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Featured researches published by Pau Alsina.


Artnodes | 2017

Futurs especulatius de l’art «Què passaria si...?»

Vanina Hofman; Pau Alsina

Abordar l’art des de l’aspecte especulatiu implica pensar tambe altres possibles mons, a partir de la invencio de futurs que escapen a la logica de la continuitat i que guarden la possibilitat de sorprendre’ns. Vol dir preguntar-nos pel «que passaria si…» i completar aixi la segona part de la frase tal com ho faria l’«idiota», aquell personatge conceptual capac de generar l’interstici per a l’emergencia d’altres preguntes, les que no donen per fet les conclusions ni pressuposen esgotats els significats d’allo que es busca coneixer. Especular es formular aquestes preguntes en forma de ficcions de futur, i buscar-hi respostes possibles sense avergonyir-nos del dubte ni del balboteig. Especular sobre el futur es fer-ho tambe sobre el present i el passat, crear fabulacions contemporanies, relats densos que condueixen al pensament.


Artnodes: revista d'art, ciència i tecnologia | 2012

La imaginació material, o els deu anys d'Artnodes

Pau Alsina

Artnodes has reached the age of ten. In this time we have published twelve nodes and a great number of the highest quality articles from authors from around the world. We have seen all kinds of practices, theories, authors, collectives, institutions, categories and histories appear, grow, disappear and consolidate. We have learned to distance ourselves critically from the diktat of the new while continuing to keep up with the latest from the great debates taking place worldwide. We have been able to consolidate our position in terms of the academic journals on art and now set forth on a new process of internationalization of the journal’s structure in order to face up to the new challenges that this will entail. Thus, we want to be able to continue focusing the upcoming monographic issues on the crucial debates and leading topics in art today. With this in mind, the issue presented here focuses on a topic of particular importance, which over recent years has been framed within a “new materialism” – a topic that has stood out for the great amount of confusion it has caused and the important implications it has led to. Following years and years of visionaries preaching the immateriality and bare ethereal virtuality of digital culture and art, raising up the discursiveness and their symbolic paradise over the brute materiality of things and converting artistic practice into the act of an active subject giving shape to an inert and passive material which becomes a mere receiver of the idea…, after all this and more, digital culture and art now turn out to be made of things, things that sometimes break and stop working (we’ve all experienced that). Things, parts of things, systems of things, amalgams of all kinds of different things, materials, techniques and technologies that organize the materiality that underlies all cultural practice, regardless of how virtual or digital they might be. Curators and artists themselves have been battling daily, though they have known for years. While the former concern themselves with the best way to preserve the materials and technologies that articulate the work, the latter choose one or other material, technique or technology to make or explain some things better than others. In both cases, they are not banal decisions on “mere inert receptacles”, rather they fully affect the sense of the actual practice. This may well be the main point of incomprehension inherent in the still present idealist aesthetic and underlying formalism in contemporary art with regard to new media art – a perspective that is obviously unable to see the materials, and the techniques and technologies used in these media as authentic cultural artefacts that are the subjects and/or objects of meaning in the construction of the aesthetic experience. In the last node, number 11, we looked at this radical and explicit incomprehension between the great theoreticians in each of the two camps, Peter Weibel and Nicolas Bourriaud, in terms of the practices, theories and systems of new media art, art-science or contemporary art in general. What is in play is the conceptualisation of materiality in the very practice of art: whether it is a mere receptacle or the formulation of an unbreakable semantic-material hybrid and, indirectly, attributing technological and material culture the role that it deserves in the constitution of the history of art, leaving the way open for new creative forms that connect intimately with our contemporaneity.


