Call For Papers IVSA 2013 Conference The Public Image
Call For Papers IVSA 2013 Conference The Public Image
Call For Papers IVSA 2013 Conference The Public Image
We are inviting paper submissions for the IVSA 2013 Conference, The Public Image. Please submit your abstract (250 words max.) directly to the panel chairs via email writing IVSA 2013 - Paper submission in the subject line. The deadline for abstract submissions is 31st of March 2013. Authors will be notified by the end of April; panel organizers and presenters will be required to register for the conference by the end of May to be included in the programme. For enquiries related to specific panels, please contact the panel chair and for general enquiries please contact [email protected].
N.B. More information about the conference (including fees and registration) will soon be available on the IVSA website: www.visualsociology.org
Exploding the Scopic Regime of Bentham's: Does the Metaphor of the Panopticon Still Hold?
Dystopian scenarios of urban environment ridden with mechanical eyes have filled the imagination of the last generation of scholars, activists, and artists. Urban society has been thought to resemble scenarios similar to Bentham's prison or Orwell's 1984. In the past decades, however, there has been an increasing call for re-thinking the extent to which western modern societies are effectively under the threat of overarching and ubiquitous technologies of surveillance. According to Hille Koskela, claims around the 'panopticon society' are either overstating the actual functionality and effectiveness of the visual security apparatus whether industrialmilitary complex, police tactics of containment of protesters, or CCTV or they are underplaying the way in which security itself contributes to making place. On the one hand, there is a sense that security and place (especially in the urban) are in an interplay which can only be fully appreciated by engaging in a multisensorial and pragmatic approach to place. On both sides of the coin, watchers and watched contribute to make place and participate in an unfolding narrative of place/space which is performative and fabricated everyday. On the other hand, the revolution in portable technologies and their ability to quickly communicate or share visual outcomes have open spaces of accountability for power never imagined before. Some have suggested that the panopticon is now happening from below and it is a highly democratic adventure. In such claims, the whole way in which the visuality implicit in the panopticon works has been called into question (one way relationship watchers-watched, detached view from above, passivity of the watched, and so on). The panel suggests to contribute to such critical understanding, calling scholarly, hackivist, and artistic contributions to help unpacking the scopic regime of surveillance. How do watchers or the interplay between watchers and watched, contribute to the making of urban space? How can social networking, ubiquitous visual technology, and activist intervention help to make security apparatus visible? To what extent can we talk of the social panopticon? Would this new dimension of surveillance enhance accountability for power? Do metaphors of 'panopticon society' still hold to the test of change in technology of the visual and of people's everyday experience of surveillance?
Chair: Paolo Cardullo, CUCR, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Inventive Futures for Visual Sociology: Visual Sociology meets Science and Technology Studies
We invite papers for a session that will address the challenges posed to Visual Sociology by recent developments in Science and Technology Studies, including the turn to Inventive or Live Methods. Papers might address concerns from actor network theory, experimental approaches, digital visualization or non-representational thinking. Papers might equally address the challenges posed to STS by Visual Sociology. We are interested in presentations or interventions which are based on recent empirical sensory and inventive projects that go beyond visual or sociological as normally conceived, as well as theoretical position papers which suggest overlaps or tensions at the intersections of these two fields. We welcome proposals which seek to discuss (or actually employ) experimental formats, objects, foods or other materials, and their implications for the future of Visual Sociology.
