[spectre] CFP: Form, Production and Transknowledge in Soviet Modernity (Vienna, 25-26 Sept 24)
Andreas Broeckmann LEU
andreas.broeckmann at leuphana.de
Mon Apr 8 15:04:42 CEST 2024
From: Natalia Ganahl
Date: Mar 22, 2024
Subject: CFP: Form, Production and Transknowledge in Soviet Modernity
(Vienna, 25-26 Sept 24)
Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Universität Wien, Sep 25–26, 2024
Deadline: May 15, 2024
The Actuality of the 20s: Form, Production and Transknowledge in Soviet
Modernity. International Conference.
Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Universität Wien.
Prof. Dr. Sebastian Egenhofer, Dr. Natalia Ganahl.
The materialist turn that came into force in Russia after the
revolutions of 1917 encompassed knowledge and social politics, which
simultaneously mutated into constructivist biopolitics and social
control. As a turn in art, it was reflected in the reorientation of art
and art theory makers towards the primary relevance of material-economic
conditions, the data of scientific research and the reformatory
discourses based on Marxism and Anarchism. The artistic practices of
form-building turned to the exploration of natural resources, industrial
technology and materials, energetic and physiological processes, as well
as new forms of institutionalization according to the horizontal
principles of the workshop and the laboratory. In the highly active
intellectual landscape, transdisciplinary drafts emerge that go beyond
the framework of the classical cogitatio universalis and aim at the
fundamental reorganization of social life on the new principles of
equality, non-alienated labour and social participation, permanent
revolution of the forms of living. E.G. Kazimir Malevich, who saw the
revolution as a further step towards the realization of the energetic
dynamics of the world, defined it as a stage of a universal process that
lies deeper than the utilitarian interests of individual classes and
consists in overcoming the "objectification" of the world in images and
representations. An energetic-materialist explanation of the world
required a renewal of the understanding of art. The socialist path of
art, according to the "proletarian monism" of Boris Arvatov, consists
in the "complete immersion of art in life", in the "creation of an
incessantly created being".
In recent decades, there has been a growing interest in the historical
origins of materialist anthropology in the age of industrialization,
with its questions about the relationship between material and thought,
about free will and suggestibility, about the integration of individuals
and groups in systems of energy and information exchange, etc. The
relevance of these questions prompts us to turn to the transdisciplinary
projects of the early Soviet period, where the materialist doctrines
were realized not only in scientific-philosophical and social-utopian
thinking, but also in social production. The topicality and challenges
of some of the artistic, theoretical and scientific projects launched
after the revolution are only gaining visible contours today. Russian
philosopher of feminism and knowledge Alla Mitrofanova writes: "What
seems to me important in these almost forgotten discussions is their
resonance with contemporary philosophical attempts to construct new
approaches to ontology, with notions of the historical materiality of
the natural, and with the impossibility of separating nature and
culture..." Together, we can expand this list: the epistemologically and
ontologically motivated critique of the central perspective and
individual subjectivity, the questioning of the documentary status of
image media and the truth value of representation as such, the
performative turn in theatre and agitative activism, the orientation of
the arts towards the neurological processes in the body or the
problematization of the systemic interconnectedness of
material-energetic processes in nature and social production. The
practice of epistemological actualization of historically earlier models
and languages of knowledge also becomes possible. As Pavel Florensky
remarked in a letter about his own project of "concrete metaphysics",
some concerns take 100 years to gain academic validity. Soviet modernism
received its first productive reception in Western Europe and the USA as
early as the 1970s. More recent editions and research show the new round
of attention, which seems to be symptomatic. Ongoing wars in Ukraine and
the Caucasus and new dictatorships are once again sharpening the
contrasts between light and dark in this new exploration of the past.
What can we learn today from the discussions and experiments of the 1920s?
The international conference in the Department of Art History at the
University of Vienna collects original contributions from researchers in
all relevant disciplines. The 30 minutes presentations could be oriented
towards the following lines: form and critique, theory and laboratory,
matter and movement, institution and mobility, energy and politics etc.
We welcome explorations that deal with pictorial and artistic works, as
well as with new forms of creativity that were bubbling up in the
immanent plane, in which thought, labor and organization belong to
artistic activities.
Please send abstracts no longer than 700 words (English or German) and a
short CV by 20 May 2024 to: natalia.ganahl at univie.ac.at
Notifications and Information will be sent out at the beginning of July,
2024.
Reference / Quellennachweis:
CFP: Form, Production and Transknowledge in Soviet Modernity (Vienna,
25-26 Sept 24). In: ArtHist.net, Mar 22, 2024.
<https://arthist.net/archive/41490>.
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