Confessional Video Art and Subjectivity: Private Experiences in Public Spaces
By (Author) Jaye Early
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
17th April 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Digital, video and new media arts
History of art
Internet and digital media: arts and performance
777.8942
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This is the first book of its kind to examine the development of the confessional subject in video art and demonstrate how it can provide a vital platform for navigating the politics of self, subjectivity, and resistance in society. In doing so, it reframes video art the most ubiquitous and yet most understudied art form of recent decades as an urgent socio-political tool that is increasingly popular among contemporary artists as a means of exploring a broad range of social issues, from politics and identity, to the body and technologies of self-representation. Analysing a diverse selection of case studies from the 1960s up to the present day, covering the work of Yoko Ono, Gillian Wearing, Ana Mendieta and Sam Taylor-Wood, among others, the book brings together theory and practice to offer new ways of looking at contemporary video art through a Foucauldian lens. It also brings the analysis of video art up to date by showing how social media and digital self-representation has informed and further politicized time-based art practices. Confessional Video Art and Subjectivity shows how forms of confessional discourse not only play an important function in the construction of subjectivity but also open spaces for personal resistance and agency within contemporary video art. As a result, it offers researchers of contemporary art practice, and media and cultural studies, an updated framework through which to view this constantly-evolving genre and a deeper understanding of wider contemporary video practices.
Jaye Early is Lecturer in Contemporary Art at the University of South Australia, Australia, and a practicing video artist.