Walter Benjamin 1892-1940. BENJAMIN - 1940 cognoscenti reputation in left circles in Germany trying to escape -- Pyrenees blocked that particular day.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Immanuel Kant ( ) Theory of Aesthetics
Advertisements

The Subject-Matter of Ethics
Museum Entrance Welcome to the Lobby National Portrait Gallery.
Lit 101 students arm the barricades (cartoon ‘borrowed’ from Lalo Alcaraz, Latino U.S.A.)
Basic Acting Terminology
Today’s Lecture A clip from The Matrix Concluding the Upanishads.
Introduction to Ethics Lecture 8 Moore’s Non-naturalism
Dear Teddie,. Dear Walter, Politics? A disagreement?
Arthur Danto Introduction to Beyond the Brillo Box:
The Rationalists: Descartes Certainty: Self and God
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Walter Benjamin ( )
ACT II Literary Elements of Julius Caesar William Shakespeare Julius Caesar.
III. Reaction to The Great War Seminar in Art History: Twentieth Century Art.
Film as Ethnography; or, Translation between Cultures in the Postcolonial World Group One.
Alex Schuh The Art of Games A look at a new art form.
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Walter Benjamin (1936)
History of the Virtual World Prehistory of the virtual and the history of virtual technology.
POP art. Slide 2 POP art Pop art is a visual art movement that emerged in the mid 1950s in Britain and in the United States. Pop art is an art movement.
ANDY WARHOL. WHAT WAS ANDY WARHOL KNOWN FOR? Influential in the 1960’s Pop Art movement Wide variety of art forms including: Drawing Painting Printmaking.
Warhol Biography Andy Warhol was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in His parents had only recently moved to the United States from what is now Slovakia.
A digital lesson about Futurism and visual movement in art  2005 Pearson Publishing.
The noted critics Statler and Waldorf. What critical thinking is and why it matters How it can be applied to different academic disciplines What it means.
Engl 332 Langah.  Art imitates nature (Aristotle) or ‘holds mirror up to nature’ (Hamlet)  The same idea reflects through the paintings from early Renaissance.
WALTER BENJAMIN : THE WORK OF ART IN THE AGE OF MECHANICAL REPRODUCTION “The authenticity of a thing is the essence of all that is transmissible from its.
Philosophy of Mind Week 3: Objections to Dualism Logical Behaviorism
Disciplines of the Humanities Arts Disciplines Visual art- drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, photography Performing art- music, theatre, dance,
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Lecture from Terri Senft Delivered 20 February 2006 Module:Digital Media Culture School of Media,
The Aesthetics of Natural Environments- Arnold Berleant Presentation by: Cody Shoemaker.
Walter Benjamin & The Decay of Aura by Diane Rarick.
WHAT IS THEATRE?.  Theatre is a complex art at least 2500 years old.  Our experience of theatregoing varies depending on the time  Greeks would have.
Lit Crit Round Two: Marxist and Feminist Lit Crit
Design constraints.  Constraint; something that limits or restrains  Design constraint;  RULES and LEGISLATIONS  STANDARDS  VALUES and NORMS  REQUIREMENTS.
Work of Art in the Age of its Technological Reproducibility Premise: centrality of media technology in the production (and capacity) of modern culture.
P R P O S T M O D E R N I S M Research Part 1 “Postmodernism is the term used to describe the use of a late 20 th century style and concept in the arts,
Walter Benjamin By Julio Castrejon MAT 103. Introduction Walter Benjamin ( ) was a Jewish and German intellectual who is known for as a literary.
Theme of Propaganda Throughout history, art has been used as propaganda to shape public opinion. Propaganda takes many forms, such as architecture, paintings,
SESSION th CENTURY continued. DAMIEN HIRST: SKULL, For the Love of God, 2007.
Practice using the Frames. Using the Subjective Frame, what could we say about this work by JMW Turner? Review: the Subjective Frame talks about emotions,
Ways of Seeing A lecture based on the book of the same title by art critic John Berger.
Performing the Past, Spring 2001, Lecture 7 1 Lumière, Méliès, Benjamin move from 50-sec, 17m shots of Lumières to magical narratives of Méliès Méliès.
Benjamin THESIS: THE FILM MAKES THE CULT VALUE RECEDE in to the background not only by putting the public in the position of the critic but also by the.
Walter Benjamin The ”Aura” in modern time MAT103 – Final Presentation Niclas Jorvid Santa Barbara City College – Spring 2011.
One of the fathers of Sociology. German philosopher, political economist and sociologist who together with Karl Marx and Emile Durkheim are considered.
Prime Minister Winston Churchill Never Give In, Never, Never, Never Almost a year has passed since I came down here at your Head Master's kind invitation.
Chapter 1: The Nature of Theatre Origins in ritual practices Theatre as a form is at least 2500 years old It has been as varied as the cultures in which.
Walter Benjamin  Full name: Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin  15 July 1892 – 26 September 1940  Berlin, German Empire  “Europe last intellectual”
Walter Benjamin’s Ideas on the Mechanical Age & Art
How to Read Literature Ms. Kintz 7 th Grade Language Arts.
Freire- Chapter 3. Moving Past Oppression Freire is quite frank about what it takes to move past oppression: DIALOGUE Dialogue is really about language.
Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproducibility)
OPCVL Learning Objective: Understand how to assess the value and limitations of a source with reference to its origin, purpose and content.
Performing the Past, Spring 2001, Lecture 7 1 Lumière, Méliès, Benjamin move from 50-sec, 17m shots of Lumières to magical narratives of Méliès Méliès.
Theories of Media, culture and Society. McLuhan He focused on popular electronic media. It was the time when limited media effect made a pick. Literary.
Last week’s focus: communication as information This week’s focus: media technology in the writings of Walter Benjamin and Marshall McLuhan.
The Frankfurt School.
Art History: What is art?
More Art Vocabulary!. Patron a person who financially supports an artist or an art organization.
Part III.  Karl Marx ( )  Social change  Growth of industrial production and resulting social inequalities  European labor movement.
Benjamin, Horkheimer/Adorno, Hedbidge. The Work of Art In the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, 1936 Walter Benjamin.
Hi, I’m Michele Del Core! I’m 18 years old and photography is one of my biggest passions. Practicing and doing researches about it, I discovered that.
Lit Crit Round Two: Marxist and Feminist Lit ~define Marxist Lit Crit ~define “false consciousness” ~define “ideology” ~define “reification” ~define “patriarchy”
What is art for?.
Walter Benjamin: The Work of Art in the Age of is Technical Reproducibility Lecture, Popular Culture & Medieforskningens klassikere.
Analyzing Art Mr. Green.
Media Studies: Key Thinkers and Approaches Week 2: Medium Theory
Photography Cult Value Exhibition Value As a social construction
Sociological theories
Media Studies: Week 2: Medium Theory The Gutenberg Press ( )
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
Presentation transcript:

