SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.5 issue2The colonial shock. Human’s tecnologies and border artFrom third cinema to the video movement: Theories and decolonizing practices in latinamerican audiovisual materials author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


Ñawi: arte diseño comunicación

On-line version ISSN 2588-0934Print version ISSN 2528-7966

Abstract

LIBRANDI, Nancy Beatriz. Ruins at the technosphere: surviving identities. Ñawi [online]. 2021, vol.5, n.2, pp.107-126. ISSN 2588-0934.  https://doi.org/10.37785/nw.v5n2.a6.

Technological progress and the accumulated material at the technosphere define frontiers through the possibilities of mobility and accessibility to technology. These liminal zones act as filters shaping different centralities and subalternities (or peripheries), inclusions and exclusions, as new forms of coloniality. The matter of the technosphere, betrayed by the linearity of its own progress and for the havoc that nature causes, is discarded and transformed into an new sense of ruin. Art frees it from its futility and transforms it into its material to make visible from its abandonment those borders between the functional and the useless generated by the technological world itself. The artist catalogs and serializes his accumulations; the form-journey becomes the privileged artistic operation for the acquisition of the ruinous material. Art uses the technological object (in ruins) not because of its ephemeral functionality, but rather of the ruinological properties it acquires from its disuse.

Keywords : Form-journey; border; periphery; ruin; technology..

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish     · Spanish ( pdf )