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Indexical Ambivalence with Kris Paulsen

Mon Jan 29, 2018 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Interfaces are boundaries and dividing lines. They are surfaces that maintain the distinction between discrete portions of matter and space, but they also create the site for their encounter and interaction. The interface is a place where opposites touch: here and there, now and then, I and you, actual and virtual, true and false. Screens make for particularly troubling interfaces, for they enact a great leveling, and these opposites can become uncannily confused or indistinguishable. All things, all times, all places are reduced to the pulsing electronic mosaic of the raster grid. Everything flattens on to a single surface, all made of the same electronic matter regardless of the existential or ontological status of what it represents. It might seem that the age of screens and digital about would have killed the index, the semiotic register that once seemed to ground our ideas about materiality and truth, but instead it has revitalized and resurrected it. The index is not dead in the digital age; it is more vital than ever, but it is exposed as the ambivalent and dubious sign it has always been and is the operative tool for understanding mediated information, digital doubt, and experiences through interfaces. On the screen, the index is a forensic tool not a guarantor of any truth. About Kris Paulsen: Kris Paulsen is Associate Professor in the Department of History of Art and the Film Studies Program at The Ohio State University. She is a specialist in Contemporary Art with a focus on time-based and computational media. Her work traces the history of technology in the arts and the rhetoric of “new media” from photography to digital art, with a particular emphasis on telepresence and interface studies. In 2017, The MIT Press published Dr. Paulsen’s first book, Here/There: Telepresence, Touch, and Art at the Interface, as part of the Leonardo Book Series. Her current research project, “Against Algorithms (or The Arts of Resistance in the Age of Quantification)” addresses the logics of quantification and algorithmic structures in contemporary art, culture, and activism. Her work has appeared in Representations, Leonardo Electronic Almanac, X-TRA Contemporary Art Quarterly, Mousse, BOMB, Design and Culture, Media-N, Art Practical, Amodern, and numerous exhibition catalogs and collections of essays. From 2012 to 2016 she was co-director of The Center for Ongoing Research & Projects (www.the-corp.org), an experimental art space in Columbus, OH. More information can be found at: www.kpaulsen.com and https://history-of-art.osu.edu/people/paulsen.20