IT HAS NOT BEEN—IT IS. THE SIGNALETIC TRANSFORMATION OF PHOTOGRAPHY

It has not been—it is. The signaletic transformation of photography

It has not been—it is. The signaletic transformation of photography

Blog Article

Inspired by the concept of “the signaletic,” this article proposes a new understanding of photography as a social and performative device related to everyday life, to communication, and to presence.Today photography is a ubiquitous, social activity to a much larger extent than before the digital revolution and the introduction of the Internet, creating relational situations and communication as well as new affective involvements between human bodies and the photographic, media-convergent technologies.In the light of this epistemological change, the medium of photography Computer Monitors demands a theoretical reformulation, and contemporary art works can help us articulate “the signaletic paradigm” in photography.To illustrate this, the article includes an analysis of Christian Marclay's prize winning “The Clock” and David Claerbout's “Sections of a Happy Moment”.

It is my argument that although the traditional photography, such as the early photography Engine Cold Air Intake theories by Bazin and Barthes have described, confirmed “what-has-been” (Barthes) and fulfilled a “mumification desire” (Bazin), the new digital practices at the Internet show “what-is-going-on” (presence) and thereby rather fulfills the user's existential desire to “feel time.”.

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