Lectures

Bossing images. Subverting normalcy through queer cultural politics

In this talk I will present „Bossing Images. The Power of Images, Queer Art, and Politics“, an ongoing series of curated evenings that started in 2012 at the NGbK Berlin. Bossing Images proposes bossiness as a framework through which to foreground the desiring but not always, hierarchical but never fully stabilized power relations that shape the production, reception, and circulation of art. The series draws on Elspeth Probyn’s thesis that desire travels in images, and inspires me to reflect upon artistic practices and queer cultural politics that intervene in regimes of normalcy.

Antke Engelis director of the Institute for Queer Theory in Berlin and works as independent scholar in the fields of queer, feminist and poststructuralist theory, political philosophy, visual cultural studies and queer aesthetics. She received her PhD in Philosophy at Potsdam University in 2001, was research fellow at the Institute for Cultural Inquiry (ICI Berlin) from 2007-2009, and held visiting professorships for Queer Theory at different universities. She has published widely on queer theory and visual culture, among others Bilder von Sexualität und Ökonomie (2009), The Surplus of Paradoxes. Queer/ing Images of Sexuality and Economy, in: Pascale, Celine-Marie (2013), and in e-flux journal

placeAVU in Prague
tags
castAntke Engel
cameraBarbora Švehláková
soundBarbora Švehláková
editingBarbora Švehláková
categoryLectures
published14. 12. 2016
duration0:00:01
languageČesky / English
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Bossing images. Subverting normalcy through queer cultural politics
The traveling exhibition Rituals of Solitude, conceived during the global lockdown, explores the spread of fake news, the reversal of the traditional relationship between private and public space, the paradoxical rituals that populate homes, the ways in which visual technologies are domesticated into tools of self-presentation and connection, the accumulation, fetishization, and display of objects in home interiors; and, in addition, the states of loneliness that arise as a result of forced isolation.