Chairs: Nina Wakeford, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Michael Guggenheim, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries [email protected] should be sent to: [email protected] and
Graffiti, Affective Inscriptions and the New Expressions of Visibilities in the Urban Landscape
Graffiti and tag practices are common themes with studies of contemporary culture, especially concerning the perception of the socio-political role they play. However, it is notable that recently new ways of street manifestations have emerged and their themes surpass political denouncement. In So Paulo (Brazil), such movement is expressed through requests such as More love, please or Love is important, damn it, that have become more and more visible on the city walls, generating echoes, dialogues and appropriations. Graffiti street artists and taggers claim for love and draw images of melancholy, build perceptions about time's finitude, good and evil, creating affective inscriptions on the walls of great cities. Reproductions, appropriations and inspirations from famous artists like Banksy proliferate, requesting a war made of flowers and hope in the places where they seem to have escaped. The transformations that dislocate the traditional places of public and private in the contemporary world mean that the great urban centres can be held as visibility stages for the feelings of their inhabitants. Besides that, the affective inscriptions seem to be in sync with the construction of the idea of love as a religion (May, 2011) as well as the rise of therapeutic narratives (Illouz, 2011) that allow the subjects to name affections, making them visible and therefore liable for reflexive experience. If the walls have already been in a recent past a visibility stage for essentially political manifestations in great urban centres, nowadays these walls seem to propose a post-modern wailing wall, built as structures of feelings (Williams, 1989), gathering feeling and the structural condition of great metropolises. Thus, the walls make visible the invisible structures of urban life. This panel will discuss how graffiti, tags, posters and other visibility regimes in large cities have been serving to affections manifestations that permeate the contemporary world, creating possibilities for sharing the sensible (Rancire, 2009). The persistence of these messages in dense urban spaces as the ones of many big cities in Latin America or other great metropolises shows a transformation of the public space in a space of reflexion about the affections and feelings that are constituent and constitutor of the individuals. We are looking for proposals that discuss the relations of this type of art with the city affections; the way it dialogues with the urban space and how the messages externalize affections and affect subjects.
Chairs: Tatiana Amendola Sanches, Institute of Philosophy and Human Sciences, Social Sciences Department, UNICAMP (State University of Campinas, Brazil) Tarcisio Torres Silva, Institute of Arts, Visual Arts Department, UNICAMP (State University of Campinas, Brazil) Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
Street Art, the City and the Public: Changing the Urban Vision
During the last 10-15 years the walls and pavements of big cities became canvases for huge figures by Roa and Roadsworth, gave shelters to tiny characters by Slinkachu and Isaak Cordial, and in general became the surfaces for many different types of images associated with the international street art movement. Contemporary street art is an innovative artistic practice with thousands of participants and viewers all around the world. It is also a powerful collection of images waiting for their researchers, and, last but not least, an effective tool changing urban vision or highlighting some insufficiencies in our ability to see (in) the city. Inscribing images into the city surface, street art increases the spatial sensitivity of the urban citizens. It inspires a variety of performances and practices contributing to the complexity and dynamism of urban visual landscape. It turns invisible/insignificant/alienated places into the new public domains, new scenes of urban communication. Thus, street art provides a perfect opportunity to study urban vision: how and where the urban dwellers look, what they see and do not see, which characteristics of the image make it visible and important for someone, what kind of public can be brought to life by street art itself. The intensification of visual communication among different groups of the public (street artists, tourists, urban citizens, municipalities) via street art questions with new sharpness the correspondence of aesthetics and politics, message and perception, visual and corporeal, public and private, visible and hidden in contemporary city space. Street art challenges visual methodologies working with images, their production and perception in (post)modern world. The heterogeneity of the world makes this challenge even more powerful. While talking about street art, the city and the public, we are talking about different cities and publics, different norms of communication in the city space, different traditions of looking and seeing in urban settings. We suggest to discuss the following aspects of visual communication via street art in the city space: Street art: Reshaping the Cityscape Street Art and the Transformations of Urban Vision Street Art and Site Specificity: Different Cities, Different Experiences Street Art on the Internet and in the City Street Art and Global Tourism; Visual Practices of Street Art Tourist (street art photography, in particular) Methodological Perspectives of Analyses of New Urban Visual Experiences: Visual Sociology, Visual Anthropology and Beyond.
