi-channels installations, live visuals), as well as how these
case studies are influenced by avant-garde forms and practices;
– how this relation may be revisited and articulated today in the
post-medial panorama.
*Submission details*
Please send your abstract (300–500 words in English + bibliographical
references) and a short biographical note to (submissions /at/ cinemaetcie.net)
<mailto:(submissions /at/ cinemaetcie.net)> by*September 15, 2018*.
All notifications of acceptance will be emailed no later than *September
30, 2018*. If accepted, 5,000/6,000-word essays will then be required
for peer review by *December 1, 2018*.
For further information, please
visit:http://www.cinemaetcie.net/2018/07/16/cfe33/
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