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Leaving the white cube of Ekphrasis : Gordon Matta-Clark’s conical intersection

Führer, Heidrun LU and Kraus, Anna (2019) p.97-117
Abstract

This chapter reconsiders the conventional conceptualization of ekphrasis as a “double representation”. In a case study, intertwining ancient rhetoric with contemporary agential rhetoric, we present Gordon Matta-Clark’s (1943-78) Conical Intersect (Paris, 1975) as ekphrasis in its reality-producing dimension and beyond the subjectivism of intentional actions. In our proposal, we introduce ekphrasis as rooted in agential realism and multimodal performative rhetoric. Our rhetorical understanding of ekphrasis ties in with the ancient sense of mimesis and poiesis as crafting, forming and “pro-ducing” something into the light. Endowed with the energy of affect, ekphrasis shows and “presences”, before eyewitnesses, something absent. This... (More)

This chapter reconsiders the conventional conceptualization of ekphrasis as a “double representation”. In a case study, intertwining ancient rhetoric with contemporary agential rhetoric, we present Gordon Matta-Clark’s (1943-78) Conical Intersect (Paris, 1975) as ekphrasis in its reality-producing dimension and beyond the subjectivism of intentional actions. In our proposal, we introduce ekphrasis as rooted in agential realism and multimodal performative rhetoric. Our rhetorical understanding of ekphrasis ties in with the ancient sense of mimesis and poiesis as crafting, forming and “pro-ducing” something into the light. Endowed with the energy of affect, ekphrasis shows and “presences”, before eyewitnesses, something absent. This rhetoric of “presencing” is described in terms of the light-shedding performativity of “agential cuts”, which bring something hidden or absent into presence by way of “intra-acting” with human and nonhuman actants. Rather than following the strategies involved in translating a source into target media, we stress the embodied “intra-active” process of pro-ducing differences in an act of becoming as a foundational criterion for ekphrasis. Despite the limited attention given to the “durable media products” of photo collage and film as a part of Conical Intersect, we focus on the rhetoric of repetition and variation across the performances in different media formats. Shifting focus away from the dichotomy between live and recorded performances, we argue that the totality creates the effect of making the absent present in different materialized discourses.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Transmediations : Communication Across Media Borders - Communication Across Media Borders
pages
21 pages
publisher
Routledge
external identifiers
  • scopus:85105216082
ISBN
9780429282775
9781000761160
DOI
10.4324/9780429282775-6
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
ddcd2988-07c3-4d42-a2e6-7369f9794ffd
date added to LUP
2021-06-01 15:40:36
date last changed
2024-03-23 05:54:35
@inbook{ddcd2988-07c3-4d42-a2e6-7369f9794ffd,
  abstract     = {{<p>This chapter reconsiders the conventional conceptualization of ekphrasis as a “double representation”. In a case study, intertwining ancient rhetoric with contemporary agential rhetoric, we present Gordon Matta-Clark’s (1943-78) Conical Intersect (Paris, 1975) as ekphrasis in its reality-producing dimension and beyond the subjectivism of intentional actions. In our proposal, we introduce ekphrasis as rooted in agential realism and multimodal performative rhetoric. Our rhetorical understanding of ekphrasis ties in with the ancient sense of mimesis and poiesis as crafting, forming and “pro-ducing” something into the light. Endowed with the energy of affect, ekphrasis shows and “presences”, before eyewitnesses, something absent. This rhetoric of “presencing” is described in terms of the light-shedding performativity of “agential cuts”, which bring something hidden or absent into presence by way of “intra-acting” with human and nonhuman actants. Rather than following the strategies involved in translating a source into target media, we stress the embodied “intra-active” process of pro-ducing differences in an act of becoming as a foundational criterion for ekphrasis. Despite the limited attention given to the “durable media products” of photo collage and film as a part of Conical Intersect, we focus on the rhetoric of repetition and variation across the performances in different media formats. Shifting focus away from the dichotomy between live and recorded performances, we argue that the totality creates the effect of making the absent present in different materialized discourses.</p>}},
  author       = {{Führer, Heidrun and Kraus, Anna}},
  booktitle    = {{Transmediations : Communication Across Media Borders}},
  isbn         = {{9780429282775}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{97--117}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  title        = {{Leaving the white cube of Ekphrasis : Gordon Matta-Clark’s conical intersection}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429282775-6}},
  doi          = {{10.4324/9780429282775-6}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}