Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship

This practice based PhD is an enquiry into repetition found in relation to the visual art object, specifically the repetition that operates within the process of art production. There is some precedence for the consideration of repetition observed as a repeated subject or object, and especially the...

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Main Author: Townsley, Jill
Other Authors: Bristow, Maxine
Published: University of Chester 2010
Subjects:
700
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.542553
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5425532015-10-03T03:25:12ZMoments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorshipTownsley, JillBristow, Maxine2010This practice based PhD is an enquiry into repetition found in relation to the visual art object, specifically the repetition that operates within the process of art production. There is some precedence for the consideration of repetition observed as a repeated subject or object, and especially the Warholian like repeated image. Rosalind Krauss observed in The Originality of the Avant-Garde: A Postmodernist Repetition that many artists are 'condemned to repeating as if by compulsion, the logically fraudulent original' (1981). This research considers a different presentation of repetition, the repeated action of labour that accumulates during the process of production. A body of artworks, that for the purpose of the research I describe as labourwork, was conceived and made with the concerns of repetition at the core of its process. Personal reflection and a close critical analysis of each labourwork, allowed for the identification of a number of issues that are significant to the consideration of repetition as it relates to the process of production. They include 'failure through repetition1, 'temporality', 'erasure' and 'shifting authorships'. The emergent themes are considered within the thesis, where broader theories of repetition are addressed in order to position this form of art production within a larger theoretical framework. The purpose of the repeated action within the labourworks was found to be more complex than a means to an end. It was not just a prerequisite to forming a critical mass or achieving a particular form. When observed from the standpoint of different schema such as time, the simulacra, mimesis or theories of replication, the repetition within the labourwork was observed to be identified within many different constructs. It was seen to affect the object, its relation to the viewer, authorship and the subject. Yet, these multifarious roles are not differentiated within the single word 'repetition'. The conclusion to this thesis summarises the effect repetition has been found to have within the labourworks, separating out its roles and offering opportunities to identify its individual operations, over-and-above the general term 'Repetition'.700repetition : art productionUniversity of Chesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.542553http://hdl.handle.net/10034/126694Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 700
repetition : art production
spellingShingle 700
repetition : art production
Townsley, Jill
Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
description This practice based PhD is an enquiry into repetition found in relation to the visual art object, specifically the repetition that operates within the process of art production. There is some precedence for the consideration of repetition observed as a repeated subject or object, and especially the Warholian like repeated image. Rosalind Krauss observed in The Originality of the Avant-Garde: A Postmodernist Repetition that many artists are 'condemned to repeating as if by compulsion, the logically fraudulent original' (1981). This research considers a different presentation of repetition, the repeated action of labour that accumulates during the process of production. A body of artworks, that for the purpose of the research I describe as labourwork, was conceived and made with the concerns of repetition at the core of its process. Personal reflection and a close critical analysis of each labourwork, allowed for the identification of a number of issues that are significant to the consideration of repetition as it relates to the process of production. They include 'failure through repetition1, 'temporality', 'erasure' and 'shifting authorships'. The emergent themes are considered within the thesis, where broader theories of repetition are addressed in order to position this form of art production within a larger theoretical framework. The purpose of the repeated action within the labourworks was found to be more complex than a means to an end. It was not just a prerequisite to forming a critical mass or achieving a particular form. When observed from the standpoint of different schema such as time, the simulacra, mimesis or theories of replication, the repetition within the labourwork was observed to be identified within many different constructs. It was seen to affect the object, its relation to the viewer, authorship and the subject. Yet, these multifarious roles are not differentiated within the single word 'repetition'. The conclusion to this thesis summarises the effect repetition has been found to have within the labourworks, separating out its roles and offering opportunities to identify its individual operations, over-and-above the general term 'Repetition'.
author2 Bristow, Maxine
author_facet Bristow, Maxine
Townsley, Jill
author Townsley, Jill
author_sort Townsley, Jill
title Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
title_short Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
title_full Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
title_fullStr Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
title_full_unstemmed Moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
title_sort moments of repetition in the process of art production : temporalities, labour, appropriations and authorship
publisher University of Chester
publishDate 2010
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.542553
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