Lexicon

This lexicon was developed by the curators of this exhibition to define the vocabulary as it relates to the content of the website.

Find these words throughout the site in orange. 

Agency:

a person’s ability to act or intervene; to produce a change

Alter:

to change an image’s conceptual, spatial, temporal trajectory in a significant way

Appropriation:

a curatorial act; an artistic act; (re)contextualizing an image in a violent, creative, generative, destructive, subtractive way; an assertion of power over an image; its erasure, theft, contemporization, performance, homage, reference, critique, interrogation, reflexivity, fiction, subjective truth, collapse

 

Archetype:

an ideal example; an original; a recurrent symbol

Archive:

a collection of data pertaining to a particular archetype

Collapse:

a process in which a structure falls in on itself or is deconstructed; to break down a structure in order to expose and densify information

Colonialism:

the policy or practice of acquiring full or partial political control over another people/culture, and the occupation and exploitation of that people/culture

Contemporary history:

histories understood as constructions of contemporary discourse; the collapse of the past and present in an ongoing reworking of narrative

Content:

substantive information or creative material of something; its meaning

Context:

the political, social, cultural, temporal, spatial constellation in which an object/image operates

Curating:

the practice of exhibition making through the selection of objects, images, documents, in line with an aesthetic, or conceptual thesis

Curatorial:

the conceptual constellations that inform the making of an exhibition

Currency:

the tangible representation of circulation within a system of exchange

Deconstruct:

analyze by the stripping away of layers of text, typically in order to expose hidden internal assumptions and contradictions and subvert apparent unity

Digital age:

a period in human history characterized by the shift from traditional industrialism to an economy based on information networks, service industries, and cultural currency

Density:

the depth of temporal, spatial, contextual, information within a single image or moment

Documentation:

the means by which ephemera (events, performance, interactions) are solidified in space

Event:

something that happens in a specific place at a specific time

Format:

the structure in which information is arranged and through which it is expressed

History:

the contemporary understanding of events from the past

Identity:

the ability to construct a self in relation to sociopolitical, economic, cultural norms

Image:

a representation of the external form of a person or thing in art

Informational Blockage:

to obstruct information from traveling through a network; halting communication

Informational Passage:

to facilitate the travel and communication of information

Institution:

an established system or place of cultural practice

Lexicon:

the vocabulary through which a system expresses itself

Mine:

to delve into an archive to extract, reconsider, and recontextualize an image

Monument:

a rigid structure that validates/perpetuates a fixed historical narrative

Monument to Ruin:

a deconstructed/collapsed monument that generates multiple, divergent, histories

Multiples:

the manifestation of an image, separate from its origin, that transcends notions of aura and authenticity

Original:

the assumption of an authentic source of a multiple

Popular Media:

institutionalized image circulation for a national/global audience

Poor Image:

a reproduction that deteriorates as it is circulated

Performance:

the intentional movement of bodies in space and time for an audience

Photojournalism:

the illustration of contemporary history in a linear narrative

Pixelation:

the degradation of a digital image

Reactivate:

the resurrection of an image in order to complicate its contextual/historical substance

Recontextualize:

to place or consider an image in a new or different context

Reference:

the use of a specific piece of information to illustrate the substance of an image

Remythologize:

to make a new mythological system out of an existing one

Restaging:

a performative parrotting removed in time from the original event

Stereotype:

a widely held but fixed and essentialized image or idea of a particular identity

Symbol:

something used for or regarded as representing something else