Pasquier, Edith, 2019, Thesis, Discourses of photography in the Victoria and Albert Museum collection: the living bird PhD thesis, Royal College of Art.
Abstract or Description: | The research delves into the figure of the wild bird as through an encounter between a museum — the Victoria and Albert Museum — and an archive — the photographic collection of the Word & Image Department at the V&A. The research asks why we select photographic images, how we write from photographic images and The context of the research is threefold: to understand what a figure can be through the 'voice' of the wild bird, and thus enquire about the concept of 'voice' within human-animal and non-human animal relations; to consider the museum, archive and curated collection as a site of encounter, as a repository of knowledge and histories, individual and collective and to raise the ontological claims of photography as a site of writing and to re-mark again the performative possibilities of writing and photography. The question is whether the writing of an archive, a collection, can be marked by the presence of a living figure — human or non-human, and, in To the ontology of photography, the essays and autobiographical work of Walter Benjamin hold a key focus, as do the early pioneers of photography such as William Henry Fox Talbot, and contemporary practitioners. The process of the research is framed through the phenomenology of the reverie. It is through the properties of reverie — nonlinear, fragmentary, restless, contemplative, fleeting — that the writing attends to the photographic object, the museum's collections and the figure of the wild bird. The thesis is written in a varying 'focus' that intertwines the readings and writings of images: a gallery of wild and captive birds from the photography |
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Qualification Name: | PhD |
Subjects: | Creative Arts and Design > W600 Cinematics and Photography > W640 Photography |
School or Centre: | School of Arts & Humanities |
Date Deposited: | 20 Mar 2019 17:18 |
Last Modified: | 19 Feb 2022 08:38 |
URI: | https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/id/eprint/3867 |
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