Artnodes | 2012

The Material Imagination, or Ten Years of Artnodes

Pau Alsina

Artnodes has reached the age of ten. In this time we have published twelve nodes and a great number of the highest quality articles from authors from around the world. We have seen all kinds of practices, theories, authors, collectives, institutions, categories and histories appear, grow, disappear and consolidate. We have learned to distance ourselves critically from the diktat of the new while continuing to keep up with the latest from the great debates taking place worldwide. We have been able to consolidate our position in terms of the academic journals on art and now set forth on a new process of internationalization of the journal’s structure in order to face up to the new challenges that this will entail. Thus, we want to be able to continue focusing the upcoming monographic issues on the crucial debates and leading topics in art today. With this in mind, the issue presented here focuses on a topic of particular importance, which over recent years has been framed within a “new materialism” – a topic that has stood out for the great amount of confusion it has caused and the important implications it has led to. Following years and years of visionaries preaching the immateriality and bare ethereal virtuality of digital culture and art, raising up the discursiveness and their symbolic paradise over the brute materiality of things and converting artistic practice into the act of an active subject giving shape to an inert and passive material which becomes a mere receiver of the idea…, after all this and more, digital culture and art now turn out to be made of things, things that sometimes break and stop working (we’ve all experienced that). Things, parts of things, systems of things, amalgams of all kinds of different things, materials, techniques and technologies that organize the materiality that underlies all cultural practice, regardless of how virtual or digital they might be. Curators and artists themselves have been battling daily, though they have known for years. While the former concern themselves with the best way to preserve the materials and technologies that articulate the work, the latter choose one or other material, technique or technology to make or explain some things better than others. In both cases, they are not banal decisions on “mere inert receptacles”, rather they fully affect the sense of the actual practice. This may well be the main point of incomprehension inherent in the still present idealist aesthetic and underlying formalism in contemporary art with regard to new media art – a perspective that is obviously unable to see the materials, and the techniques and technologies used in these media as authentic cultural artefacts that are the subjects and/or objects of meaning in the construction of the aesthetic experience. In the last node, number 11, we looked at this radical and explicit incomprehension between the great theoreticians in each of the two camps, Peter Weibel and Nicolas Bourriaud, in terms of the practices, theories and systems of new media art, art-science or contemporary art in general. What is in play is the conceptualisation of materiality in the very practice of art: whether it is a mere receptacle or the formulation of an unbreakable semantic-material hybrid and, indirectly, attributing technological and material culture the role that it deserves in the constitution of the history of art, leaving the way open for new creative forms that connect intimately with our contemporaneity.


Convergence | 2009

Videogame as Media Practice An Exploration of the Intersections Between Play and Audiovisual Culture

Antoni Roig; Gemma San Cornelio; Elisenda Ardèvol; Pau Alsina; Ruth Pagès


Digithum | 2007

Cultura lúdica i pràctiques mediàtiques

Elisenda Ardèvol; Antoni Roig; Gemma San Cornelio; Ruth Pagès; Pau Alsina


RED. Revista de Educación a Distancia | 2010

Media Art Wiki. Uso de Wikis para la enseñanza interdisciplinar y multimedia del arte de los nuevos medios de comunicación en entornos virtuales de aprendizaje

Pau Alsina; Gemma San Cornelio; Jordi Alberich


Revista ICONO14. Revista científica de Comunicación y Tecnologías emergentes | 2014

Agencia, materialidad y documentación del arte de los medios

Pau Alsina; Vanina Hofman


Artnodes | 2018

El devenir de la arqueología de los medios: derroteros, saberes y metodologías

Pau Alsina; Ana Rodríguez-Granell; Vanina Hofman


Revista Latinoamericana de Estudios sobre Cuerpos, Emociones y Sociedad | 2015

Politics of Desire in the New Economy. From the historical background to critical artistic and social movements in Spain

Ana Rodríguez-Granell; Pau Alsina


Artnodes: revista d'art, ciència i tecnologia | 2014

Desmuntant el mite de la immaterialitat de l'art digital: cap a un enfocament neomaterialista en les arts

Pau Alsina

Collaboration


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Gemma San Cornelio

Open University of Catalonia

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Antoni Roig

Open University of Catalonia

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Ruth Pagès

Open University of Catalonia

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Elisenda Ardèvol

Open University of Catalonia

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Vanina Hofman

Open University of Catalonia

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