'Face No Dial of a Clock – a cross-temporal fugue' ist eine Auseinandersetzung mit der Wahrnehmung von asynchronen Gleichzeitigkeiten. Gegenwärtige Lebenssituationen werden aufgesucht, die von den betroffenen Individuen fordern, einen Umgang mit unterschiedlichen Zeitregimen zu finden.
Die Erzählerin des Film-Essays recherchiert an unterschiedlichen Orten, die sich in einem Wandel befinden. Sie verfolgt ein Bauprojekt eines Pflegezentrums für Demenzerkrankte, das ein ‘Dorf’ bauen will, welches den Bewohner:innen Normalität vermitteln soll. Sie besucht über mehrere Jahre eine Kleinfamilie, deren Junge sich mit der Einschulung schwer tut. Und sie berichtet von zufälligen Begegnungen mit einer Doktorandin, die dem Filmprojekt von Maya Deren zu haitianischen Voodoo-Ritualen in den 1940er Jahren nachgeht.
Was vorerst wie ein Durcheinander zusammenhangsloser Beobachtungen und Entwicklungen erscheint, erweist sich mit der Zeit als ein Gedankenstrom aus Bildern, Tönen und Stimmen. Aus den unterschiedlichen Strängen entstehen Fragen zu je spezifischen Eigenzeiten, die in Konflikt mit den Anforderungen der aktuellen Leistungsgesellschaft stehen, und sie zeigen, wie diese gelebt werden.
Der Film-Essay ist Teil des gleichnamigen PhD-Projekts Face No Dial of a Clock, welches im Rahmen der PhD-Kooperation der Kunstuniversität Linz mit der Zürcher Hochschule der Künste entstanden ist.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.
Trading Zones: Camera Work in Artistic and Ethnographic Research
Contributions by Shirin Barghnavard, Laura Coppens, Heidrun Holzfeind, Louis Henderson, Daniel Kötter, Uriel Orlow, Bina Elisabeth Mohn, Anette Rose, Lena Maria Thüring, Zheng Mahler, Artur Żmijewski
Edited by Jürgen Krusche, Barbara Preisig and Laura von Niederhäusern, Institute for Contemporary Art Research IFCAR, Zurich University of the Arts, 2021
Print publication and e-book
Summary
Artistic and ethnographic work intersect where the camera is no longer merely an instrument of research or a visual medium. At this intersection, photographic or cinematic images themselves become the sensory bearers of latent knowledge. A shared field of Art and Ethnography opens up in this border zone. Its potential — for explorations, experiments and reflections — has far from been exhausted.
Between 2018 and 2020, a lecture series at Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) further investigated these relationships. The resulting contributions (by artists, filmmakers, visual anthropologists, and theorists) are gathered in the present volume. «Trading Zones» brings together essays, interviews, and image-based work that illumine the audio-visual practices of camera-related work while transcending generic conventions: What is the documentary value of fiction? How do video installations circumvent linear narrations and forms of representation? Is there a difference between aesthetic and scientific knowledge?
Although the authors have diverse disciplinary backgrounds, their contributions emphasize that the camera, as an apparatus, questions the material process of visual perception and enables conversations between author, subject, object, and viewer. The contributions as such take into account all levels of camera-based work: recording, post-production, and presentation. Thus, Camera Work in Trading Zones invites new approaches of theoretical and practical interest to artists, researchers, filmmakers, and ethnographers and establishes a basis on which these related fields enable inventive experiences.