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[Commlist] cfp Imago Special Issue Surfaces, Boundaries, Formats of Contemporary Images
Mon Jan 28 16:40:04 GMT 2019
Call for Papers
/Imago - Studi di cinema e media/, n. 20/2019
*
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*Surfaces, Boundaries, Formats of Contemporary Images*
*Ilaria A. De Pascalis and Lorenzo Marmo*
Contemporary visual culture investigates the materiality of images and
their status as objects, as well as their structure, their boundaries,
and their points of contact with other experiences and phenomena. The
/Imago 20/ dossier aims to address the multifarious ways images permeate
the current mediascape (Pinotti-Somaini). The ever-increasing
changeability that connotes the surfaces of digital images demands a
thorough interrogation of pixel culture, shedding light upon the
mobility, ductility, and reversibility of contemporary devices
(Casetti). At the same time, a stronger awareness seems to be emerging
about the issue of the aspect ratio, whose fluidity plays a primary role
in both social and authorial practices (Doane).
Such an awareness has given the term “format” renewed
relevance. On the one hand, in connection to cinema, it concerns the
geometric configuration of images, i.e. the shape through which they
frame the world. Recent mainstream cinema seems to be playing with
horizontal, vertical and square frames, in order to produce complex
creative and theoretical discourses; and the development of such a trend
might be connected to the new frames implemented by smartphones and
mobile devices. On the other hand, the term “format” suggests the
extension of the image file, i.e. the quantity of information it
contains, with direct consequences on its resolution and visual quality.
In this sense, the notion of format might occasion a wide-ranging
reflection on the new configurations of high- and low-definition, as
well as on the atmospheric dimension of images (Griffero), hence
contributing to the investigation on the materiality of contemporary
images and screens (Bruno). We would like to propose an interaction
between these two meanings of the term “format”, that might become both
metaphor and instrument to map out the new theoretical production on images.
The dossier aims to tackle the boundaries and limits of
contemporary images, addressing their ability to mold our imaginaries
(Bertetto), to deploy spaces and environments (Heise), and to function
as cultural techniques (Siegert) producing complex subjective and
relational configurations. In which ways and to what extent does the
creative dimension pervade social practices in everyday life? And, vice
versa, what are the implications of the reuse of pre-existent materials
in artistic production? In the multifaceted current situation, different
media practices and experiences intertwine with one another developing
original synergies, and it is possible to intercept brand-new models of
vision. The dossier will not focus exclusively on the dynamics of the
web; rather, it also aims at exploring other aspects of the contemporary
mediascape, addressing the ways the recent reflection on images
contaminates and rewrites the configuration of cinema in the traditional
sense. What role is envisioned today for film and traditional
projections? And what new opportunities are opened by the diffusion of
ever-more diversified devices and platforms for image production and use?
The proposals may either consider the theoretical scenario of these
models of creation and reception or focus on case studies that might
enlighten the new forms and the original status of contemporary images.
Submissions may consequently deal with (but are not limited to), the
following topics:
* aspect ratio: contemporary devices allow us to rotate images and
transform their proportions, and such a play with formats also finds
a new expressive role in mainstream cinema and tv (one can think of
the stylistic choices of Xavier Dolan or Wes Anderson, as well as
the recent Amazon series /Homecoming/);
* the diffusion of image-modification-oriented practices on a social
medium such as Instagram (Manovich), the specific modes of
representation implied in the different image proportions (for
instance, the relationship between cover and profile images in
microblogging platforms), and the new role for vertical images in
the arts (as in the “Vertical Cinema” project);
* resolution: high- or low-definition images, media temperatures
(McLuhan), the notion of “pixel” (Cubitt), and its comparison with
the grain of analog photography;
* issues of format in relation to the work of authors, concerning both
shooting practices and distribution options, as a challenge to the
divide between film and digital images (consider for instance the
works by Alejandro González Iñárritu, Alfonso Cuarón or Christopher
Nolan);
* the renewal and hybridization of psychoanalytic approaches to the
study of the relationship between images and subjectivity: the
recent reconfigurations of fetishism, possessivity, and other
dynamics of interaction and interpellation between images and their
users (Mulvey);
* new experiences in the realm of cinephilia (Keathley): on the one
hand, its unflinching investment in film projection; on the other
hand, its metamorphosis in relation to the redefinition of the
cinematic experience and the practices of archival collecting
brought about by new formats and interfaces;
* the idea of carnal images (Sobchack), the dimension of synesthesia,
and the renewed role of tactility (Strauven) in the configuration of
the experience of media;
* the atmospheric quality of images (Böhme), namely their ability to
question ontological theories in the direction of an ongoing
negotiation between objectivity and subjectivity;
* the implications of the relationship between immersive images (IMAX,
3D, virtual reality, etc.) and their audiences: the experiences of
spectatorship and their boundaries, the spectacular connotation of
images, the dynamics of distribution, preservation and use of these
new models of vision (from museums to domestic devices), as well as
their ideological consequences;
* the redefinition of the distinction between amateurs and
professional creators of images, and how such a reconfiguration
questions contemporary reuse practices (Kuhn), from found footage
films to the fragmentation of images in reaction or comment GIFs;
* the specific manipulation of duration and length, considering both
pre-existing and original images. The cinematic time that dominated
the 20th century is now being rewritten and reoriented, for example
through the production of ephemeral videos for online circulation,
and in general towards a blurring of the border between still and
moving images (as detailed by the reflection of the /Still Moving/
field: Bellour; Røssaak).
Proposals of no more than 2500 characters, in Italian or English, and
accompanied by an essential bibliography (five items max), five
keywords, and a biography, should be submitted to
(_ilariaantonella.depascalis /at/ uniroma3.it)
<mailto:(ilariaantonella.depascalis /at/ uniroma3.it)>_ and
_lorenzomarmo@gmail.com_ by *March 11th, 2019*.
The editors will communicate the selection results by the end of March,
and the essays (40.000 characters, accompanied by a 1500 characters
abstract, five keywords and a 500 characters bio) should be completed by
June 20th, 2019, to be sent to the peer reviewers.
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