Art & Surveillance

Art & Surveillance

vol 31 no 3, 2011


Guest co-editors Virginia Fraser and Natalie King.
This issue of Artlink approaches the prying curiosity of surveillance, scopophilia, and compulsive and clandestine looking. Texts by artists, curators, writers and academics alongside images by artists who use photography, video, film, electronic networking, installation, performance and painting reveal some of the social implications of watching and the way that watching is framed. From surreptitious encounters to self-exploitation, they uncover the uneasy questions about who is looking at whom for power or pleasure. What is clear is that people love to watch! Including Judy Annear, Geoffrey Batchen, Djon Mundine and Adrian Martin.


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NAVA - National Association for the Visual Arts



You are here » Artlink » vol 31 no 3, 2011 » Treading the fault-line of inter-cultural relations in Alice Springs

Treading the fault-line of inter-cultural relations in Alice Springs

Author: Ms Kieran Finnane, Feature

Alice Springs-based writer Kieran Finnane explicates the long roots of the project 'Pmere Arntarntareme / Watching This Place' and how it points towards a different kind of future where 'there is no us and them' for the residents of Mparntwe (Alice Springs).



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