Chairs: Natalia Samutina, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow Oksana Zaporozhets, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
Visual Sociology at Work: Poetics and Practices in the Visualization of Contemporary Times Dynamics
Visuality gains increasing importance in contemporary social life. This very fact requests adaptive approaches regarding the poetics and practices of producing knowledge and new visual works capable to improve the understanding of society's processes, increase public awareness and provoke debate within a wide range of audiences. The role of Visual Sociology implies evolving responsibilities embedded in the diversified modes to research,
analyse and express the social representations and dynamics of our times. In this session we will try to investigate Visual Sociologys capacity to condense time and sensoriality in the attempt to understand society's shifts. The speakers are invited to accompany their theoretical papers with audio-visual works in the form of photography, film and new media. Documentary film excerpts dedicated to the theme of the panel and of the conference are especially encouraged to be presented and discussed. This session invites Visual Sociologists to showcase, analyse and deconstruct their own visual work while critically addressing the attempt to grasp visually contemporary society's transformations, be it of cultural, economical, social or political nature. On this occasion, discussants are invited to: Question Visual Sociology's potentials and limits. Rethink research methods, choices and difficulties in producing Visual Sociology works. Debate the dilemmas crisscrossed while trying to contextualize, conceptualize and visualize the meaningful dynamics of our society in a way that would succeed to speak to a diverse public, enhancing its understanding regarding the present day's more or less radical social changes.
Chair: Ionut Piturescu, National School of Political Sciences of Bucharest Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Chair: Rachel S. Jones, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
further by Surealists, International Situationism, but also by researchers such as Kevin Lynch and hybrids such as the STALKER group. Interest came from Urban Anthropology, but less from Urban Sociology and Planning. This is rather interesting as walking does not require much (feet able to walk) and is a mode of locomotion that gives the most pervasive access to the city and for the largest variety of individuals. By this means, it could be an effective ally for the project of a 'public sociology' that transcends the academy into the public spheres of different audiences. But the inability to produce a "public image" of the walk, defined as collection of related images that can be shared and discussed by the participants and a wider audience is a crucial limitation. More so, if considering the use in academic disciplines where differently than in the arts objective and reliable data is more important than subjective expression. Coming from this point, we want to enter a discussion that has strands to environmental perception, spatial visibility and social marginalization. Questions addressed by the panelist can be, but are not limited to:
What images are produced by walking practices? What type of media and images are successful to fuel a public discussion? How to bridge the gap between the indiviual experience of the walker and the ones who did not do the walk? Do social and mobile media offer new ways of picturing walkbased experiences? Do they change the way we remember, discuss and behave in urban spaces? Can documenting walking experience inform scientific practice, come up with data for further research without loosing the capability to integrate complexity, sensual experience and contradictions? How can the walking experience come up with a picture of the entire city? How can it contribute to reliable knowledge on the city?
This panel seeks to collect a wide range of thoughts, methods and strategies from different disciplines with conceptual and practice-based approaches. Chair: Martin Kohler, Independent photographer and urbanist Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
the social sciences. The focus of the papers will lie on innovative methodological, typological, theoretical, ethical, or technological aspects in a more generic sense. The aim of this session is to contribute to the construction of a more solid and explicit theoretical and methodological basis for the use of visuals in social scientific endeavors.
Chair: Luc Pauwels, Department of Communication Studies, University of Antwerp, Belgium Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Chair: Elif Alp, Sociology Department, Columbia University Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to [email protected]
methods with all potential research participants? How might contextual factors influence the ultimate success or failure of a visual research project? Researchers adopting visual methods could also be more open about the limitations of their approaches and the potential dangers of implementing existing visual methods in new contexts. This panel will critically reflect on these less-discussed aspects of new visual methods and practice. We are particularly interested in papers that: Explore the limitations of new visual methods or innovations on established visual techniques. Challenge established parameters of visual research. Problematize the process of integrating visual materials and methods with other research techniques. Investigate the replicability of visual methods with different types of participants, in new contexts or for novel research purposes. Emphasize the importance of (researcher and participant) reflexivity in the development and implementation of new visual methods Reflect on the production and use of visual products as a way of representing findings (derived from visual research) to stakeholders, decision-makers and other audiences.
