Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Introduction: Video: Between Technology and Performance
- 1 Volume-Image of Video Technology
- 2 Zones of Modulation: Video as a Space-Critical Medium
- 3 Programmed Life and Racialized Technesis
- 4 Video and the Technological Milieu of Desire
- Conclusion: Performative Images as Objects of Philosophical Inquiry
- Artworks Cited
- Acknowledgements
- Index
4 - Video and the Technological Milieu of Desire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Introduction: Video: Between Technology and Performance
- 1 Volume-Image of Video Technology
- 2 Zones of Modulation: Video as a Space-Critical Medium
- 3 Programmed Life and Racialized Technesis
- 4 Video and the Technological Milieu of Desire
- Conclusion: Performative Images as Objects of Philosophical Inquiry
- Artworks Cited
- Acknowledgements
- Index
Summary
Abstract: This chapter foregrounds the presence of video technology in shaping the milieu where desire emerges. I interrogate the milieu we share with video technology to foreground an ecology of desiring, desired, and desirable relations to performative technology. Moving beyond the psychological model applied to video and its aesthetics of narcissism, this chapter looks at both dispersive and penetrating video images to account for the flesh in subversive ways. I do so by looking at an historical moment: the demolition of the last women's jail in Paris portrayed in Nicole Croiset, Judy Blum, and Nil Yalter's collective work La Roquette, prison de femmes from 1974, and by comparatively approaching two video installations: Mona Hatoum's Corps étranger from 1994 and Thierry Kuntzel's La Peau from 2007. Dispersive and penetrating modes of video existence foreground the necessity to think about desire in relation to the milieu where images, objects, and subjects cohabit.
Keywords: desire, video, technology, Mona Hatoum, Nil Yalter, Thierry Kuntzel
Perhaps the work of art (the work art does) has never been anything other than life worked on, through, and by a certain intention.
– Denise Ferreira da SilvaDesire beyond Narcissism
The question of desire in relation to video technology is the question of the living together with technology. It is the question of living entities sharing modes of existence with and within technological platforms of relation. What draws me to desire in this chapter is the performative dimension of image technology and its capacity to act on the milieu in which images are seen. Specifically, I am interested in the performative dimension of video images because in that dimension I see the power of technology to shape the psychic and collective environment we inhabit. In that context the psychological model applied to visual studies has been central to interrogating the relationship between video-image technology, intimacy, and identity. This psychological model, applied to video art, was introduced in Rosalind Krauss's seminal article “Video: The Aesthetics of Narcissism” in 1976. In the article, Krauss generalized the image of self-regard, namely narcissism, as “the condition of the entire genre.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Performative ImagesA Philosophy of Video Art Technology in France, pp. 141 - 170Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023