Art, Aura, and Admiration in the Age of Digital Reproduction

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Patricia A. Emison
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Summary Walter Benjamin famously argued that the mass public of the twentieth century would necessarily correlate with a newly politicized art. But the world has changed considerably since Benjamin’s article was written, as Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer already were assessing less than a decade later. It is the purpose of this article to examine how the aesthetics of the Frankfurt school, though frequently still invoked, have lost some of their immediate relevance. The anti-establishment phase of the 60s, compounded by a pronounced taste for irony, rendered aura and exhibition outmoded values, while on the other hand, more recently, price escalation in the art market and digitization have made certain of the Frankfurt school arguments more pertinent than ever. Taking as examples Goldsworthy and Kentridge, this essay argues that a deliberate loosening of the artist’s control over both medium and reception displaces the warmed-over religious responses endorsed by Benjamin, positing instead increased intellectual agency on the part of viewers, whose identity as a mass public has become newly complicated.
数字复制时代的艺术、光环与崇拜
沃尔特·本雅明(Walter Benjamin)有一个著名的论点,即20世纪的大众必然与一种新的政治化艺术联系在一起。但是,就像西奥多·阿多诺(Theodor Adorno)和马克斯·霍克海默(Max Horkheimer)在不到十年后所做的评估那样,自本雅明的文章发表以来,世界已经发生了很大的变化。本文的目的是研究法兰克福学派的美学,尽管仍然经常被引用,但已经失去了一些直接的相关性。60年代的反建制阶段,加上对讽刺的明显偏好,使光环和展览的价值变得过时,而另一方面,最近艺术市场的价格上涨和数字化,使法兰克福学派的某些论点比以往任何时候都更有意义。本文以戈尔兹沃西和肯特里奇为例,认为艺术家对媒介和接受的控制的刻意放松取代了本杰明所支持的热烈的宗教反应,相反,假定观众的智力代理增加了,他们作为大众公众的身份已经变得更加复杂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Art History and Criticism
Art History and Criticism Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
24 weeks
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