Walter Benjamin

BENJAMIN cognoscenti reputation in left circles in Germany trying to escape -- Pyrenees blocked that particular day - suicide – Brecht: the first real loss to literature caused by Hitler book collector – collector of quotations wanted to write a book made up only of quotations Beckett

Important Works Zur Kritik der Gewalt (Critique of Violence / 1921). Goethes Wahlverwandtschaften (Goethe's Elective Affinities / 1922). Ursprung des Deutschen Trauerspiels (Origin of German Tragic Drama [Mourning Play] / 1928). Einbahnstraße (One Way Street / 1928). Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter Seiner Technischen Reproduzierbarkeit (The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction / 1936). Berliner Kindheit um 1900 (Berlin Childhood around 1900 / 1950, published posthumously). Über den Begriff der Geschichte (On the Concept of History / Theses on the Philosophy of History) / 1939, published posthumously). Das Paris des Second Empire bei Baudelaire (The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire / 1938). (“Arcades Project”)

WORK OF ART IN AN AGE OF MECHANICAL REPRODUCTION I. Marx :infrastructure and super structure – note that Marx thought that the tendencies of exploitation would put an end to capitalism – importance of the idea of production and reproduction WB argues that superstructure change takes place more slowly than in infrastructure – his question: how has changed production of art changed the significance of art in or lives – this is what he calls the politics of art

PART II: art can always be reproduced (copies and so forth) but with lithography we have something where the art exists ONLY as a copy why should this be important? - speed;: with film it can keep pace with speech: change. Two matters of importance: reproduction of works of art (posters); and film

PART III: original work of art has a unique existence: “presence in time and space” – includes changes; ownership the concept of authenticity : “the essence that is transmittable from its beginning, running from its duration to the history it has experienced” – authenticity gives us a notion of history: when it is challenged, then the sense if history and time is challenged. two forms of reproduction: manual and mechanical – against the manual the original preserves its authenticity – less so against the mechanical here the process does not depend on the original and: the copy can move into venues which are new: can “meet the beholder.” 220 what do we loose when art is mechanically reproduced: its”aura” – art detached from tradition – many copies give it a plural rather than singular existence shattering of tradition linked by WB with contemporary mass movements – FILM liquidates the past

by Andy Warhol – silkscreen and hand; sold for $11.7M in 2006 Poster of painting by AW –sells for $5 Campbell Tomato Soup Can –sells for $1.35