Chairs: Lauren Leigh Hinthorne, Centre for Communication and Social Change, University of Queensland Lisa Petheram, School of Sociology, Australian National University Abstracts and related enquiries [email protected] should be sent to [email protected] and
I Cant See a Thing! Visual Methodologies, Technologies and Reflections for Low/No-Light Environments
Photographic and videographic methods in social research have a tendency to pose a challenge to researchers (both inside and outside of academia) who do not have a professional or technical grounding. These challenges are exacerbated all the more by changes in the field, particularly lighting conditions, during the process of image-making. In particular, the loss of ambient light creates significant difficulties for social researchers who are either unwilling or unable to use artificial light to assist their documentation. Issues like (unintentionally) blurry photographs, underexposure or blank videos are common in these situations. These dark spaces are defined here as low/no-light environments spaces and/or circumstances where a researcher is unable or unwilling to make use of any light other than ambient. Examples of these include night photography in rural areas, or street photography where the use of a flashgun is inappropriate. This panel seeks papers from both image practitioners and researchers who have faced challenges in visually documenting their field in low/ no-light environments. Papers could discuss, but are not limited to, the difficulties of photographing night scenes and methods used to overcome these difficulties; current technologies for photographing/videographing using only ambient light; empirical case studies of research done in low or no-light environments, and theoretical papers dealing with the images produced in low/no-light environments. Papers drawn from work done in the Asia-pacific region are particularly welcome. Chair: Terence Heng, The Glasgow School of Art Singapore Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to [email protected]
Chair: Tracy Xavia Karner, Sociology Department, University of Houston Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to to [email protected]
Chair: Eric Margolis, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication, Arizona State University Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
10
But as many have argued, museums are not as unbiased as initially believed, since their choices of display involve a set of complex political, social or economic matters, whereas photographys apparent truthfulness is an historical construct greatly questioned by more contemporary readings. Therefore, one has to consider not only what a photograph displayed in a museum can communicate visually, but also how the photographs meaning is shaped by the institution itself. In cases in which photographs of violence or death are on display, then the question of meaning becomes even more complex as it involves possible issues of audience engagement, empathy, uncanny effects, and a transgression of the museum space. We invite presentations which deal with the following themes: art photography and death war museums and images of violence and death history museums and the construction of narratives through death displaying death in science museums the effects of images of violence and death on visitors photographs of violence/ death, their context and meaning war and documentary photography in museums
Chairs: Elena Stylianou, European University, Cyprus Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert, Cyprus University of Technology Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
This panel is looking for submissions from scholars at all levels and invites contributions from as wide a scope of research areas and disciplines as possible.
11
Chair: Christine Singer, Media and Film Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Chairs: Tony Dowmunt, Senior Lecturer in Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London Heinz Nigg, Social Anthropologist and community artist, Zurich, Switzerland Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
On Mapping
The core problem of the social sciences is that of transforming the traces of certain observed phenomena into the materiality of a specific artefact, usually the textual inscription of the book, translating the phenomena into a complementary and new register. But this translation/transformation act begs the question: what kind of sign system is created, codified and mobilised to accomplish this act? The contingency of sign systems one possibility among others has led the social sciences to explore a wider range of potential designed artefacts as the final result of a research process, such as written books, diagrams, photography and film, web interfaces, art-installations, etc. This panel will approach these issues in relation to one increasingly common concept: mapping. It is proposed that the notion of mapping exceeds, but not excludes, the idea of a cartographic experience, addressing the more general question of visualising information.
