
Futures of the Contemporary
Contemporaneity, Untimeliness, and Artistic Research
Edited by Paulo de Assis and Michael Schwab
Transdisciplinary
approaches to the notions of “the contemporary” and “contemporaneity”
Futures of the Contemporary
explores different notions and manifestations of “the contemporary” in music,
visual arts, art theory, and philosophy. In particular, the authors in this
collection of essays scrutinise the role of artistic research in critical and
creative expressions of contemporaneity. When distinguished from “the
contemporaneous” of a given historical time, “the contemporary” becomes a
crucial concept, promoting or excluding objects and practices according to
their ability to diagnose previously unnoticed aspects of the present. In this
sense, the contemporary gains a critical function, involving particular modes
of relating to history and one’s own time.
Written by major experts from fields such as music performance, composition, art theory, visual arts, art history, critical studies, and philosophy, this book offers challenging perspectives on contemporary art practices, the temporality of artistic works and phenomena, and new modes of problematising the production of art and its public apprehension.
Contributors: Andrew Prior (University of Plymouth), Babette Babich (Fordham University), Geoff Cox (Fine Art at Plymouth University / Aarhus University), Heiner Goebbels (Justus Liebig University), Jacob Lund (Aarhus University), Michael Schwab (Orpheus Institute), Pal Capdevila (Autonomous University of Barcelona), Paulo de Assis (Orpheus Institute), Peter Osborne (Kingston University London), Ryan Nolan (University of Plymouth), Zsuzsa Baross (Trent University)
This publication is GPRC-labeled (Guaranteed Peer-Reviewed Content).
THE CONTEMPORARY:
Format: Edited volume - ebook
188 pages
Illustrated b/w
ISBN: 9789461662866
Publication: July 15, 2019
Series: Orpheus Institute Series
Languages: English
Paulo de Assis is artist researcher (pianist, composer, music philosopher) and research fellow at the Orpheus Institute.