Robert Frank e a operação de montagem no campo do olhar

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2009

RESUMO

In the Polaroids series photographer Robert Frank creates performed situations and manipulates the two-dimensional surface in a post-production condition, building images with uncertain borders where emptiness, words, pictorial gestures, appropriations and acts are highlighted. Emerging through mounting resources, these procedures question certain intrinsic references in the field of photography and image, allowing the recognition of a territory where both manufacture and operatory notions that state poetical basis are implied and contrasted, interrogate and disturb in relation to the look field. In the interlocution of art history and theory with psychoanalysis and philosophy, we find the possibility of troubling the procedures of this work in order to elaborate questions that resonate from it, without reducing its terms. In the first chapter, we investigate the potential of the foreigner language as a condition of the image, which is identified in both the photography and image fields, as extinguisher of borders and promoter of new proposition parameters. The unquiet Freudian strangeness articulated with infinite possibilities of artistic language opens a field to think the Polaroids series as image-happening. In the second chapter, we analyze the relation between the visible and what can be said from renitent aspects of the mounting operation along the series, such as the figural logic in dreams and reticulations, the relation between image and word, the repetition as difference and the gesture that re-signifies the instant of looking. In the third chapter, we study the projection of these plastic procedures in the visual field. From the process of determining the view of the artistic object, we reach the notion of irrepresentability as an encounter with the Real, and we conclude with the structure of the scopic field, which was formulated by Jacques Lacan and has its orientation in art theory developed by Georges Didi-Huberman, in which the look accomplishes the function of causing the subject in its desire

ASSUNTO(S)

fotografia frank, robert photography fotografia campo do olhar look field mounting operation robert frank artes robert frank imagem operação de montagem

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