12
Mapping can be understood as both a material artefact, and as a metaphor to guide research practice; as a method to both discover and present research findings and as a tactic of everyday life to make sense of the world. In short, mapping is the act of defining a specific sign system to visualise an aspect of reality through the medium of a new materiality, not as mimesis but as figuration of the world, which makes visible what remains invisible to perception alone. This call for papers seeks to gather together different uses and interpretation of what mapping means and how it can function in the context of sociological work. The panel goal is not to define or solidify an ontological description of maps; on the contrary, it seeks to probe their practical utility through the interaction of different approaches, addressing the malleability of the term as a research and presentation tool. The panel welcomes papers on: Critical Cartography Internet Mapping / Mapping Controversies Ethnographic Maps Cognitive Mapping / Psychogeography Mapping Methods / Information Visualisation Mapping Temporalities
Chairs: Felipe Palma, CUCR, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London David Moats, CSISP, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
13
This panel invites proposals by both practitioners and theorists whose work engages with the question of how to direct ones technological gaze towards to the future as an inducement for thinking and doing politics in the present. Areas of exploration are not limited to, but may include emergent modes of documentation within sites of conflict, pre-emption as a visual condition, and the production of the archive as a future-oriented practice.
Chair: Susan Schuppli, Forensic Architecture / Centre for Research Architecture, Department of Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
The topics will be introduced by four to five short presentations, leaving enough time for a moderated discussion open to all participants. Submissions should be for presentations of 1015 minutes and propose open questions for the discussion at large. Proposals with a strong practical focus and/or multimedia presentations will be preferred.
Chairs: Maureen Mullinax, Sociology Deparment, Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio Antonia Levy, Sociology Department, Graduate Center of the City University of New York Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
14
The notion of artistic activism refers precisely to the modes of production and aesthetic forms of relatedness that put social action in tension with the demand for autonomy of art rooted in modernity. Often for artistic and political activism, "art" is a reservoir of both aesthetic and representational tools, techniques and strategies and symbolic materials, fed largely - though not exclusively - through avant-garde artistic experiments (Expsito, Vidal and Vindel, 2011). In this sense we seek to open a conversation to think through the role of visual production in processes of information and counter-information, the making, taking, and recuperating of spaces, public demonstrations and collective insurgencies. Papers may include but are not limited to those that address the visual and creative strategies deployed by social movements; visibility of artistic and political activism; reflections and analysis of forms and agency of visibility; artistic production overflowing into social activism; the way political struggles utilize, create, and recreate visual and artistic tools; aesthetics of activism; using public sociology to understand strategies of visibility; and theorizations of online and offline public visualizations as well as the intersections between them.
Chairs: Carolina Cambre, Department of Sociology, Kings University College at Western University, Canada Daniela Lucena, Gino Germani Research Institute, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina Abstracts and related enquiries should be send to: [email protected] and [email protected]
15
Finally, the social, political and aesthetic aspects of public images of social disruption also address representations of the trickster and related figures of confidence games as generic personifications of the logic of disruption. In short: The panel is interested in a broad research agenda of visual phenomena of disruption from the perspective of a decidedly aesthetical and political contemplation within social theory. It focuses on aspects like, for instance, the question of the specific epistemological value of public images of social disruption. What kind of knowledge do these images provide? How does the visual make-up of society in this particular case shape our understanding of social order and disorder?
Chair: Il-Tschung Lim, NCCR Iconic Criticism Eikones, Basel (Switzerland) Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Chairs: Alexandra Baixinho, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Tine Blom, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London / Lillehammer University College, Norway Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
Thorstein Veblen Revisited; Conspicuous Consumption and Nouveau Riche Syndrome in New Democracies
Erving Goffman's idea of the presentation of self (1959) has achieved particularly visible illustrations in the Eastern European as well as post-Soviet societies which in the aftermath of 1989 have gone directly from the uniformity and greyness of autocratic regime of shortages to the diversity and bristling colors of democracy and consumerism. Considerable segments of the population have succeeded in the rapid embracing of the new rules of the social game entrepreneurial drive, risk taking, profit seeking, achievement motivation, success value either in legitimate or sometimes illegitimate, criminal forms (corruption, organized crime, mafias etc.). At the same time some other groups have experienced unemployment, marginalization, decrease in standards of living, or at the extreme - outright poverty or homelessness. The huge and growing gap between the successful middle and higher
16
classes, vis-a-vis the losers of transformation, has produced for the winners the strong incentive to show off their freshly acquired riches and social statuses. Perhaps since the time of Thorstein Veblen's classic study of "The Leisure Class" (1899), the phenomenon he described as "conspicuous consumption" has nowhere found more spectacular manifestations. The private successes have become visibly advertised in public space, either directly before the public eye or via mass media creating new brand of celebrities. We seek papers which will illustrate and explain the current implications of Goffmanian and Veblenian concepts with the help of the approach, language and methods of Visual Sociology; i.e. photography and documentary film. We would particularly appreciate not only ad hoc attractive observations, but attempts to classify or build typologies of the phenomenon, and to theorize about its origins as well as consequences for the social climate, the mood of the population, emotions of envy, inter-group tensions and conflicts, social divisions, inter-party competition, rising right-wing as well as left-wing populism, and instability of democratic politics. Systematically gathered visual materials depicting the phenomenon of offensive presentation of self and conspicuous consumption may not only produce better sociological understanding, but become a powerful tool for activists and social movements fighting for more civilized and fair development of the post-communist societies.
