A Relational Ecology of Photographic Practices

This paper proposes a relational history of media artifacts, which decentralizes the dominance of the photographer or filmmaker as the absolute author of the work. It adds an alternative account to understanding the creative process and the subsequent study of media forms by discussing film and phot...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jacqui Knight
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Philosophical Research 2017-11-01
Series:Avant: Journal of Philosophical-Interdisciplinary Vanguard
Subjects:
Online Access:http://avant.edu.pl/wp-content/uploads/J-Knight-A-Relational-Ecology.pdf
Description
Summary:This paper proposes a relational history of media artifacts, which decentralizes the dominance of the photographer or filmmaker as the absolute author of the work. It adds an alternative account to understanding the creative process and the subsequent study of media forms by discussing film and photographic practices as the reciprocal affective relationship between the maker, their intentions, materials, technologies, non-human agents and the environment. By reorganizing the anthropocentrism of art historical narratives, which typically exclude corporeality and materiality as drivers of human history, we are able to discuss the complex dynamic meshwork of determinants that bring photographic artifacts into existence: the lived, animate, vital materialism at once emergent and mixing of different causalities and temporalities.
ISSN:2082-6710