Chapters eight, nine,
and ten present thought provoking positions on experience. Although the word
“experience” is never highlighted as a major theme throughout the chapters it
was an indirect argument for every position stated. Experience is the strong unifying
theme for these chapters.
Chapter 8 AESTHETICS, AISTHESIS & SYNESTHESIA
“Why I (still) want my MTV” argues a relentless
battle in favor of an aesthetical consideration for television. Chapter eight
reiterates that fact that “Television
is rarely considered aesthetically”(2).
As one reads
more into the chapter, however, aspects of television- more specifically
aesthesis and synesthesia- support television aesthetically.
Readers are
taught early that “While the word aisthesis has fallen into disuse, in ancient
Greek it meant something akin to “taking in” or “breathing in;” a “gasp” at the wondrous encounter with the
world (Hillman, 1993) (6).” This being said, anything that we take in is an
aisthesis experience. For someone to watch a music video and be taken back by
the shier beauty of the experience would have said to have experienced aisthesis.
For someone to experience true aisthesis they would have, perhaps
unconsciously, but nonetheless considered television aesthetically. The fact
that the viewer reacted means that they would have judged the beauty or
artistic value of the piece after their “wondrous encounter.” Because there was
an experience, there was also an aesthetic consideration. Although the viewer
might not have been taught conventional aesthetics, they were still able to
consider the work aesthetically based on their experiences.
Likewise,
synesthesia can be considered based on experience or as it was stated in the
reading, a perception. Chapter eight discussed the “phenomenon of synesthesia
[as] a matter of perception” but it also made the point that “it can also
become a phenomenon of expression”(26) An expression such as in language, or in
music are often critiqued based on aesthetics so for television to host an
experience, or phenomenon of synesthesia it should not be considered any
differently.
Chapter 9 THE REVERSIBILITY OF EXPRESSION AND
PERCEPTION
Chapter 9
stated that “Perception itself is never finished; it gives us a world to
express; to think only through partial perspectives”(2). This was
extraordinarily interesting because most people would argue that their
perceptions were affects of their experiences. A child raised in a household
with fifteen other people will certainty view sharing, dinnertime, family, and
being alone differently from an only child in a house with one parent.
The statement
expresses that unless a child could have experienced being an only child while
simultaneously experienced living in a household with fifteen other people,
then the child’s perspectives will always be partial. “The relationship of
expression and perception is doubled and reversible, and is a foundation not
only of aesthetic formations, but of cultural conceptions of the
relationship(s) between human and world.” (15)
Just as a human
is partial, so is technology. If a child tried to live both experiences, they
would miss the fullness of both. “The poetic acts of video are used for
enframing and objectifying images, if we act as if we have exhausted the
possibilities of experience even for a moment, we will have missed the
communicative world for a momentary conception or ideation of that world. We will have missed the communicative world
for an objectified, lifeless and dead world.”(11)
Not only is
technology itself partial, but the way we perceive it is partial as well. The
author wrote, “the visual surface of music television is so enveloped in music
that my sight sinks into the visuals as if they were waves of sound—in
depth”(12) Interestingly, his entire experience is changed not only by the
intentional perception the music television editors are displaying, but perhaps
also because of his personal experience with music. If he could not hear would
he have perceived this differently?
“Twentieth century art has, to a large degree,
brought forth the displacement of perspective as central to the representation
of reality. Questioning, in particular,
its spatialization of knowledge, and its propensity to measure all things
linearly.”(20) For so many years art had to be perceived in a specific manner,
then artists such as Picasso brought his perceptive of art and expressed his
experiences. When Picasso expresses himself through his perspective of art, and
puts it on display it is as if he is taking out his eyes- his experiences of
the past, and handing them to people gazing out saying see what I have been
through. Do you see that heart ache? Do you see that political mess? Do you see
the beautiful women? Since he expresses
his experiences with his eyes, they become so much more clear to people who
have not seen what he has seen.
An extensive
part of this chapter is dedicated to the movement of a camera with the
deliberate intention of revealing the countless ways to portray an experience
on television. An experience can zoom, rotate, swirl, pan or repeat itself, and
so can a camera. Television can be the eyes to any experience. Whether a viewer
agrees with Picasso's painting, or a music video at least they can begin to
experience with someone else’s perspective.
Chapter 10 FROM LOGOS TO ECHOS
Chapter 10
says that “Every technique,” Merleau-Ponty suggests (in Johnson, 1993, p. 129),
“is a ‘technique of the body (2). Everything we do in body is an experience,
and so technique would also have to be partially dependent on experience.
All of the
senses are stimulated by different experiences. If we smell cookies, for
example, we’ve experienced the smell of cookies. Music video, and television
are an experience of sounds, vision, and perhaps even a feeling if the speakers
are rocking the room. Although we know logically that there will be music
playing, and people on television it is our experience of the event that makes
music visuality more echos from logic. “Echos describes the mode of
televisual/video address as a multimedia presentation which draws on sight and
sound, writing and speaking, orality and literacy, hearing and listening in its
overlapping and interpenetrating presentation of images, words, sounds, music,
and so on” (6)
If I
understand this correctly a logical evaluation- you see a guitarist, a crowed
dancing, and you hear music and an evaluation of echos would lead you to
believe that the man is playing the music that the people are dancing to. Echos
combines the three experiences into one experience. Two visual, and one
auditory experiences are logical but Echos is the sum of the whole experience.
