Border Skirmishes: Boundaries as a Lens to Contemporary Viewership
ABSTRACT
With the acceleration of globalization, new immigration patterns, and social media’s blurring of public and private identity, borders of all kinds have been complicated and problematized in contemporary society. This poster presentation will explore artists, architects, and social actors that reveal and exploit various historical or extant boundaries. The presentation will pose questions regarding the nature of borders as existing functional devices capable of challenging conventional definitions of viewership.
QUESTIONS:
Just as tectonic plates create seismic and volcanic activity as they rub and collide; demographic, cultural, and national borders and boundaries produce friction in contemporary societies. This poster presentation raises questions about how particular viewpoints along borders become dominant or subsumed within social narratives. The object of the presentation is to provide a flashpoint or “skirmish” in which alternate views are shared and viewers see from another’s vantage point.
KEYWORDS
Borders, Boundaries, Territory, Desocialization, Public Art, Monuments
MODALITY
VIRTUAL COMMUNICATION
SECTION
ART - TERRITORY
BIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCE
Brian Gillis and Mike Miller have worked together as an artistic team since 2006, creating projects ranging from editioned multiples to site-specific installations and actions. Gillis is currently a Professor of Art and Director of the Center for Art Research at the University of Oregon. Miller is an Associate Professor of Art at the University of Illinois Springfield.