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Event announcement. Megan Hoetger, “Body + Motion” keynote lecture on occasion of the 16th IN OUT Video Art Festival, Gdańsk, Poland, October 2024.
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Title slide. Megan Hoetger, “Body + Motion” keynote lecture on occasion of the 16th IN OUT Video Art Festival, Gdańsk, Poland, October 2024.
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Megan Hoetger, “Body + Motion” keynote lecture on occasion of the 16th IN OUT Video Art Festival, Gdańsk, Poland, October 2024. Photo: Paweł Jóżwiak, courtesy of CCA ŁAŹNIA.
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Megan Hoetger, “Body + Motion” keynote lecture on occasion of the 16th IN OUT Video Art Festival, Gdańsk, Poland, October 2024. Photo: Paweł Jóżwiak, courtesy of CCA ŁAŹNIA.
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Alexei Gastev, Cyclogram of chopping wood with a chisel staged in the pedagogical laboratory of the Central Institute of Labor (TsIT), Moscow, c. 1922-1924. Wikimedia Commons.
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Eadweard Muybridge, Animal Locomotion, 1877. Collotype.
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Megan Hoetger, “Body + Motion” keynote lecture on occasion of the 16th IN OUT Video Art Festival, Gdańsk, Poland, October 2024. Photo: Paweł Jóżwiak, courtesy of CCA ŁAŹNIA.
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Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman, TV Bra for Living Sculpture, 1969. Image courtesy of the Walker Art Center, 2020. © Estate of Nam June Paik.
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Joan Jonas, Vertical Roll, 1972. Single-channel video; black and white; sound; 19:38 minutes. ©Joan Jonas, courtesy of the artist and Yvon Lambert New York, Paris.
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Woody Vasulka, Vocabulary, 1973. Analogue video; color; sound; 4:17 minutes. Open source video access: Fondation Daniel Langlois(opens in a new tab).
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Megan Hoetger, “Body + Motion” keynote lecture on occasion of the 16th IN OUT Video Art Festival, Gdańsk, Poland, October 2024. Photo: Paweł Jóżwiak, courtesy of CCA ŁAŹNIA.
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Steina Vasulka, Summer Salt, 1982. Analogue video; color; sound; 18:42 minutes. Open source video access: Fondation Daniel Langlois(opens in a new tab).
“These phantom horses were soon followed by phantom humans, who ran and turned somersaults to even greater admiration. […] the same principles of mechanical repetition that made possible industrial reproduction had now made movement more visible. Movement itself had become a ‘visible mechanics.’”
Building from what film theorist Linda Williams coined the “frenzy of the visible,” Hoetger’s keynote lecture rehearsed scenes of the “phantom horses” and “phantom humans” from a story of body motion capture leading from early photographic experiments by Eadweard Muybridge, Alexei Gastev and others, to the era of video art with works by Joan Jonas, Steina and Woody Vasulka, and Nam June Paik. Looking at the long arc of these imaging technologies, Hoetger considered medial concerns with mapping movement that link the photograph and video screen.
“Body + Motion. Mapping Movements from Early Photography to the Era of Video Art” was delivered on occasion of the 16th annual IN OUT Video Art Festival in Gdańsk, Poland. Special thanks to Jola Woszczenko for the invitation, and to Oriana Radziuk for her coordination assistance.