The logic is necessary, but the big picture is, well, the big picture. “Musical
visuality is an aural-visual aesthetic in which music and dance become the logos
of video, the logos of images. I
have suggested, moreover, that with this technique perhaps logos has
given way to echos, and in the following I wish to deal more thoroughly
with this suggestion”(2-3)
Together
Experience is
certainty a connective theme throughout the three chapters. Aesthetics,
aesthesis, synesthesia, reversibility of expression, perception, logos, and
echos are very different topics, but under the experience of television and
art, they seem to relate very well.
photo:http://images.google.com/search?as_q=guitarist&tbs=sur:f&biw=1159&bih=703&sei=YfNZUbH0INPK4APW44GYDA&tbm=isch#imgrc=_NRDS7k65WvizM%3A%3BTzNMmolQTxvE4M%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fupload.wikimedia.org%252Fwikipedia%252Fcommons%252Fb%252Fbe%252FAn_electric_guitarist.jpg%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fcommons.wikimedia.org%252Fwiki%252FFile%253AAn_electric_guitarist.jpg%3B1024%3B685
Chapter 8 AESTHETICS, AISTHESIS & SYNESTHESIA
“Why I (still) want my MTV” argues a relentless battle in favor of an aesthetical consideration for television. Chapter eight reiterates that fact that “Television is rarely considered aesthetically”(2).
As one reads more into the chapter, however, aspects of television- more specifically aesthesis and synesthesia- support television aesthetically.
Likewise, synesthesia can be considered based on experience or as it was stated in the reading, a perception. Chapter eight discussed the “phenomenon of synesthesia [as] a matter of perception” but it also made the point that “it can also become a phenomenon of expression”(26) An expression such as in language, or in music are often critiqued based on aesthetics so for television to host an experience, or phenomenon of synesthesia it should not be considered any differently.
Chapter 9 THE REVERSIBILITY OF EXPRESSION AND
PERCEPTION
Chapter 9 stated that “Perception itself is never finished; it gives us a world to express; to think only through partial perspectives”(2). This was extraordinarily interesting because most people would argue that their perceptions were affects of their experiences. A child raised in a household with fifteen other people will certainty view sharing, dinnertime, family, and being alone differently from an only child in a house with one parent.
The statement expresses that unless a child could have experienced being an only child while simultaneously experienced living in a household with fifteen other people, then the child’s perspectives will always be partial. “The relationship of expression and perception is doubled and reversible, and is a foundation not only of aesthetic formations, but of cultural conceptions of the relationship(s) between human and world.” (15)
Not only is technology itself partial, but the way we perceive it is partial as well. The author wrote, “the visual surface of music television is so enveloped in music that my sight sinks into the visuals as if they were waves of sound—in depth”(12) Interestingly, his entire experience is changed not only by the intentional perception the music television editors are displaying, but perhaps also because of his personal experience with music. If he could not hear would he have perceived this differently?
“Twentieth century art has, to a large degree, brought forth the displacement of perspective as central to the representation of reality. Questioning, in particular, its spatialization of knowledge, and its propensity to measure all things linearly.”(20) For so many years art had to be perceived in a specific manner, then artists such as Picasso brought his perceptive of art and expressed his experiences. When Picasso expresses himself through his perspective of art, and puts it on display it is as if he is taking out his eyes- his experiences of the past, and handing them to people gazing out saying see what I have been through. Do you see that heart ache? Do you see that political mess? Do you see the beautiful women? Since he expresses his experiences with his eyes, they become so much more clear to people who have not seen what he has seen.
Chapter 10 FROM LOGOS TO ECHOS
Chapter 10 says that “Every technique,” Merleau-Ponty suggests (in Johnson, 1993, p. 129), “is a ‘technique of the body (2). Everything we do in body is an experience, and so technique would also have to be partially dependent on experience.
If I understand this correctly a logical evaluation- you see a guitarist, a crowed dancing, and you hear music and an evaluation of echos would lead you to believe that the man is playing the music that the people are dancing to. Echos combines the three experiences into one experience. Two visual, and one auditory experiences are logical but Echos is the sum of the whole experience. The logic is necessary, but the big picture is, well, the big picture. “Musical visuality is an aural-visual aesthetic in which music and dance become the logos of video, the logos of images. I have suggested, moreover, that with this technique perhaps logos has given way to echos, and in the following I wish to deal more thoroughly with this suggestion”(2-3)
Together
photo:http://images.google.com/search?as_q=guitarist&tbs=sur:f&biw=1159&bih=703&sei=YfNZUbH0INPK4APW44GYDA&tbm=isch#imgrc=_NRDS7k65WvizM%3A%3BTzNMmolQTxvE4M%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fupload.wikimedia.org%252Fwikipedia%252Fcommons%252Fb%252Fbe%252FAn_electric_guitarist.jpg%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fcommons.wikimedia.org%252Fwiki%252FFile%253AAn_electric_guitarist.jpg%3B1024%3B685
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