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[Commlist] CFP Re-scale
Fri Jan 07 16:11:53 GMT 2022
CALL FOR PAPERS & AUDIOVISUAL ESSAYS, “RE-SCALE” (PUBLICATION 2023)
Two forthcoming volumes of the journal Interfaces, available on
OpenEdition, will bring together written articles and video essays that
explore the ways in which the production, circulation and reception of
images today involves “rescaling” the visible, and, by extension, our
experience of the visible, in increasingly radical ways. The two volumes
will seek to explore the epistemic, philosophical, social, political,
technological, and aesthetic implications of this phenomenon, both in
contemporary visual culture and in its histories.
Recent advances in the fields of optics and visual technologies have
radically opened up our access to the visible, as well as our visual
sensorium: computer-generated imagery, VR, electronic microscopy, as
well as electronic detectors imagery have all complexified visuality, by
producing images which had hitherto been literally unimaginable. At the
same time as the world was reshaping according to the dual logic of the
local and the global, optics made it possible for us to see that which
is normally inaccessible to the human eye: the very close and the very
far, the infinitely small and immensely large. Although this phenomenon
of “Gulliverisation” (Huhtamo 2009, 20) was already in evidence from the
antiquity to the medieval era — in the disparity of scale between large
murals and miniature paintings for instance — it is essentially
concurrent with the development of an optic- and screen-based visual
culture, which made it a defining characteristic of urban environments.
From a European perspective, this epistemic change feeds on a
long-lasting tradition of thought and shared imaginary that arguably
anticipated some of the changes brought about by the industrial
revolution (Winston 1996). In turn, the ubiquity of visual technologies
generated by the advent of electronic, then digital media has
intensified the effects of the phenomenon both in terms of imaging and
of screening modes. Then, the COVID-19 pandemic made the domestic
screens the central element of our access to the visible world, cutting
it down to size as it were. Confinement and the dependency on personal
viewing devices showed the potential as well as limits of a scalar logic
relying on diminished scale and individual viewing, raising anew the
question of the role of collective spectatorship, and of large-scale
images, in fostering a different spatial, corporeal and visual
experience as well as a specific imagining awareness (Hanich 2018;
Kenderdine 2020).This evolution also involves a rescaling of time that
started with modernity but intensified with the introduction of
contemporary, digital, modes of production, distribution and reception
of images — an issue that connects with recent debates on the economy of
attention.
Rescaling thus involves formal and technical aspects of image
production, but also the spatialization, massification, and temporal
dimension of reception. From the massive advertising boards hung in city
centers to the tiny mobile phones that most of us now carry through the
same urban centers, from “binge watching” to flicking through Gifs, the
ubiquity of scale-shifting technology works to normalize a practice of
the “miniature and the gigantic” (Stewart 1992), and that practice in
turn conditions much of our everyday perception of the world.
Today, shifts in scale routinely inform our access to the visible, the
strangeness of their visual manifestation (as when we exchange through
visio-conference with the frieze of match- box size talking heads that
lines up our screen) absorbed by the increased speed of habituation. At
the same time, visual rescaling still has the power to astonish us. From
images gathered by space probes, to records of infra-cellular
observations, advances in the fields of optics and digital technologies
continue to expand the limits of the visible world. Together with the
proliferation of fixed and mobile screens of all sizes that
systematically rescale images, such visual reformations work to further
dis-anchor representation from natural perception.
This CFP concerns scholars in all fields of visual culture interested in
art and popular culture as well as scientific imagery, including
painting and graphic arts, photography, architecture, film and video,
video games and immersive environments. It aims to historicize, as well
as identify the impact and effect of scale on visual techniques and
aesthetics, as well as on the re-mediation, circulation and reception of
images.
We welcome articles and video essays that
- explore the ways in which rescaling alters the form of images (from
framing to definition, to composition, depth, color, and the
relationship of sound to image) and the conditions of their apparition,
spatial and temporal.
- explore the phenomenon of rescaling in contemporary visual culture
and/or integrate a historical dimension, both in terms of
media-archaeology and in terms of “structures of feeling”, seeking to
identify the ways in which scale has shaped our imaginary over a long
period of time.
- create a dialogue between art and technology, or between art and
sciences, considering art images and theorizations in relation to
scientific visualizations including ‘operative’ images (made by and for
machines).
