This collaborative and inter-disciplinary research project is directed by
Professor Margaret Iversen in the Department of Art History and Theory at the
University of Essex and by Dr. Diarmuid Costello in the Department of Philosophy
at the University of Warwick. Our task is to examine the significance of the
transformation in contemporary photographic art practice from the 1960s to the
present, and its implications for aesthetic theory. We will be particularly
concerned to understand the ways in which recent photographic art puts pressure
on a variety of aesthetic categories, reconfiguring rather than negating them.
In the process the project will not only extend our understanding of what is now
one of the dominant mediums of contemporary art, but propose new models of art
writing that draw equally on art history, theory, aesthetics, philosophical
reflection and criticism.
The art historical side of the project will track photography’s transformation from anti-aesthetic, post-conceptual document to large scale pictorial art of sumptuous aesthetic effects. What are the implications of this shift for previous touchstones of photo-theory, such as radical aspirations of the early avant-garde? The philosophical side of the project will be concerned with what distinguishes photography as an artistic medium, and the ontology of the photograph, especially in the light of digital photography, and the implications of the latter for the epistemic privilege previously associated with photography’s ‘objectivity’, ‘transparency’ and ‘automaticity’.
