Diffractive Art Practices: Computation and the Messy Entanglements between Mainstream Contemporary Art, and New Media Art*
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We engage with Karen Barad’s notion of diffraction (2007) to re-evaluate the relations between mainstream contemporary art (MCA) and new media art (NMA) that have been discussed for many years as part of a somewhat contentious debate. Our diffractive reading highlights both large and small but consequential differences between these art practices. We do not smooth over the tensions highlighted in earlier discussions of NMA and MCA. Instead we use Barad’s term ‘entanglement’ to suggest that there are generative ‘entanglements’, as well as productive differences, between these practices. We extend the debate by considering which differences matter, for whom (artists, gallerists, scientists) and how these differences emerge through material-discursive intra-actions. We argue for a new term, diffractive art practices, and suggest that such art practices move beyond the bifurcation of NMA and MCA to partially reconfigure the practices between art, computation and humanities.
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Helen Pritchard, Queen Mary University of London Goldsmiths, University of London
Helen is an artist and researcher whose work is interdisciplinary and brings together the fields of Computational Aesthetics, Software Studies, Environmental Practice and Material Feminisms. She is a PhD candidate at Queen Mary, University of London and a researcher in the Department of Sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Jane Prophet, School of Creative Media, City University
Jane Prophet is a visual artist committed to interdisciplinary collaborative research. She uses a wide range of ‘old’ and ‘new’ media in the production of her art. She is Associate Dean for Research, Postgraduate Programmes and Administration in the School of Creative Media at City University, Hong Kong
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