
Michael Stipe: Our Interference Times
a visual record
Michael Stipe(Author)
Damiani (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 3. October 2019
Book
Hardback
200 pages
978-88-6208-678-3 (ISBN)
Description
For half of his life, Michael Stipe has lived in a world between worlds, a constantly shifting moire pattern. The past world is defined by the analog, the future world by digital.
It was the advent of digital technologies and their integration into our daily lives some 30 years ago that hurled us headfirst into this tumultuous in-between state. Visually speaking, the present doesn't know what it wants to be. Our current horizon and all that wanders there is dictated by both the past and the future, but there is no clear understanding of where the 'right now' stands. It is an epic, woozy mishmash, thrilling and unsettling. These states of being don't communicate well- there's no clear point where they mesh, and no agreed upon language exists to easily translate one into another-or to integrate them into a new system altogether.
The tug of war between pixels and halftone, between past memory and new memory, and their vagaries of representation, is an endlessly fascinating and technically challenging field. Our Interference Times: a visual record is about that- its moire patterns, its signal to noise, its interferences, its consonances and dissonances, its jittery disruptions, and the extreme present tense that we're enveloped in. It is all changing before our eyes with or without our acceptance or agreement. How does one find agency within all of this?
And so it is a confused and odd landscape that we are working to navigate. For Michael Stipe, we are moving closer to something that visually represents nature, perhaps even understands nature better. But the path to that appears to be the opposite, something man-made and destructive. Where will this lead us? The images included in this book serve as a road map to a place that, although right before us, still feels very far away.
It was the advent of digital technologies and their integration into our daily lives some 30 years ago that hurled us headfirst into this tumultuous in-between state. Visually speaking, the present doesn't know what it wants to be. Our current horizon and all that wanders there is dictated by both the past and the future, but there is no clear understanding of where the 'right now' stands. It is an epic, woozy mishmash, thrilling and unsettling. These states of being don't communicate well- there's no clear point where they mesh, and no agreed upon language exists to easily translate one into another-or to integrate them into a new system altogether.
The tug of war between pixels and halftone, between past memory and new memory, and their vagaries of representation, is an endlessly fascinating and technically challenging field. Our Interference Times: a visual record is about that- its moire patterns, its signal to noise, its interferences, its consonances and dissonances, its jittery disruptions, and the extreme present tense that we're enveloped in. It is all changing before our eyes with or without our acceptance or agreement. How does one find agency within all of this?
And so it is a confused and odd landscape that we are working to navigate. For Michael Stipe, we are moving closer to something that visually represents nature, perhaps even understands nature better. But the path to that appears to be the opposite, something man-made and destructive. Where will this lead us? The images included in this book serve as a road map to a place that, although right before us, still feels very far away.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Bologna
Italy
Illustrations
150 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 330 mm
Width: 248 mm
Weight
1420 gr
ISBN-13
978-88-6208-678-3 (9788862086783)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
As an undergraduate studio art major at the University of Georgia, Michael Stipe (born 1960) studied photography and painting before leaving school upon the formation of R.E.M., the band for which he served as frontman and singer/songwriter until its dissolution in 2011. The sensibility that he began to develop during his time as an art student transferred to the spectrum of his work for R.E.M., from art directing all graphic, video and stage design, to writing, composing and performance, and his iconoclastic personal style. Stipe's visibility as a media figure in the popular culture of the 1980s and '90s left an indelible mark on the aesthetic trends of the time, many of which have trickled down to contemporary culture.