Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
The Future Is Present : Art, Technology, and the Work of Mobile Image - Philip Glahn

The Future Is Present

Art, Technology, and the Work of Mobile Image

By: Philip Glahn, Cary Levine

eBook | 18 June 2024

At a Glance

eBook


RRP $76.24

$61.99

19%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $15.50 with

 or 

Instant Digital Delivery to your Kobo Reader App

A critical history of the pioneering art and technology group Mobile Image and their prescient work in communications, networking, and information systems.

In The Future Is Present, Philip Glahn and Cary Levine tell the fascinating history of the visionary art group Mobile Image—founded by Kit Galloway and Sherrie Rabinowitz in 1977—which appropriated emerging technologies, from satellites to electronic message platforms. Based in Los Angeles, this under-studied collective worked amid urban crisis, a techno-boom, consolidating media power, and ascendant neoliberal politics. Mobile Image challenged fundamental conventions of the public sphere, democracy, communication, and political participation, as well as notions of power, representation, and identity.

Glahn and Levine argue not only for the historical importance of Mobile Image, but also for a critical artistic process that is at once analytic and transformative. They weave themes such as embodiment and its mediation, public/private dialectics, and techno-utopian vision throughout the book, binding these projects to discourses around race, gender, and class, as well as margin and center, the local and the global. In today's world of ubiquitous digital re/production, networking, and social media, The Future Is Present shows how the work of Mobile Image continues to have profound implications for art, technology, and the politics of public and private experience.

on

More in Art from 1960

The Dharma of Star Wars - Matthew Bortolin

eBOOK

Match Prints - Jim Marhsall

eBOOK

RRP $25.99

$20.99

19%
OFF
Check, Please! : Dating, Mating, & Extricating - Janice Dickinson

eBOOK

Michael Moore Is a Big Fat Stupid White Man - David T. Hardy

eBOOK