THE LEGACY OF TRANSGRESSIVE OBJECTS
Colloquium at the
Getty Research Institute
May 14th, 2015
Rebellion, transgression, and scandals are the normal conditions of ‘68. According to recent historiography, however, the revolutionary promise of the student revolts was short-lived: The process of stabilization and the decline of political energies in the 1980s followed the utopian phase of 1968/69. Yet one promise of the politicized era appeared to persist through this history of decline: the idea of transgression. This workshop traces the afterlife and historization of the theorem of transgression in art, architecture, technology, music, and psychedelic practices of the 60s and 70s by looking at the objects, materials, and images that actually shaped the idea of transgression – e.g. conceptions of radical architecture suggesting a whole new organization of society, the dissolution of boundaries between art and life in artistic practices, transgressions in music and festivals, and utopian visions of technological progress. The very objects of such far-reaching ideas are often ephemeral and of deteriorating material quality when visited in archives and museums today – yet they still function as repositories of time and objects of projection. Against this background the workshop brings together scholars from the U.S. and Europe to consider – with regards to the Special Collections of the Getty Research Institute – the dialectics of both the evidence and the historical index of objects that promised to change the world and opened up future horizons of the recent past.
PROGRAM
10:45 a.m.
Coffee Welcome Reception
11:15 a.m.
Introduction:
Katja Müller-Helle (Free University Berlin/GRI Fellow)
11:30 a.m.
TRANSGRESSIONS IN ART, ARCHITECTURE, AND MUSIC
Chair: James Merel Thomas (USC)
Branden W. Joseph (Columbia University):
The Limits of Transgression
Beatriz Colomina (Princeton University):
Little Magazines, Portable Utopias 196x- 197x
Helmut Lethen (IFK Vienna): Amsterdam, June 1964:
The Transgressive Magic of the Single “Twist and Shout”
Discussion
1:30-2:30 p.m.
Lunch
2:30 p.m.
TRANSGRESSIONS ACROSS INNER AND OUTER SPACE
Chair: Alena Williams (UC San Diego)
Jeannie Moser (Technical University Berlin):
Neurochemical Selves and Mind-Altering Techniques: The Legacy of LSD
Claus Pias (Leuphana University Lüneburg):
Leaving Earth: Ecology, Space Travel, Counter Culture
4:00- 4:15 p.m.
Coffee
4:15 p.m.
Screening of Tacita Dean’s Manhattan Mouse Museum
(2011, 16 mins., 16mm)
4:35 p.m.
Tacita Dean (GRI Artist in Residence) in conversation with
Katja Müller-Helle (Free University Berlin/GRI Fellow)
Space is limited. Please RSVP by May 8th, 2015 to GRIEventsgetty.edu.
The colloquium is organized by Katja Müller-Helle. Sponsored by the Volkswagen Foundation and the Getty Research Institute.
Quellennachweis:
CONF: The Legacy of Transgressive Objects (Los Angeles, 14 May 15). In: ArtHist.net, 22.04.2015. Letzter Zugriff 17.04.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/10100>.