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  1.  71
    Michael Fried and beholding video art.Ken Wilder - unknown
    In this paper, I consider Michael Fried’s recent contribution to the debate around the experience of video art, made in relation to the work of Douglas Gordon. Fried speculates that issues of antitheatricality may in fact be key to specifying the medium of video installation. While Fried’s position offers a useful way of framing the relation with the beholder in video art, in a way that pointedly moves beyond tautological notions of activating spectatorship, I question how theatricality is to be (...)
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  2. The case for an external spectator.Ken Wilder - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (3):261-277.
    I question the assumption that painting always presents a self-contained world. I use Masaccio’s Trinity to claim that in certain works, integrated into their architectural settings, the internal onlooker is fused with the external spectator. Here the imaginative engagement is situated. I highlight differences afforded internal and external spectators: with the former, the viewer identifies with a spectator who already occupies an unrepresented extension of the ‘virtual’ space; with the latter, the beholder enters that part of the fictive world depicted (...)
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  3.  34
    Architecture as performance: Sigurd Lewerentz's uncut bricks.Ken Wilder - 2021 - Aesthetic Investigations 5 (1):28-50.
    Might architecture be reconceived as a form of performance? I draw upon Nelson Goodman’s writing on architecture—including his account of architectural notation—and David Davies’s performance theory, which claims that artworks should be considered not as products made by generative performances, but rather as the performances themselves. I tie the exemplification that Goodman identifies as the primary way architectural works ‘mean’ to the role of the architectural ‘score’, recast not as a mere ‘constraint’ but as integral to the creative processes by (...)
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  4.  24
    Installation Art and the Question of Aesthetic Autonomy: Juliane Rebentisch and the Beholder’s Share.Ken Wilder - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (3):351-356.
    Intermedial art, as it emerged in the 1960s and 70s, constituted a threat not only to the medium specificity of modernism, but to the artwork as self-contained autonomous object. Both supporters and critics of intermedia drew a contrast between, on the one hand, modernism’s aesthetic engagement with a medium-specific ‘object’, and on the other new non-aesthetic ‘practices’ engaging the ‘literal spectator’ within her own space, such that the space of the gallery is drawn into the situational encounter. In her 2003/12 (...)
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  5.  2
    Michael Fried and Beholding Video Art.Ken Wilder - 2011 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 49 (1):5.
    In this paper, I consider Michael Fried’s recent contribution to the debate around the experience of video art, made in relation to the work of Douglas Gordon. Fried speculates that issues of antitheatricality may in fact be key to specifying the medium of video installation. While Fried’s position offers a useful way of framing the relation with the beholder in video art, in a way that pointedly moves beyond tautological notions of activating spectatorship, I question how theatricality is to be (...)
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  6.  20
    Neither Here Nor Elsewhere: Displacement Devices in Representing the Supernatural.Ken Wilder - 2011 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):46-62.
    How might the supernatural be represented in religious paintings that imply continuity between the virtual space of painting and the real space of the beholder? Such an implied continuity might be thought to threaten a necessary distance demanded of religious works. This article examines how a number of Italian paintings employ strategies for representing the supernatural through displacement devices that create a ‘gap’ within perception – an inviolable space that is implied as being outside normal spatiotemporal relations. The contention is (...)
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  7.  3
    Neither Here Nor Elsewhere: Displacement Devices in Representing the Supernatural.Ken Wilder - 2020 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):46.
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  8.  2
    Neither here nor elsewhere: displacement devices in representing the supernatural.Ken Wilder - 2010 - In .
    How might the supernatural be represented in those religious paintings that imply a continuity between the virtual space of painting and the real space of the beholder? Such an implied continuity, dependent upon an engagement where the beholder imaginatively realigns her frame of reference to that of the picture, might be thought to threaten a necessary distance demanded of religious works. This paper examines how a number of painters exploited innovative displacement devices, utilizing inherent ambiguities as to where a painting (...)
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  9.  38
    Negotiating Painting's Two Perspectives: a Role for the Imagination.Ken Wilder - unknown
    This 4000 word essay was selected for a special issue of 'Image & Narrative' (Issue 18, September 2007), on 'Thinking Pictures', guest edited by Hanneke Grootenboer, author of 'The Rhetoric of Perspective' (University of Chicago Press, 2005). 'Image & Narrative' is a peer-reviewed e-journal on visual narratology, with essays reviewed by at least two members of the editorial board. The essay addresses contemporary arguments on spectatorship within the philosophy of art. It examines different ways by which internal and external spectators (...)
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  10.  21
    Projective art and the ‘staging’ of empathic projection.Ken Wilder - unknown
    Michael Fried’s unexpected contribution to defining the ontological status of video art includes an intriguing claim that projective art is particularly suited to the ‘staging’ of empathic projection. Fried applies Stanley Cavell’s notion of empathic projection, developed in relation to skepticism of ‘other minds’, to moving image installations that not only exploit the beholder’s capacity for empathically projecting, but do so in such a way as to reveal the mechanism at play. In developing this claim, I compare Fried’s key example (...)
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  11.  9
    The Configurational Encounter and the problematic of Beholding.Ken Wilder - 2018 - In Malcolm Quinn, Dave Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch & Stephen Wilson (eds.), The Persistence of Taste: Art, Museums and Everyday Life After Bourdieu.
    This is a peer reviewed chapter in the book The Persistence of Taste: Art, Museums and Everyday Life After Bourdieu, an interdisciplinary analysis of taste in the wake of Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology. The chapter, ‘The configurational encounter and the problematic of beholding’, is in Part I of the book, entitled ‘Taste and Art’. Engaging the aesthetics of reception as its field of inquiry, the chapter draws upon the literary theorist Wolfgang Iser’s notion of the ‘blank’ as a staged suspension of (...)
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  12.  22
    Vermeer: Interruptions, Exclusions, and ‘Imagining Seeing’.Ken Wilder - 2015 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 52 (1):38-59.
    This article proposes an essential interrelatedness of Vermeer’s strategies of inclusion and exclusion of an implied beholder. I will argue that such strategies mutually reinforce each other, to the extent that the plausibility of one is arguably dependent upon the possibility of the other. This is evidenced by Vermeer’s subtle manipulations of pictorial space, and the article traces a decisive shift in his familiar use of barriers from those aimed at an external presence to those oriented towards an internal beholder. (...)
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  13.  3
    Vermeer: Interruptions, Exclusions, and ‘Imagining Seeing’.Ken Wilder - 2020 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 52 (1):38.
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