Neil Taylor’s experimental animation: the technical habitus as aesthetic trace
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 02:42authored byDC De Bruyn
This essay examines Neil Taylor’s (1945-) animations, situated between the moving image, performance and sculpture and in the shadows of his recognised wire-based sculptural practice. Taylor’s animations automatically inscribe the surfaces of flipbooks and note pads, (Short Lives 1980-90) cash register rolls (Roll Film 1990) and are enhanced by hand-made ‘machines’ (Copy Copy 1998) designed to shape this idiosyncratic activity. These short films are part of an avant-garde project ‘that continues to explore the physical properties of film and the nature of perceptual transactions which take place between viewer and film.’ (John Hanhardt, 1976: 44). Taylor’s practice is additionally placed, through Vilem Flusser’s ‘technical image’ in relation to the ascendancy of digital culture, and Pierre Bourdieu’s ‘habitus’ is used to frame both Taylor’s art and teaching practice, in order to examine the discounting of the technical classes that these fields of production consistently perform.
History
Journal
Senses of cinema
Volume
September 2016
Pagination
1-12
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
ISSN
1443-4059
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article