Resource type
Date created
2022-05-19
Authors/Contributors
Author: Choi, Suk Kyoung
Abstract
In this article I initiate an inquiry into the artistic act and its relation to self-expression in an age of computational virtuality, a time when subjectivity is being subsumed by ubiquity and its requisite social mediation. Starting from my painting practice, I attempt to access the tacit aesthetic prior to the emergence of the algorithmic mediation permeating contemporary culture, by exploring metaphor in precomputational artistic praxis. I examine the entanglement of self and context in a ‘cognitive autoethnography' reflecting on artists' reports from late Modernism, a time when subjectivity found focus in the studio of the individual practitioner, not across networks of digital mediation. I examine metaphors of curiosity and intuition in the creative ‘play’ of artists to offer a qualitative analysis of 10 articles published in ARTnews magazine during the 1950s and 1960s interviewing Abstract Expressionist artists of the New York School. I seek the individual in the creative act to relocate myself as a practitioner in our age of distributed subjectivity. The study brings into question presumptions about sampling and interpretation, explores the subjective dimensions of creative praxis and speculates on what we – as artists and humanists – may be losing in the algorithmic transformation of embodied creative intentionality.
Document
Identifier
DOI: 10.1080/14702029.2022.2069917
Publication details
Publication title
Journal of Visual Art Practice
Document title
The (de)situated subjective: A cognitive autoethnography of "the New York School.”
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Date
2022
Volume
21
Issue
2
First page
97
Last page
132
Publisher DOI
10.1080/14702029.2022.2069917
Published article URL
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the publisher with many rights continuing to also be held by the author(s).
Scholarly level
Peer reviewed?
Yes
Member of collection
Download file | Size |
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Situated-subjective_edited_AOM_Summit.pdf | 1.95 MB |