Museum Media. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

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Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Жанр произведения: Изобразительное искусство, фотография
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119796640
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Johann Joachim. (1764) 2006. History of the Art of Antiquity. Translated by Harry Mallgrave. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute.

      Winthrop-Young, Geoffrey. 2006. “Cultural Studies and German Media Theory.” In New Cultural Studies: Adventures in Theory, edited by G. Hall and C. Birchall, 88–104. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

      Wolfgang Ernst has been Full Professor for Media Theories at the Institute of Musicology and Media Studies, Humboldt University, Berlin, since 2003. He studied history, classics, and archaeology; in the 1980s and 1990s his academic focus was the theory of history, museology, and the archive. His current research fields embrace time-based and time-critical media, their chrono-poetical capacities and implicit sonicity. He has published many books in German, including, recently, Chronopoetik: Zeitweisen und Zeitgaben technischer Medien (Chrono-poetics: Time in and of technological media; Kulturverlag Kadmos, 2012), Gleichursprünglichkeit. Zeitwesen und Zeitgegebenheit technischer Medien (Equiprimoridality: The temporal being and the being-in-time of technical media; Kulturverlag Kadmos, 2012), and Signale aus der Vergangenheit: Eine kleine Geschichtskritik (Signals from the past: A small historical critique; Wilhelm Fink, 2013). In English he has most recently published Digital Memory and the Archive, edited and with an introduction by Jussi Parikka (University of Minnesota Press, 2013).

      Michelle Henning is Senior Lecturer in Photography and Visual Culture in the Media Department, College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Brighton. She is also a Visiting Senior Research Fellow in the Digital Cultures Research Centre at the University of the West of England, Bristol. Prior to this she was Associate Professor of Media and Culture at the University of the West of England, Bristol. She is a practicing photographer and designer and has written widely on museums, media, and display techniques in her book Museums, Media and Cultural Theory (Open University Press, 2006), as well as in numerous collections.

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      MEDIA ARCHAEOLOGY OF/IN THE MUSEUM

       Andrew Hoskins and Amy Holdsworth

      The connective turn has threatened the scarcity value of museal media culture (Hoskins 2011a; 2011b). This “turn” is the sudden abundance, pervasiveness, and immediacy of communication networks, nodes, and digital media content which opens up new histories: new ways of sorting, sifting, and seeing the past. The past, which was once scarce and relatively inaccessible from the present, is suddenly and inexorably visible and accessible in an emergent “post-scarcity” culture. But the connective turn is far from being some benign phase in the evolution of media and memory; rather, it devalues scarcity as the once universal currency of museum culture. Museum content, simply put, is everywhere.

      But how museums use or can use media to represent the past and shape memory of media and media’s pasts – the subject of this chapter – has been deeply affected, and indeed infiltrated, by the media of the day. Media have long entwined the personal and the public, locating the unfolding details of everyday life in terms of the events of the larger society. But the difference today is that digital connecting, networking, and archiving is a qualitatively different force of media memory from previous transformative media in that it simultaneously makes present multiple pasts, while captivating the present.

      It is through this open and continuous connectivity that Peter Lunenfeld sees cultural memory as “warped”: “When image, text, photo, graphic, and all manner of audiovisual records are available at the touch of a button anywhere in the unimodern wired world, the ordered progression through time is replaced by a blended presentness” (2011, 46).

      An influential factor here is the impact of different media in shaping an experience of proximity (in time and space) to events deemed “historical.” For example, “historical distance,” according to Mark Salber Phillips, is manifested “along a gradient of distances, including proximity or immediacy as well as remoteness or detachment” (2004, 89). But digital devices and networks have seized and short-circuited precisely these “manifestations” of distance and not least in their deliverance of immediacy as one of the defining – and compulsive – experiences of their use. And the conditions of remoteness or detachment seem inexorably dissolvable through the equivocations of the digital: the reduction and reproduction of all-things-past in the fluidity of digital data. Digital networks and databases don’t just bridge historical distance: they crush it. And yet these are precisely the media that are being brought in to represent, organize, and manage the organizational, archival, and official memory of museums.

      The museum then is inevitably caught up in media archaeology, both as a version or form from a macro-historical (or antihistorical) perspective, and in the uses of media archaeology as a curatorial strategy in responding to not only the transformations of the digital outlined above but, at the same time, a deep dissatisfaction with the novelty from which discourses on the digital are frequently hung. Furthermore, it is precisely in this space and time that artists have flourished, intervening to construct alternative or hypothetical media histories to challenge both the inexorable immediacy of the present and its post-scarcity digital futures.1

      In what follows we explore some cases of media archaeology in practice – both implicit and explicit – and consider their effectiveness in offering alternative medial times and spaces amid the onslaught of the connective turn.

      The Memorial to the Iraq War exhibition, which ran at London’s