Gathering Ecologies

Gathering Ecologies
Title Gathering Ecologies PDF eBook
Author Andrew Goodman
Publisher Saint Philip Street Press
Total Pages 342
Release 2020-10-09
Genre
ISBN 9781013290190

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What might an interactive artwork look like that enabled greater expressive potential for all of the components of the event? How can we radically shift our idea of interactivity towards an ecological conception of the term, emphasising the generation of complex relation over the stability of objects and subjects? Gathering Ecologies explores this ethical and political shift in thinking, examining the creative potential of differential relations through key concepts from the philosophies of A.N. Whitehead, Gilbert Simondon and Michel Serres. Utilising detailed examinations of work by artists such as Lygia Clark, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Nathaniel Stern and Joyce Hinterding, the book discusses the creative potential of movement, perception and sensation, interfacing, sound and generative algorithmic design to tune an event towards the conditions of its own ecological emergence. This work was published by Saint Philip Street Press pursuant to a Creative Commons license permitting commercial use. All rights not granted by the work's license are retained by the author or authors.

Gathering Ecologies

Gathering Ecologies
Title Gathering Ecologies PDF eBook
Author Andrew Goodman
Publisher Saint Philip Street Press
Total Pages 342
Release 2020-10-09
Genre
ISBN 9781013290183

Download Gathering Ecologies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

What might an interactive artwork look like that enabled greater expressive potential for all of the components of the event? How can we radically shift our idea of interactivity towards an ecological conception of the term, emphasising the generation of complex relation over the stability of objects and subjects? Gathering Ecologies explores this ethical and political shift in thinking, examining the creative potential of differential relations through key concepts from the philosophies of A.N. Whitehead, Gilbert Simondon and Michel Serres. Utilising detailed examinations of work by artists such as Lygia Clark, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Nathaniel Stern and Joyce Hinterding, the book discusses the creative potential of movement, perception and sensation, interfacing, sound and generative algorithmic design to tune an event towards the conditions of its own ecological emergence. This work was published by Saint Philip Street Press pursuant to a Creative Commons license permitting commercial use. All rights not granted by the work's license are retained by the author or authors.

Gathering Ecologies

Gathering Ecologies
Title Gathering Ecologies PDF eBook
Author Andrew Goodman
Publisher
Total Pages 344
Release 2018-03-17
Genre Art
ISBN 9781785420528

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Gathering Ecologies explores the potential for complex relational ecologies in interactive and participatory art, utilising concepts from process philosophy to argue for an ethical and expanded notion of interactivity that moves beyond a focus on human subjectivity to enable the expressive capacities of all the components of the event.

Gathering the Desert

Gathering the Desert
Title Gathering the Desert PDF eBook
Author Gary Paul Nabhan
Publisher University of Arizona Press
Total Pages 228
Release 1985
Genre Gardening
ISBN 9780816510146

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Looks at the history and uses of plants of the Sonoran Desert, including creosote, palm trees, mesquite, organpipe cactus, amaranth, chiles, and Devil's claw

Art as Information Ecology

Art as Information Ecology
Title Art as Information Ecology PDF eBook
Author Jason A. Hoelscher
Publisher Duke University Press
Total Pages 176
Release 2021-08-09
Genre Art
ISBN 1478021683

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In Art as Information Ecology, Jason A. Hoelscher offers not only an information theory of art but an aesthetic theory of information. Applying close readings of the information theories of Claude Shannon and Gilbert Simondon to 1960s American art, Hoelscher proposes that art is information in its aesthetic or indeterminate mode—information oriented less toward answers and resolvability than toward questions, irresolvability, and sustained difference. These irresolvable differences, Hoelscher demonstrates, fuel the richness of aesthetic experience by which viewers glean new information and insight from each encounter with an artwork. In this way, art constitutes information that remains in formation---a difference that makes a difference that keeps on differencing. Considering the works of Frank Stella, Robert Morris, Adrian Piper, the Drop City commune, Eva Hesse, and others, Hoelscher finds that art exists within an information ecology of complex feedback between artwork and artworld that is driven by the unfolding of difference. By charting how information in its aesthetic mode can exist beyond today's strictly quantifiable and monetizable forms, Hoelscher reconceives our understanding of how artworks work and how information operates.

Creative Ecologies

Creative Ecologies
Title Creative Ecologies PDF eBook
Author Hélène Frichot
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 264
Release 2018-12-13
Genre Architecture
ISBN 1350036544

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Architect and philosopher Hélène Frichot examines how the discipline of architecture is theorized and practiced at the periphery. Eschewing a conventionally direct approach to architectural objects – to iconic buildings and big-name architects – she instead explores the background of architectural practice, to introduce the creative ecologies in which architecture exists only in relation to other objects and ideas. Consisting of a series of philosophical encounters with architectural practice that are neither neatly located in one domain nor the other, this book is concerned with 'other ways of doing architecture'. It examines architecture at the limits where it is muddied by alternative disciplinary influences – whether art practice, philosophy or literature. Frichot meets a range of creative characters who work at the peripheries, and who challenge the central assumptions of the discipline, showing that there is no 'core of architecture' – there is rather architecture as a multiplicity of diverse concerns in engagement with local environments and worlds. From an author well-known in the disciplines of architecture and philosophy for her scholarship on Deleuze, this is a radical, accessible, and highly-original approach to design research, deftly engaging with an array of current topics from the Anthropocene to affect theory, new materialism contemporary feminism.

The Behavioral Ecology of Efe Pygmy Men in the Ituri Forest, Zaire

The Behavioral Ecology of Efe Pygmy Men in the Ituri Forest, Zaire
Title The Behavioral Ecology of Efe Pygmy Men in the Ituri Forest, Zaire PDF eBook
Author Robert C. Bailey
Publisher U OF M MUSEUM ANTHRO ARCHAEOLOGY
Total Pages 172
Release 1991-01-01
Genre
ISBN 0915703246

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Rev. version of author's doctoral dissertation which was completed in 1985.