Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art

Going against phalloculocentrism’s situation in a hom(m)o-sexual paradigm and structuration of the male gaze and moving towards a gyneacentric perspective, the thesis explores how a feminised process of reception and interaction with artworks might arise. My installation and moving-image practice-le...

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Main Author: Maffioletti, Catherine
Published: University of the Arts London 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.576919
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5769192015-03-20T04:18:05ZBeyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based artMaffioletti, Catherine2012Going against phalloculocentrism’s situation in a hom(m)o-sexual paradigm and structuration of the male gaze and moving towards a gyneacentric perspective, the thesis explores how a feminised process of reception and interaction with artworks might arise. My installation and moving-image practice-led research is driven by a central question: How might a feminised form of spatiality, based on a gyneacentric model, deform an audience’s phalloculocentric reading of an artwork? The purpose of this thesis is to find a practice-led feminist method of producing an artwork that actively represents the feminine and de-centres an audience’s (male) gaze. By dislocating the eye from the lens of a camera, I propose to alter an audience’s usual cinematic experience of an image of the feminine through my artwork. This is developed through my proposition for composing an experience of her image through inter-relational exchanges in order to shift the register of reception from gazing to “touching”. I claim this could provide a potential for an embodied feminised process of spatiality and perception. A method of cartographically mapping the feminine through diagrams, photographs, drawings and video is developed in the preparation and installation of the central artwork that structures the thesis, (f)low visibility, in a nightclub. Feminist (installation and video) practitioners’, Martha Rosler, Louise Bourgeois, Mona Hatoum and Pipilotti Rist, approaches to representing the feminine are also investigated. The preparatory designs attempt to subvert the potential for a voyeuristic reception and/or exhibitionistic composition of the installation. This forms an investigation into how the reception and interaction with a feminised image might arise through a tactile process of exploration. I propose that although (f)low visibility produced ungraspable feminised on-screen images it afforded embodied partially locatable inter-relational exchanges in its reception of her. Luce Irigaray’s and Donna Haraway’s theories of embodiment are developed and intertwined in my conclusion. I claim that interaction with and reception of monstrous cyborg images on-screen occurred through the navigation of a fantasy of intrauterine “touching” in (f)low visibility’s installation as a feminised process of spatiality.709.04074Gender studies : Film & Video : Moving Image Techniques : Creative Arts and Design not elsewhere classifiedUniversity of the Arts Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.576919http://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/6107/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 709.04074
Gender studies : Film & Video : Moving Image Techniques : Creative Arts and Design not elsewhere classified
spellingShingle 709.04074
Gender studies : Film & Video : Moving Image Techniques : Creative Arts and Design not elsewhere classified
Maffioletti, Catherine
Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
description Going against phalloculocentrism’s situation in a hom(m)o-sexual paradigm and structuration of the male gaze and moving towards a gyneacentric perspective, the thesis explores how a feminised process of reception and interaction with artworks might arise. My installation and moving-image practice-led research is driven by a central question: How might a feminised form of spatiality, based on a gyneacentric model, deform an audience’s phalloculocentric reading of an artwork? The purpose of this thesis is to find a practice-led feminist method of producing an artwork that actively represents the feminine and de-centres an audience’s (male) gaze. By dislocating the eye from the lens of a camera, I propose to alter an audience’s usual cinematic experience of an image of the feminine through my artwork. This is developed through my proposition for composing an experience of her image through inter-relational exchanges in order to shift the register of reception from gazing to “touching”. I claim this could provide a potential for an embodied feminised process of spatiality and perception. A method of cartographically mapping the feminine through diagrams, photographs, drawings and video is developed in the preparation and installation of the central artwork that structures the thesis, (f)low visibility, in a nightclub. Feminist (installation and video) practitioners’, Martha Rosler, Louise Bourgeois, Mona Hatoum and Pipilotti Rist, approaches to representing the feminine are also investigated. The preparatory designs attempt to subvert the potential for a voyeuristic reception and/or exhibitionistic composition of the installation. This forms an investigation into how the reception and interaction with a feminised image might arise through a tactile process of exploration. I propose that although (f)low visibility produced ungraspable feminised on-screen images it afforded embodied partially locatable inter-relational exchanges in its reception of her. Luce Irigaray’s and Donna Haraway’s theories of embodiment are developed and intertwined in my conclusion. I claim that interaction with and reception of monstrous cyborg images on-screen occurred through the navigation of a fantasy of intrauterine “touching” in (f)low visibility’s installation as a feminised process of spatiality.
author Maffioletti, Catherine
author_facet Maffioletti, Catherine
author_sort Maffioletti, Catherine
title Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
title_short Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
title_full Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
title_fullStr Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
title_full_unstemmed Beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
title_sort beyond the mirror : towards a feminised (cartographic) process of spatiality in moving-image & installation based art
publisher University of the Arts London
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.576919
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