The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film

The dichotomy between the figurative and the abstract has often been evoked as a key element in the understanding of the modern image, as it was the case, for example, in influential art historians such as Wilhelm Worringer and Clement Greenberg. However, if such a rigid opposition between the abstr...

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Main Author: Schmidt, Ulrik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Intellect 2017-03-01
Series:Artifact
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/intellect/ajdp/2017/00000004/00000001/art00008
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spelling doaj-4e3bcbe0c11b440488f3da0b78b542652020-11-25T00:21:33ZengIntellect Artifact1749-34631749-34712017-03-0141https://doi.org/10.14434/artifact.v4i1.13371The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde FilmSchmidt, Ulrik0Roskilde University, Department of Communication and ArtsThe dichotomy between the figurative and the abstract has often been evoked as a key element in the understanding of the modern image, as it was the case, for example, in influential art historians such as Wilhelm Worringer and Clement Greenberg. However, if such a rigid opposition between the abstract and figurative has ever been qualified, an unlimited number of images after 1900 – whether painted, printed or screen-based – have significantly obscured any clear distinction between the two. Hence, if one wishes to understand the very nature of modern images it is indispensable to ask what it could mean to conceive of images beyond the opposition between the abstract and the figurative: How could we think of images that are neither figurative nor abstract, or perhaps are both at the same time? How could we think of images that are not either signifying and representational or non-signifying and non-representational but rather a-signifying and a-representational in the sense that they operate and find expression beyond the very question of signification and representation? The aim of this text is to explore some of the key elements in such imagery beyond representation. I will investigate the issue by revisiting a series of iconic images in early 1920s avant-garde film by the artists Man Ray and Fernand Léger. On this background, and in dialogue with film theorists and philosophers such as Malcolm Le Grice and Gilles Deleuze, I outline the basic properties and aesthetic potentials of what I term the generalized image as an imagery that operates and affects beyond the very question of representation.https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/intellect/ajdp/2017/00000004/00000001/art00008abstractionavant-garde filmimage theoryrepresentation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Schmidt, Ulrik
spellingShingle Schmidt, Ulrik
The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film
Artifact
abstraction
avant-garde film
image theory
representation
author_facet Schmidt, Ulrik
author_sort Schmidt, Ulrik
title The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film
title_short The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film
title_full The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film
title_fullStr The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film
title_full_unstemmed The Generalized Image: Imagery Beyond Representation in Early Avant-Garde Film
title_sort generalized image: imagery beyond representation in early avant-garde film
publisher Intellect
series Artifact
issn 1749-3463
1749-3471
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The dichotomy between the figurative and the abstract has often been evoked as a key element in the understanding of the modern image, as it was the case, for example, in influential art historians such as Wilhelm Worringer and Clement Greenberg. However, if such a rigid opposition between the abstract and figurative has ever been qualified, an unlimited number of images after 1900 – whether painted, printed or screen-based – have significantly obscured any clear distinction between the two. Hence, if one wishes to understand the very nature of modern images it is indispensable to ask what it could mean to conceive of images beyond the opposition between the abstract and the figurative: How could we think of images that are neither figurative nor abstract, or perhaps are both at the same time? How could we think of images that are not either signifying and representational or non-signifying and non-representational but rather a-signifying and a-representational in the sense that they operate and find expression beyond the very question of signification and representation? The aim of this text is to explore some of the key elements in such imagery beyond representation. I will investigate the issue by revisiting a series of iconic images in early 1920s avant-garde film by the artists Man Ray and Fernand Léger. On this background, and in dialogue with film theorists and philosophers such as Malcolm Le Grice and Gilles Deleuze, I outline the basic properties and aesthetic potentials of what I term the generalized image as an imagery that operates and affects beyond the very question of representation.
topic abstraction
avant-garde film
image theory
representation
url https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/intellect/ajdp/2017/00000004/00000001/art00008
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