Energies in the Arts

Energies in the Arts

About the Book

Investigating the concepts and material realities of energy coursing through the arts: a foundational text.

This book investigates energies—in the plural, the energies embedded and embodied in everything under the sun— as they are expressed in the arts. With contributions from scholars and critics from the visual arts, art history, anthropology, music, literature, and the history of science, it offers the first multidisciplinary investigation of the concepts and material realities of energy coursing through the arts. Just as Douglas Kahn's earlier books helped introduce sound as a category for study in the arts, this new volume will be a foundational volume for future explorers in a largely uncharted domain.

The modern concept of energy is only two hundred years old—an abstraction grounded in extraction—but this book takes a more expansive view. It opens with a clap: the sonic energies in a ceremony of the indigenous Goolarabooloo people of Australia. Other chapters explore the energies of photography; responses of artists in the early twentieth century—including Marcel Duchamp—to scientific discoveries in electricity and electromagnetism; the aestheticization of entropy in works by Hans Haacke and Robert Smithson; free-jazz musician Milford Graves's cross-cultural engagement with music, science, and spiritualism; energy field performance; and the self-generating energy of rumor and gossip as artwork. Contributors include such leading scholars as Linda Dalrymple Henderson, John Tresch, and Caroline A. Jones. Practicing artists and students of art history will find Energies in the Arts an essential work.

Contributors
Susan Ballard, Jennifer Biddle, Marcus Boon, Joan Brassil, Steven Connor, Milford Graves, Daniel Hackbarth, Linda Dalrymple Henderson, Caroline A. Jones, Douglas Kahn, David Mather, Stephen Muecke, James Nisbet, Daniela Silvestrin, Michael Taussig, John Tresch, Melissa Warak

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Praise for Energies in the Arts

Kahn's achievement lies in not only questioning the concept and core definition of energy by taking a more expansive view on it, but also view[ing] it from different historical angles that provide an intriguing perspective on the emergence of what eventually became schools of thought and art.—Scene Point Blank

Kahn's achievement lies in not only questioning the concept and core definition of energy by taking a more expansive view on it, but also view[ing] it from different historical angles that provide an intriguing perspective on the emergence of what eventually became schools of thought and art.

THE WIRE
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About the Author

Douglas Kahn
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