About the event

Categories:
History and Archaeology
Labels:
Archives
Audiovisual Media
Media Archaeology
Media Heritage
Media Histories

The aim of a Media Archaeological evening at La Virreina is to generate a space for sharing different approaches to the media and art histories taking into account perspectives, agents and variables under-explored in the established narratives of Art / Media History.

Through the 'research lenses' and case-studies introduced by Thomas Elsaesser and Wolfgang Ernst we will approach two different understandings of the fertile domain of Media Archaeology and its implications in the construction of divergent frameworks in order to approach the pasts/presents/futures of Art and Audiovisual Media and their related practices, infrastructures and agencies.

The presentations and the dialogue between these two pioneer researchers in the Media Archaeologies domain will be followed by an extended and participative discussion with researchers of DARTS and the public.

 

MEDIA ARCHAEOLOGY AS A SYMPTOM

Prof. Thomas Elsaesser (Amsterdam/Columbia University)

For nearly one hundred years, the moving image has been discussed primarily from the perspective of photography, by organizing our questions and theories around cinema as an ocular dispositif, based on light, projection and transparency, or as a recording dispositif, based on index, imprint and trace. In the age of digital imaging technologies, some of which have little to do with optics, such a history of the moving image seems too narrowly conceived.

The broadly based, if loosely defined research field “media archaeology” not only locates the cinema within more comprehensive media histories, it also investigates apparently obsolete, overlooked, or poorly understood past media practices. The expectation is that by once more “opening up” these pasts, one can enable or envisage also a different future. The question then arises: is media archaeology a (viable) disciplinary subject or a (valuable) symptom also of changes in our ideas of history, causality and contingency?

 

RADICAL MEDIA ARCHAEOLOGY (its epistemology, aesthetics and case studies)

Prof. Wolfgang Ernst (Humboldt University in Berlin)

Media Archaeology is both a method and an aesthetics of approaching technical objects. Within a broad range of such academic and artistic practices, radical media archaeology will be presented against the soft archaeological metaphor, with an emphasis on Foucault's approach and the non-human meaning of media-active archaeology. One characteristic of Media Archaeology is its focus on media materialism, analytically or creatively bound to practices like circuit bending.

Seductive events like the excavation of once buried computer game cartridges (case E. T.) request a more code-oriented, critical resistance to the archaeological metaphor, just like media archaeology as artistic research such as the "Dead Media" project requires a media-epistemological counter-reading. Diagrammatic Media Archaeography will be proposed as alternative to culturally familiar narratives of media historiography.

A special focus will be directed on video art and preservation where algorithms themselves become the archaeologists of archaic video recordings. The media-archaeological method is rather about signal "re-presencing" (Sobchack) than historicizing it (case early television recording, and the Voyager space mission "picture disc"). Media Archaeology as method of techno-logical research stays close to the signal (be it analogue waveforms or digital pulses).

Media Archaeography as mode of its representation has been written already (e. g. Ina Blom's Autobiography of Video). For the challenge of media time heritage, video art preservation is applied media archaeology.

 

#MediaArchaeologyBCN

 

The talks will be in English languagge, with Spanish simultaneous interpreting.

 

 

Event place

Dates

Event local time

Dec '171

17:00 Starting date

Dec '171

20:00 Closing date