Tuesday 8 January 2019

Vlogging and Aesthetics: YouTube as an emergent 'artworld'




I've submitted the following proposal for the 2019 Screen conference; we'll see if they like it:


Today, the first questions that scholars of screen media ask about any new audiovisual technology or form may not necessarily be primarily aesthetic. For instance – the most pressing questions about forms like vlogging, or platforms like YouTube, have not been: do they facilitate new types of art? Or: what expressive properties must, for example, a vlog possess in order to be profitably interpreted and evaluated as an artwork? On YouTube itself, however, such questions are increasingly being contemplated – by content creators themselves.

Producing a rapidly evolving array of genres and stylistic conventions, vlogging on YouTube has also been giving rise to lively meta-critical debates amongst creators and video-essayists, who are addressing the question: “What does 'YouTube art’ look like?” I will survey the style of a variety of vlogs, as well as some aesthetic discourses used in discussion of them by creators and commentators. I will close by addressing a video essay by the YouTuber Sarah Zedig, from which the question quoted above (and the above image) is taken. A thoughtful critical reflection on another popular trans YouTuber, ContraPoints, I suggest that it is indicative of the current emergence of a YouTube-centred aesthetic community, or what Arthur Danto might term a developing vernacular 'artworld'.


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YouTube Activism or YouTube Art?

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I'm very pleased to have written a little post about YouTube, aesthetics and the YouTube channel ContraPoints over at In Media Res for their week themed around ‘Online Influencers’. The main purpose of the entry is to introduce a fantastic video essay/meditation on ‘YouTube art’ and trans activism by the YouTuber Sarah Zedig, from which the above image comes.

You can read it here; it opens like this:


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YouTube Aesthetics and YouTube Art

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A couple of slides from a lecture I gave recently on the Film Aesthetics module at Warwick, which give some sense of a new strand of research I'm tentatively pursuing:


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