Peter Osborne
Created @11 februari 2024 21:00
Class CI
Type Reading
Subject Art
Reviewed
Deadline @15 februari 2024
Art versus Image?
The document explores the relationship between art and image within the
context of mass media, digital image production, and cultural value. It delves
into the opposition between art and image as a cultural stereotype in capitalist
societies, with references to the influence of Guy Debord's "Society of the
Spectacle" and the shift from modernist formalist aestheticism to Conceptual
Art. The text also discusses the persistence of the image in both modernist-
formalist art and canonical Conceptual Art, highlighting the significant role of
interpretation and the shift from opticality to textuality in the production of
images. Additionally, it addresses the development of the field of visual culture
and its theoretical eclecticism.
Furthermore, the document critiques the "visual essentialism" that reproduces
the presuppositions of formalist-modernism and highlights the disability of
Visual Culture Studies in relation to the critical interpretation of contemporary
art. It emphasizes the significance of the mediating quality of the image in the
Kantian opposition of intuition to concept, as well as in the structure of
cognitive experience. The text also touches on the ontological structure of the
image in the context of digital technologies and the relationship between
virtuality and possible visualizations. Additionally, it provides references to
Peter Osborne 1
Created @11 februari 2024 21:00
Class CI
Type Reading
Subject Art
Reviewed
Deadline @15 februari 2024
Art versus Image?
The document explores the relationship between art and image within the
context of mass media, digital image production, and cultural value. It delves
into the opposition between art and image as a cultural stereotype in capitalist
societies, with references to the influence of Guy Debord's "Society of the
Spectacle" and the shift from modernist formalist aestheticism to Conceptual
Art. The text also discusses the persistence of the image in both modernist-
formalist art and canonical Conceptual Art, highlighting the significant role of
interpretation and the shift from opticality to textuality in the production of
images. Additionally, it addresses the development of the field of visual culture
and its theoretical eclecticism.
Furthermore, the document critiques the "visual essentialism" that reproduces
the presuppositions of formalist-modernism and highlights the disability of
Visual Culture Studies in relation to the critical interpretation of contemporary
art. It emphasizes the significance of the mediating quality of the image in the
Kantian opposition of intuition to concept, as well as in the structure of
cognitive experience. The text also touches on the ontological structure of the
image in the context of digital technologies and the relationship between
virtuality and possible visualizations. Additionally, it provides references to
Peter Osborne 1