超越厄运与忧郁的岩石美学:面对石油,使能源成为问题

IF 0.1 Q4 COMMUNICATION
MediaTropes Pub Date : 2020-02-06 DOI:10.33137/mt.v7i2.33675
Bart H. Welling
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文认为,阻碍整个文明向可再生能源过渡的因素之一是,人们普遍倾向于将石油和其他碳氢化合物视为卑贱和抽象的。化石燃料行业的代表通过将石油文化的真实成本隐藏在虚拟化能源背后来做到这一点;环境主义者的框架通过过度依赖于厄运的岩石美学(即世界末日的图像)和阴郁(即哥特式的石油泄漏和生锈的采掘基础设施的可视化)来做到这一点。碳氢化合物既具有赋予生命又具有毁灭生命的特性,它们在现代世界中调解几乎所有人类和非人类关系方面具有强大的非人类作用,因此很难想象石油文化的替代品。最近,艺术家们开始颠覆岩石美学的传统,以对抗碳氢化合物的抽象和堕落,包括将原油作为自己的艺术媒介。路易斯·赫尔比格(Louis Helbig)古怪好玩的沥青砂照片,沃伦·卡里奥(Warren Cariou)以沥青为基础的“岩石画”,以及凯瑟琳·图姆(Kathleen Thum)怪异迷人的“油彩”,都被解读为对岩石美学现状的有意义的挑战——无论从什么意义上讲,这种挑衅都很重要。除了促进能源转型之外,这些图像还让观众看到碳氢化合物是所有生物都深深纠缠在一起的媒介。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond Doom and Gloom in Petroaesthetics: Facing Oil, Making Energy Matter
This essay argues that one of the factors holding back civilization-wide transitions to renewable energy is the widespread tendency to render petroleum and other hydrocarbons abject and abstract. Fossil fuel industry representations do this by hiding the true costs of petroculture behind the virtualization Energy; environmentalist framings do it by relying too much on petroaesthetics of doom (i.e., apocalyptic imagery) and gloom (i.e., Gothic visualizations of oil spills and rusting extractive infrastructure). The scarcity of representations of hydrocarbons that acknowledge both their life-giving and life-destroying properties, their powerful nonhuman agency in mediating practically every human and nonhuman relationship in the modern world, makes it hard to imagine alternatives to petroculture. Recently, artists have begun subverting petroaesthetic conventions in ways that counter the abstraction and abjection of hydrocarbons, including by using crude oil as an artistic medium in its own right. The oddly playful bitumen sands photographs of Louis Helbig, the bitumen-based “petrographs” of Warren Cariou, and the weird, enthralling “oilscapes” of Kathleen Thum are interpreted as meaningful challenges to the petroaesthetic status quo—provocations that matter in every sense of the word. Beyond merely promoting energy transitions, these images perform transitions as they empower viewers to see hydrocarbons as media with which all living things are deeply entangled.
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