Mythopoesis or Fiction as Mode of Existence: Three Case Studies from Contemporary Art
This article explores a trend in some British contemporary art towards ‘fictioning’, when this names not only the blurring of the reality/fiction boundary, but also, more generally, the material instantiation – or performance – of fictions within the real. It attends to three practices of this fiction as mode of existence: sequencing and nesting (Mike Nelson); the deployment ‘fabulous images’ and intercessors (Brian Catling); and more occult technologies and an idea of the ‘invented life’ (Bonnie Camplin). The article also attends to the mythopoetic or ‘world-making’ aspect of these practices and the way this can involve recourse to other times, past and future. Mythopoesis also involves a sense of collective enunciation and, with that, a concomitant disruption of the more dominant fiction of the self.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | mythopoesis, fictioning, Mike Nelson, Brian Catling, Bonnie Camplin |
Departments, Centres and Research Units | Visual Cultures |
Date Deposited | 10 Nov 2017 11:06 |
Last Modified | 07 Mar 2019 10:45 |
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folder_zip - Fiction_as_Mode.doc
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subject - Accepted Version
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- Available under Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0