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Nicky Robertson-Peek - Paranoid Live
My
research explores notions of paranoia, performativity and the urban
environment in the context of surveillance and the prevailing ideologies
of voyeurism. We are (according to a recent Daily Mail article)
caught on surveillance cameras an average of 300 times per day;
subsequently we enact our daily routine with an inherent awareness
of a constant "gaze". The emergent technological order in the spectre
of George Orwell's 1984 or Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, whose
dystopian paranoiac prophecies have haunted technological evolution
and informed contemporary popular culture.
The concept of "big brother" has become a recognisable motif with
widely acknowledged connotations, detached from its Orwellian context.
In the wake of C4's Big Brother series, the growing popularity of
docu-soaps and the iconic value of the surveillance image in the
media reporting of the Jamie Bulger, Rodney King and Damiliola Taylor
incidents, the emergent overt big brotherism has become a significant
aspect of popular visual culture. The use of covert video surveillance
images in consumer watchdog programmes or Hollywood films (which
perpetuate the notion of totalitarian state surveillance) creates
a climate where the iconography of CCTV has become an either naturalised
or fetishised aesthetic of visual culture.
The surveillance image functions in a framework of the traditional
voyeuristic modalities of "seeing" and "being seen" inherent in
the relationship to the visual. The aim of this study is to examine
these themes and the role of artistic representation within the
topography of a telemediated or surveillance-based society. My research
will examine how artists are increasingly engaging with these themes
and developing methodologies for questioning these trends (e.g.
Ulf Lundin, Steve Mann, Julia Scher & Jamie Wagg), as well as considering
contemporary work within a shifting understanding of scopic regimes.
The advent of the 'globalised space' and the "imploding urbanism"
(Virillio) of new telecommunications media has radically restructured
postmodernist notions of space and visual perception, I aim to develop
a new critical framework for engaging with these discourses which
moves away from the existing methodologies of largely subjective
luddite/technophile polarities, predominantly based in outmoded
cultural theory. Any study which centralises new or emergent technologies
is problematic for establishing a fixed criterion for analysis,
I will therefore maintain a flexibility in my research by adopting
a multifaceted approach will also draw upon a variety of sources
outside of conventional art history, in order to produce a more
holistic and multidisciplinary investigation. In addition I am organising
exhibitions and events to bring together artists employing these
themes in a range of environments to identify and develop the main
critical questions for a study of these discourses and genre.
Please contact me with your comments.
nickyrobertson-peek@orange.net or c/o Middlesex University, School
of Arts, (Research Dept)
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