Agency and/or Creator

Jocelyn Holmes, IDSVA

Bureau/Division/Agency

Library

Files

Download

Download Full Text (4.4 MB)

Document Type

Text

Broad Creation Date

2024

Language

English

Location

Portland

Abstract

This dissertation examines the transformative potential of artmaking practices to decolonize structures of knowledge and oppression. While artists in the United States have engaged with colonization, gender, and racial oppression across different historical periods, contemporary artists such as Ana Mendieta, Kara Walker, Adriana Corral, and Rebecca Belmore critique the enduring systems of oppression that continue to shape current socio-political conditions. How do such artmaking practices challenge the production of the “other” and decolonize pre-established social and political boundaries to cultivate a deeper understanding of responsibility and the world’s interactive becoming? To expose art’s potential as a material-discursive practice that intervenes in power configurations, I argue that rethinking art as a gesture is essential to understanding how it responsibly reimagines and intra-actively reconfigures spacetimematter.

Weaving together insights from philosophy, epistemology, ethics, art, and politics illuminates subversive and restorative ways of knowing, thinking, making, and being that emerge in defiance of dominant Western European traditions. A Posthuman Feminist perspective of art as a gesture underscores the entanglement of mind and body in artistic practices that actively reshape materiality and ideas. In a world persistently defined by boundaries, art, viewed as an intra-active gesture, becomes an active force in reshaping our reality and revealing critical areas requiring intervention. This project employs a theoretical-practical approach that emphasizes artistic gestures can serve as material-epistemic interventions, renegotiating the interplay among ethics, knowledge, power, and the material world.

Disciplines

Aesthetics | Art Practice | Fine Arts | Philosophy | Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies

Publisher

Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts

City

Portland ME

Artistic Gestures: Contemporary Art Practices That Decolonize SpaceTimeMatter



Share

COinS
 

Rights Statement

Rights Statement

In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted. URI: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. In addition, no permission is required from the rights-holder(s) for educational uses. For other uses, you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).