- address the epistemics and politics of scale in visual culture,
looking at the ways in which visual scale-shifting shapes our ways of
viewing and knowing the world, how it underpins identification and
self-representation, as well as how we configure the place we occupy in
the world, in local and global, individual and collective, real and
imaginary terms.
We welcome contributions in French and in English. All articles and
video essays will be submitted to peer review by two anonymous
reviewers. Publication will take place in 2023.
Abstracts for both written and audiovisual essays (300 words with a
brief bibliography and bio) should be sent in by January 10, 2022.
Contributions (for written essays: between 30 000 and 45 000 characters,
spaces and footnotes included; for audiovisual essays: 20 minutes max.)
will be expected by June 30, 2022.
Editorial board: Martine Beugnet, Clémence Follea, Ariane Hudelet,
Eliane de Larminat, Catherine Wheatley
Please send your questions and proposals to:
(beugnetmartine /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(beugnetmartine /at/ gmail.com)>
(clemence.follea /at/ u-paris.fr) <mailto:(clemence.follea /at/ u-paris.fr)>
(ariane.hudelet /at/ u-paris.fr) <mailto:(ariane.hudelet /at/ u-paris.fr)> eliane.de
<http://eliane.de>- (larminat /at/ u-paris.fr) <mailto:(larminat /at/ u-paris.fr)>
(catherine.wheatley /at/ kcl.ac.uk) <mailto:(catherine.wheatley /at/ kcl.ac.uk)>
Select Bibliography
AUMONT, Jacques. L’Œil interminable. Paris: La différence, 2007.
AZOULAY, Ariella. The Civil Contract of Photography. New York: Zone
Books, 2008.
BACHELARD, Gaston. La Poétique de l’espace [1958]. Paris: PUF, 2011.
Trans. Maria Jolas. Poetics of Space. Boston: Beacon Press, 1994.
BEUGNET, Martine. Le Cinéma et ses doubles. L’image de film à l’ère du
foundfootage numérique et des écrans de poche. Bordeaux: Bord de l’Eau,
2021.
BEUGNET, Martine, and Annie van den Oever. “Gulliver Goes to the Movies:
Screen Size, Scale, and Experiential Impact.” Screens: From Materiality
to Spectatorship – A Historical and Theoretical Reassessment. Eds.
Dominique Chateau and José Moure. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press,
2016. 247-258.
BLACK, Daniel. “An Aesthetics of the Invisible: Nanotechnology and
Informatic Matter,” Theory, Culture & Society 31.1 (2014): 99-121.
BRUNET, François. Circulation. Chicago: Terra Foundation for American
Art & University of Chicago Press, 2017.
CLARKE, Michael, and David WITTENBERG. Scale in Literature and Culture.
Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.
DICAGLIO, Joshua. Scale Theory: A non-Disciplinary Inquiry. Cambridge,
Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2021.
DOANE, Mary-Ann. Bigger than Life: The Close Up and Scale in the Cinema.
Durham & London: Duke University Press, 2021.
DVORAK, Tomáš, and Jussi PARIKKA. Photography Off the Scale:
Technologies and Theories of the Mass Image. Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press, 2021.
ELKINS, James. Six Stories from the End of Representation: Images in
Painting, Photography, Astronomy, Microscopy, Particle Physics and
Quantum Mechanics. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.
HANICH, Julian. The Audience Effect: On the Collective Cinema
Experience. Edinburgh University Press, 2018.HESSELBERTH, Pepita, and
Maria POULAKI, eds. Compact Cinematics: The Moving Image in the Age of
the Bit-sized Media. London & New York: Bloomsbury, 2017.
HORTON, Zachary. The Cosmic Zoom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
2021.
HUHTAMO, Erki. “Messages on the Wall: An Archaeology of Public Media
Displays.” Urban Screens Reader. Eds. Scott McQuire, Meredith Martin and
Sabine Niederer. Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures, 2009. 15-28.
KENDERDINE, Sarah. “Prosthetic Architectures of the Senses: Museums and
Immersion.” Screen, 61.4 (2020): 635-645.
STEWART, Susan. On Longing: Narratives of the Miniature, the Gigantic,
the Souvenir, the Collection. Durham & London: Duke University Press, 1992.
TAVERNOR, Robert. Smoot’s Ear: The Measure of Humanity. New Haven,
Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2007.
WINSTON, Brian. Technologies of Seeing: Photography, Cinematography and
Television. London: British Film Institute, 1996.
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