Chair: Piotr Sztompka, Sociology, Jagiellonian University at Krakow, Poland Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Chairs: Elisabeth-Jane Milne, Applied Social Science Department, University of Stirling Andrea Capstick, School of Health Studies, University of Bradford Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
17
Chairs Chris High, Communication and Systems Department, Open University Jacqui Lovell, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, York St John University Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected] and [email protected]
Seeing What We Shouldnt - Moral Boundaries, Transgressive Images and Public Photography
In the context of our highly mediated, screen saturated, camera-filled public lives, it may appear as if there are no limits concerning permissible public photography and/or the public circulation of privately captured images. Some images, though, come to be regarded as photographs that should never have been taken and/or been seen by a viewing public. For example, the recent case of a freelance photographer whose images of a man who had been pushed in front of a subway train in New York citymoments before his deathand which subsequently appeared on the cover of the New York Post under the caption Doomed, became an international story centered around this contentious issue. While questions surrounding transgressive and/or profane images, along with anxieties concerning the ethical imagination of the photographer are not new, during these times of ubiquitous cameras and unprecedented image mobility, the seemingly limitlessness of digital image making and circulation gives them new potency.
18
This panel invites papers that explore the morally charged landscape of public photography and image circulation in contemporary times, focusing upon the social contexts in which the creation and/or circulation of particular kinds of images comes to be seen as problematic and/or as having transgressed (previously unseen) lines. Part of what we are interested in theorizing here is the relationship between what Durkheim calls the sacredthe realm that is set apart apart and forbidden and the profane, as it might apply to instances of public photography and/or the public circulation of photographic images. Presentations that explore particular cases in detail, or more theoretically explore public images in relation to such concerns, are equally welcome. Chair: Tara Milbrandt, Department of Social Sciences, Augustana Faculty, University of Canada Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
Chair: Monica Moreno Figueroa, Sociology, Newcastle University Abstracts and related enquiries can be sent to [email protected]
19
question the cognitive, aesthetic and affective dimensions of representations that enter the public sphere via this medium. This panel invites submission of papers that explore comics as a particular medium and their role in the cultural public sphere. We will consider papers addressing a wide typology of comics from manga to comic strips, from graphic novels, to superhero series, to cartoons and the numerous theoretical, methodological and substantive issues opened up by exploring the public image via comics.
Chair: Monica Sassatelli, CUCR, Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London. Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to [email protected]
Topics may include but are not limited to: The epistemic and methodological values of emotion/affect in researching race/gender/sexuality Visualising affect/emotion through experimental and innovative visual research methods and in visual arts, film, performing arts Performativity of affect/emotion The affective dimension of social research on race/gender/sexuality
Chair: Katalin Halasz, CUCR, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Abstracts and related enquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
20
Curators: Katalin Halasz, CUCR, Sociology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London Polly Card, Multimedia producer Abstracts, a short description of the artworks with technical details and related enquiries should be sent to [email protected]
21