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Examining Aesthetic Subjectivity in Embodied Environments

Nevin Berger, Rebecca

Description

This inquiry has been concerned with identifying aesthetic languages that make visible relationships and processes that connect body and world beyond the surface of the skin. It hypothesised that aesthetic language provides a material connection which co-enables this exchange. Examining the aesthetic dimension of the embodiment-environment intersection, this inquiry reasoned, could make tangible the material continuum generated through transient processes of...[Show more]

dc.contributor.authorNevin Berger, Rebecca
dc.date.accessioned2019-06-26T01:57:45Z
dc.date.available2019-06-26T01:57:45Z
dc.identifier.otherb59285539
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/164231
dc.description.abstractThis inquiry has been concerned with identifying aesthetic languages that make visible relationships and processes that connect body and world beyond the surface of the skin. It hypothesised that aesthetic language provides a material connection which co-enables this exchange. Examining the aesthetic dimension of the embodiment-environment intersection, this inquiry reasoned, could make tangible the material continuum generated through transient processes of living. The key sites of the home and the landscape framed the scope of this research. The methodology used to undertake this research combined multi-artform practice spanning sculpture, video, installation, and drawing, visual diary-led observation and critical reflection, theoretical research, and critical engagement with the work of other artists and practitioners working in two- and three-dimensions. An examination of subjectivity and of aesthetics as an intersection of body and world centres this research. A new materialist perspective provides a logic and drive for scrutinising this intersection. New materialism unsettles traditional assumptions about the passivity of matter. It provides a framework for re-imagining the materiality of the world and the position of human subjectivity within it: a re-imagining, this research contends, that the current ecological crisis demands. The notion of aesthetics used in this inquiry is an embodied aesthetics that refers to the meaningful sensuousness that adheres and orients the body in the world. Ideas from John Dewey and the field of everyday aesthetics informed critical engagement in this embodied aesthetics through creative practice. This approach enabled a dialogue between special aesthetic experiences, everyday aesthetics, and habitual perception to emerge in the research. This research used aesthetics to examine how spaces are demarcated and different experiences enabled. Over time, the home as it is situated within the landscape became analogous for the body’s intertwining with the environment. In this context, the material passage of water through the home provided a powerful and instructive embodiment of this intertwining, revealing both the demarcation and the continuity of disparate spaces. The final body of artwork is an installation that integrates the key aesthetic languages developed through this inquiry to form a three-dimensional river that is animated with the everyday sounds of water and the textures of domestic warmth. It is titled Oikos, the Greek root for ecology. ‘Oikos’ means ‘whole house and dwelling place’. The artwork reflects the multi-layering of aesthetic relationships through which our bodies fuse with this world.
dc.language.isoen_AU
dc.subjectaesthetic
dc.subjectembodied aesthetic
dc.subjecteveryday aesthetics
dc.subjectaesthetic language
dc.subjectlanguage of landscape
dc.subjecteveryday materials
dc.subjectfeminism
dc.subjectecology
dc.subjectecology of water
dc.subjectecological crisis
dc.subjectecological feminism
dc.subjectmateriality
dc.subjectnew materialism
dc.subjectmulti-artform practice
dc.subjectinstallation
dc.subjectimmersive installation
dc.subjecttextile installation
dc.subjectimage making
dc.subjectpractice-led research
dc.subjecthome
dc.subjecthouse
dc.subjecthome and the landscape
dc.subjectpost-colonial landscape
dc.subjectrepresentationalism
dc.subjectcolonial landscape painting
dc.subjectmapping
dc.subjectpractices of habituation
dc.subjectpractices of the everyday
dc.subjectwater and the domestic space
dc.subjectsubjectivity
dc.subjectfeminist subjectivity
dc.subjectreimagining subjectivity
dc.subjectspace making practices
dc.subjectconnection
dc.subjecthabitual perception
dc.subjectaesthetic connection
dc.subjectsituated listening
dc.subjectsituated inquiry
dc.subjectcarnal knowledge
dc.subjectbody and environment continuum
dc.subjectentropy
dc.subjectentropy and the home
dc.subjectsoundscape
dc.subjectsound installation
dc.subjectbathroom
dc.subjectcleaning
dc.subjectcleaning practices
dc.subjectsensory language
dc.subjectassemblages
dc.subjectintra-action
dc.subjectvital materialism
dc.subjectoikos
dc.subjectdomestication of water
dc.subjecturban water
dc.subjectAustralian landscape
dc.subjectspace
dc.subjecthigh altitude video
dc.titleExamining Aesthetic Subjectivity in Embodied Environments
dc.typeThesis (PhD)
local.contributor.supervisorRoe, Alex Martinis
local.contributor.supervisorcontactalex.martinis.roe@anu.edu.au
dcterms.valid2019
local.description.notesthe author deposited 26/06/2019
local.type.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
dc.date.issued2019
local.contributor.affiliationSchool of Art, College of Arts and Social Sciences, The Australian National University
local.identifier.doi10.25911/5d134a38a6ddf
local.mintdoimint
CollectionsOpen Access Theses

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