Browsing by Subject "Performance Art"
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Item and then they were elsewheres(University of Minnesota, Department of Art, 2018) La Pointe, Marc, JItem The Breath Within the Breath: Contemporary Performance Art Practices in India(2015-05) Heer, MelissaThis dissertation examines contemporary performance art practices in India, with a particular focus on the work of three artists with diverse approaches to this ever-evolving art form: Ratnabali Kant, Samudra Kajal Saikia and Nikhil Chopra. The performances that serve as the focus of my analysis took place during the period of 1985 to 2012. In my examination of specific performances, I weave together strands of performance studies, histories of performance art and theater, and a theoretical analysis of “the performative” nature of society at large. The works I examine question the ways in which historical memory is itself performed through national spectacle, the reiteration of social norms, and the production of subject formations.Item Caring Too Much is a Start. MFA Thesis University of Minnesota, Department of Art(University of Minnesota, Department of Art, 2018-05) Limerick, Reb LItem Imagining the Posthuman: Art, Technology, and Living in the Future(2013-08) Myers, CeriseThis project examines works of contemporary performance, digital, and bio- art that reflect the blurring of boundaries once perceived as impermeable, whether between art and science, organism and machine, or the natural and modified. They reflect what has been called posthumanism, which, broadly defined, sees past the isolated, self-contained individual subject celebrated by liberal humanism to understand humans as bound to and shaped by their organic and technological others. As increasing scientific knowledge and rapidly expanding digital and communications technologies render increasingly obsolete the boundaries between humans and animals, organisms and machines, scholars including Cary Wolfe, Katherine Hayles, and Donna Haraway have wrestled with what this posthuman present means, yet have largely failed to address a critical aspect of understanding and imagining the posthuman: the visual. In a posthuman environment in which distinctions are created or obscured by means of what can or cannot be seen, and in which lives are increasingly mediated by ubiquitous screens and images, understanding the role the visual plays is crucial. Examining works by artists Christa Sommerer and Laurent Mignonneau, Orlan, Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr, Char Davies, and Stelarc, this project focuses on how technologies of sight reveal and structure the posthuman experience; how artistic practice shapes and is shaped by a posthuman world; how the body is viewed as modifiable or even replaceable; and what posthuman ways of seeing and creating imagery mean for human interaction, understanding, and agency. Recognizing posthumanism as a way of seeing and being seen allows not only a more complex understanding thereof, but has real-world implications for the freedom, movement, and agency of those human subjects interacting in a posthuman world.