Book ID: CBB216579679

Technocrats of the imagination: art, technology, and the military-industrial avant-garde (2020)

unapi

John Beck (Author)
Bishop, Ryan (Author)


Duke University Press


Publication Date: 2020
Physical Details: 229
Language: English

TECHNOCRATS OF THE IMAGINATION traces the rise of collaborative art and technology labs in the U.S. from WWII to the present. Ryan Bishop and John Beck reveal the intertwined histories of the avant-garde art movement and the military-industrial complex, showing how radical pedagogical practices traveled from Germany's Bauhaus movement to the U.S. art world and interacted with government-funded military research and development in university laboratories. During the 1960s both media labs and studio labs leaned heavily on methods of interdisciplinary collaboration and the power of American modernity to model new modes of social organization. The book's chapters take up MIT's Center for Art, Science, and Technology, Bell Labs's E.A.T. (Experiments in Art and Technology) Salon, and Los Angeles Museum of Art's Art + Technology Program. Their interconnected history illuminates how much of contemporary media culture and aesthetics depends on the historical relationship between military, corporate, and university actors. In light of revived interest in Black Mountain College and other 1960s art and technology labs, this book draws important connections between the contemporary art world and the militarized lab model of research that has dominated the sciences since the 1950s. The authors situate the rise of collaborative art and technology projects in the 1960s within John Dewey's ideology of scientific democracy, showing how leading thinkers from the Bauhaus movement in Germany immigrated to the U.S. and brought with them a Deweyan model for collaborative and interdisciplinary art and technology research. Over the course of the decade, the U.S. government increased funding to scientific research at university and private laboratories. Beck and Bishop investigate how various art and technology projects incorporated the collaborative and innovative interdisciplinarity of the avant-garde art movement with the corporate funding structure driven by the U.S. government's military and technoscientific interests. Finally, the authors consider the legacy of 1960s art and technology projects. During the 1970s and 80s, defense R & D funding was less motivated by a Cold War corporate state, and was instead restructured according to an entrepreneurial and neoliberal model. At the same time, funding in the art world also became increasingly financialized and globalized. Today's art and technology work happens collaboratively not because of an intellectual commitment to interdisciplinarity, but because of the precarity of the contemporary labor market. This book will interest students and scholars in art history and theory, media studies, history of technology, American studies, cultural studies, and critical university studies. (Publisher)

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Reviewed By

Review W. Patrick McCray (July 2020) Review of "Technocrats of the imagination: art, technology, and the military-industrial avant-garde". Technology and Culture (pp. 986-988). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB216579679/

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Authors & Contributors
McCray, W. Patrick
Weiss, Linda
Wilson, Mark R.
Andreas Broeckmann
Alic, John A.
Brook T. Amos
Journals
IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology
Vulcan
Technology and Culture
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Environmental History
The Bridge: Journal of the National Academy of Engineering
Publishers
University of California Press
U.S. Air Force Art Program
Garbely Publishing Company
University of Pennsylvania Press
The MIT Press
Simon & Schuster
Concepts
Technology and art
Cold War
Military-Industrial Complex
Art and society
Technology and society
Aesthetics
People
Goldberg, Rube
Time Periods
20th century
21st century
19th century
Renaissance
20th century, late
18th century
Places
United States
Germany
Institutions
New Deal (1933-1939)
Operation Paperclip
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