Sawyer Seminar: Dr. Claire Bishop, "Interventions: The Art of Political Timing"

When

6 p.m., April 8, 2021

On April 8, Sawyer Seminar at the University of Arizona (https://sawyerseminar.arizona.edu), which is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, will host Claire Bishop, Professor of Art History, Graduate Center, City University of New York, for the Sawyer theme "Socially Engaged Art" curated by Hai Ren (任海) (UArizona East Asian Studies and Anthropology).
 
Bishop's Sawyer Lecture: "Interventions: The Art of Political Timing"

"This lecture offers a historical and theoretical analysis of the term 'intervention' as a way to describe a way of making art that triangulates public gesture, political timing, and media circulation. The first uses of the term 'intervention' are found in Latin America during the 1970s, when a weakening of the dictatorships made it possible for artists to exploit and mobilize public space and the media at a moment of political uncertainty. Although the term undergoes a dilution of meaning in the 1990s (devolving into site-specific projects commissioned for biennials and museums), the intervention’s qualities of self-initiated transgression persist in the digital realm of tactical media. Since 2010 there has been a resurgence of interventions in tandem with new forms of political activism and dissent (Russia, Cuba, United States). I connect political timing to the idea of conjunctural analysis (Gramsci/ Hall), but ultimately raise questions about (1) the ability of this method to work with (rather than against) the attention span of social media, and (2) the inherent value of disruption and transgression now that it has been co-opted by the alt-right."
 
Lecture (open to the public): Thursday, April 8, 2021, 6-7:30pm WST / 9-10:30pm EST
Register in advance for this meeting:https://arizona.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZcrc-2tqjIjGtPbbVtygz2sw0hwFR… registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.