Historians and theorists of Italian art have usually dealt with the Eighties with sufficiency, reading it through the lens of disengagement and focusing on painting movements based on the return to manual expression and expressionist figuration, interpreted as a reaction to the conceptual practices that dominated the previous decade. Actually, painting represents only a small part of Italian artistic production in the postmodern era, a production whose peculiarity—and this is undoubtedly one of the reasons for the short-sighted historical reading of the period—consists in its being transdisciplinary. Indeed, in those years, a new generation of artists and cultural producers experimented with performative and media practices, moving with ease from the field of contemporary art to those of theater, television, music, design and visual communication. The use of audiovisual technologies, both video and personal computers, which saw mass diffusion in the 1980s, represents the trait d’union between these practices. Adopting an approach between the historical and the phenomenological, the article offers an “overview” of the artistic practices of video in Italy in the 1980s, articulating its discussion around three interpretative lines connected to the ideas of: hybridization, body and media. The article opens with some art-historical considerations. It then continues with an outline of the international artistic situation and references to post-modernist theories and the visual culture of the decade. Some typologies of experimental video practices in Italy are then outlined: video sculptures and installations; the relationships between video and theater; between video and design; between video and television; music videos; and computer art. The final part is dedicated to the capillary Italian network of production, distribution and fruition of video, which includes distributors, exhibition spaces, festivals and magazines. The article closes with some reflections on the evolution of the classification and historicization criteria in light of the most recent studies of visual culture.

Storici e teorici dell’arte italiana hanno solitamente trattato il decennio Ottanta con sufficienza, leggendolo attraverso la lente del disimpegno e in funzione di movimenti pittorici fondati sul ritorno alla manualità e alla figurazione espressionista, interpretati come reazione alle pratiche concettuali che dominano il decennio precedente. In realtà, la pittura rappresenta solo una piccola parte della produzione artistica italiana in epoca postmoderna, una produzione la cui peculiarità – e questa è senz’altro una delle ragioni per la miope lettura storica del periodo – consiste nel suo essere transdisciplinare. Una nuova generazione di artisti e produttori culturali, infatti, sperimenta in quegli anni con pratiche performative e mediali spostandosi con disinvoltura dall’ambito dell’arte contemporanea a quelli di teatro, televisione, musica, design e comunicazione visiva. A fare da trait d’union tra queste pratiche è l’utilizzo delle tecnologie audiovisive, il video e il personal computer, che proprio nel decennio Ottanta vedono una diffusione di massa. Adottando un approccio tra lo storico e il fenomenologico, l’articolo propone una “panoramica” sulle forme artistiche di utilizzo del video in Italia negli anni Ottanta, articolandone la trattazione attorno a tre linee interpretative connesse alle idee di: ibridazione, corpo e media. L’articolo si apre con alcune considerazioni di carattere storico-artistico. Prosegue quindi con cenni alla situazione artistica internazionale, alle teorie postmoderniste e alla cultura visuale del decennio. Sono poi delineate le tipologie di utilizzo del video in Italia e alcuni ambiti di riferimento come: le video sculture e installazioni; i rapporti tra video e teatro; tra video e design; tra video e televisione; i videoclip; e la computer art. La parte finale è dedicata al capillare network italiano di produzione, distribuzione e fruizione del video, che comprende distributori, spazi espositivi, festival e riviste. L’articolo si chiude con riflessioni sull’evoluzione dei criteri di classificazione e storicizzazione alla luce dei più recenti studi di cultura visuale.

Ibridazione, corpi e media. Pratiche artistiche del video in Italia negli anni Ottanta

Francesco Spampinato
2019

Abstract

Historians and theorists of Italian art have usually dealt with the Eighties with sufficiency, reading it through the lens of disengagement and focusing on painting movements based on the return to manual expression and expressionist figuration, interpreted as a reaction to the conceptual practices that dominated the previous decade. Actually, painting represents only a small part of Italian artistic production in the postmodern era, a production whose peculiarity—and this is undoubtedly one of the reasons for the short-sighted historical reading of the period—consists in its being transdisciplinary. Indeed, in those years, a new generation of artists and cultural producers experimented with performative and media practices, moving with ease from the field of contemporary art to those of theater, television, music, design and visual communication. The use of audiovisual technologies, both video and personal computers, which saw mass diffusion in the 1980s, represents the trait d’union between these practices. Adopting an approach between the historical and the phenomenological, the article offers an “overview” of the artistic practices of video in Italy in the 1980s, articulating its discussion around three interpretative lines connected to the ideas of: hybridization, body and media. The article opens with some art-historical considerations. It then continues with an outline of the international artistic situation and references to post-modernist theories and the visual culture of the decade. Some typologies of experimental video practices in Italy are then outlined: video sculptures and installations; the relationships between video and theater; between video and design; between video and television; music videos; and computer art. The final part is dedicated to the capillary Italian network of production, distribution and fruition of video, which includes distributors, exhibition spaces, festivals and magazines. The article closes with some reflections on the evolution of the classification and historicization criteria in light of the most recent studies of visual culture.
2019
Francesco Spampinato
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/711313
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