Abstract
The intention of my thesis is to alter some of American culture's prevailing sentiments on the relationship between: masculine and feminine; visceral and cognitive; natural and technological; as well as altering perceptions of the loci of power in our culture. The thesis exhibition was composed of seventeen gum bichromate assemblages composed of elementary images appropriated from popular media. Each composite piece is a recontextualization of extant representations. I have taken things from their typical or original context and re-presented them in a context that I have selected and directed. The new relationships established among the appropriated component images and the viewer are meant to: illuminate some aspects of our culture and to obscure others; accent farces; and subvert biases. My goal is to offer the viewer an experience that has the capacity to alter their existing perspectives on the relationships stated in my intention above.
Library of Congress Subject Headings
Photomontage--Themes, motives; Photomontage--Technique; Photography--Printing processes--Gum-bichromate--Technique; Postmodernism
Publication Date
1991
Document Type
Thesis
Department, Program, or Center
School of Art (CIAS)
Advisor
White, Ken
Advisor/Committee Member
Sigrid, Casey
Recommended Citation
Mineck, Edward, "Astronauts and Xingu: an exhibition of cultural ideograms" (1991). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from
https://repository.rit.edu/theses/785
Campus
RIT – Main Campus
Comments
Note: imported from RIT’s Digital Media Library running on DSpace to RIT Scholar Works. Physical copy available through RIT's The Wallace Library at: TR685 .M553 1991