PART IV: sense perception change over time sense perception is learned and taught the contemporary change is the decay of the aura desire of the masses to get closer, to ”get ahold of an object a very close range – this requires the “Armed eye” -- i.e. transitorines and reproducibility universal equality of things -- everything is like everything else – corresponds to statistics PART V: idea of a tradition: changeable but a guarantee of uniqueness has its basis in ritual -- in doing something, in a kind of use with mechanical reproduction, art responds by developing the idea of art for art what do we make of this change mechanical reproduction emancipates art from its parasitic dependence on ritual we move from art reproduced to art made for reproduction – footnote: film and the need for amass audience (the “gross”) -- advent of sound film at first reinforces national boundaries but also reinfuses capital into the film making process So what does art come to be based on: WB says politics (no ritual)

PART VI: distinguish art for cult – stone paintings /church sculptures today and art for exhibit – has to be moveable -- not fixed in place (religious statue vs bust): compare mass to symphony PART VII: exhibition value displaces cult value (but not without a fight) What do you carry in your wallet: in photography the resistance comes in the use of photos as remembrance devices – use of photo as historical evidence (hidden politics) – use of the caption – picture magazines

Atget (VII)

`Osios Loukas, Greece

Mona Lisa – Paris - Louvre

PART VIII: the development of photography and film: – question is not is it art, but how has it changed what art is tendency to want t talk about film as if it were ritual (citations on 227) PART IX-X: the audience relationship to a film: – film actor’s performance is constituted by the film – cannot be adjusted to the audience – there is no contact of the audience with the player – audience has position of camera – audience is in the position of TESTING the film: not a cultic situation

PART XI: the film actor represents himself to the camera, rather than representing something else. – The whole living person but without the aura: on stage the aura emanates from the actor; on film the camera substitutes for the public. HENCE no aura – relation of actor to part is very different – art is no longer semblance Part XII-XIII: the labor of the actor is beyond the reach of the actor studios respond to the shriveling of the aura with cult of the film star – this is the way in which the film industry resists the revolutionary potential of film (except as a critique of traditional art) – everyone who goes to a film is an expert. – Anyone can get on film – distinction of author and public begins to fade – this becomes Warhol’s famous for 15minutes

PART XIV there is no place from which the studio is not the place of illusory (compared to an audience position in theater) – painter is a magician -- maintains distance between himself and reality; cameraman is a surgeon: cuts into reality and reassembles fragments by a new law – and this gives a reality which is free from all equipment PART XV we get in film the possibility of both a critical and receptively enjoyment attitude – experts but not at a distance argument that Euripides should have been on film this explains reactionary reactions to modern art: museums are a sign of crisis in art: it is a hierarchical, domineering mediation () PART XVI there is a medium and also a use of the medium – compares to our sense now of Freudian slips film gives us the possibility of analyzing things which would not have previously been available – close ups, hidden details – enlargement reveals new things WB calls this “unconscious optics”

Zwg

PART XVII art creates demands which can only be satisfied later. Dadaism intended a relentless destruction of the aura of their creations one cannot remain silent band contemplative before a Dada piece. In this it is like film: Compare the attitude one has to a painting: invites contemplation But with film -- no contemplation -- scene changes “My thoughts have been replaced by moving images”

Marcel Duchamp - Fountain

Hannah Hoch (1919) Cut with the Dada Kitchen Knife through the Last Weimar Beer-Belly Cultural Epoch in Germany

“It is impossible to take time for concentration or evaluation…”(119) August Stramm Battlefield Yielding clod lulls iron off to sleep bloods clot the patches where they oozed rusts crumble fleshes slime sucking lusts around decay. Murder on murder blinks in childish eyes. Rilke – Sonnets to Orpheus, II-4 O this is the beast who does not exist. They didn't know that, and in any case --with its stance, its arched neck and easy grace, the light of its limpid gaze --they could not resist but loved it though, indeed, it was not. Yet since they always gave it room, the pure beast persisted. And in that loving space, clear and unfenced, reared it's head freely and hardly needed to exist. They fed it not with grain nor chaff but fortified and nourished it solely with the notion that it might yet come to pass, so that, at length, it grew a single shaft upon it's brow and to a virgin came and dwelled in her and in her silvered glass.

PART XVIII film is appropriated by its audience, in the way that architecture is; mastered not by contemplation but by appropriation this is in response the “film produces distraction” attack: the film goer is an absent minded critic. EPILOGUE --XIX fascism IS AN ATTEMPT TO GIVE THE MASSES THE CHANCE TO EXPRESS THEMSELVES (WITHOUT CHANGING PROPERTY RELATIONS) introduction of aesthetics into politics produce ritual values necessarily requires war

Boccioni – Unique Forms of Continuity in Space "We declare that the splendor of the world has been enriched by a new beauty: the beauty of speed. A racing automobile with its bonnet adorned with great tubes like serpents with explosive breath... a roaring motor car which seems to run on machine- gun fire, is more beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace. (Marinetti)