Proxemia: a sociotechnical analysis of an electronic artwork
Article Sidebar
Google Scholar citations
Main Article Content
This article puts forward a sociotechnical analysis of the electronic artwork Proxemia, created by the Argentine artist Mariela Yeregui. In the course of this analysis, aspects of the creative process have been selected which highlight most significantly how this process is not restricted to the artist’s original intention, but rather that it reshapes and expands in line with the agents involved in the various instances on which the piece is shown.
To this end, there will be an analysis of the artwork’s progression through two of the galleries and institutions at which it has been installed and exhibited. From that point, it is our intention to highlight the conflicts and solutions that have affected the piece in each of these instances. This will encompass the flexibility that the concept of problem acquires during this process, its sociotechnical construction and the operating definitions constructed by the various agents involved with respect to the work of art.
Based on the unique case put forward by Proxemia, the objective of this article is to analyse how, in the production of robotic art, certain factors interfere, intertwine and complexify the process, such as institutionality, variables related to management policies, representations of the artistic scene, the crossover between different knowledge systems and even local considerations.
In this respect, we aim to argue that the aforementioned variables interfere with the process not only merely as conditioning factors, or as a framework or context, but rather that, on the contrary, they acquire agency over the final experience of the artwork, influencing the mode in which the piece configures a way of seeing the world.
Article Details
Copyright
For all articles published in Artnodes that are subject to a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence, copyright is retained by the author(s). The complete text the license can be consulted at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. You may copy, distribute, transmit and adapt the work, provided you attribute it (authorship, journal name, publisher) in the manner specified by the author(s) or licensor(s).
Authors are responsible for obtaining the necessary licences for the images that are subject to copyright.
Assignment of intellectual property rights
The author non exclusively transfers the rights to use (reproduce, distribute, publicly broadcast or transform) and market the work, in full or part, to the journal’s editors in all present and future formats and modalities, in all languages, for the lifetime of the work and worldwide.
I hereby declare that I am the original author of the work. The editors shall thus not be held responsible for any obligation or legal action that may derive from the work submitted in terms of violation of third parties’ rights, whether intellectual property, trade secret or any other right.
Victoria Messi, Lecturer on the Master in Technology and Aesthetics in Electronic Arts Universidad Nacional de Tres de Febrero (Argentina)
Profesora en la Maestría en Tecnología y Estética de las Artes Electrónicas, Universidad Nacional de Tres de FebreroSimilar Articles
- Pedro Rolando Apolo Valdivia, The future of the music industry in the era of artificial intelligence , Artnodes: No. 30
- Josep Perelló, Poincaré and Duchamp: meeting in the fourth dimension , Artnodes: No. 4: (July 2005). NODE 4. Calculability (Editor: Pau Alsina)
- Joan Soler-Adillon, The intangible material of interactive art: agency, behavior and emergence , Artnodes: No. 16: (November 2015). NODE 16. Art Matters II (Editor: Ana Rodríguez Granell)
- Ji-hoon Kim, Reassembling Components, Hybridizing the Human and the Machine: Cross-disciplining Expanded Cinema and the Possibilities for a Discourse of Interfacing , Artnodes: No. 11: (November 2011). NODE 11. Hybrid Discourses (coord.: Pau Alsina)
- Pau Alsina, Mapping the interrelationships between art, science and technology for nearly ten years , Artnodes: No. 11: (November 2011). NODE 11. Hybrid Discourses (coord.: Pau Alsina)
- Jesús Fernando Monreal Ramírez, Ana Del Castillo, Itineraries of Matter: Mediality, Circulation and Technological Obsolescence in Certain Artistic Practices from Mexico , Artnodes: No. 15: (June 2015). NODE 15. Art Matters I (Editors: Pau Alsina, Ana Rodríguez Granell)
- Ana Rodriguez Granell, Pau Alsina, Introduction , Artnodes: No. 16: (November 2015). NODE 16. Art Matters II (Editor: Ana Rodríguez Granell)
- Pau Alsina, Debunking the myth of the immateriality of digital art: towards a neomaterialist focus on the arts , Artnodes: No. 14: (November 2014). NODE 14. New Feminist Materialism (Editor: Ana Rodríguez Granell)
- Michael Naimark, Analysis of the last twenty-five years of digital art , Artnodes: No. 4: (July 2005). NODE 4. Calculability (Editor: Pau Alsina)
- Ana Rodríguez Granell, Editorial , Artnodes: No. 16: (November 2015). NODE 16. Art Matters II (Editor: Ana Rodríguez Granell)
<< < 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.