The nature of the image within technological art in the mid – 20th century. Lumino Kinetic experiments by Frank Malina
https://doi.org/10.28995/2686-7249-2021-4-110-125
Abstract
For the first time in the Russian-speaking academic environment the authors of the paper analyze the creative legacy of the scientist, aeronautical engineer and artist Frank Joseph Malina (1912–1981). His working practices reflected the most important ethic and aesthetic aspirations of the mid-twentieth century, what became an important contribution to the development of modern visual culture. The pioneer of Lumino Kinetic art F. Malina created several unique electromechanical systems for the production of an image, the media infrastructure and technological nature of which would later become the visual standard of the digital age. The discovery of electric light as a new artistic medium allowed him to focus on the production methods, control and processing algorithms for light that produces images. The Lumino Kinetic experiments of F. Malina are based on understanding the new nature of the image, born during the era of scientific discoveries. Several decades before the iconic turn was proclaimed by academic science, they presented the image as a system of relations that is formed in acts of perception and that is not based on visible, but felt, ideated, imagined reality. While creating his works F. Malina dreamed of modeling qualitatively new perceptual conditions for the existence of mankind aimed at further progress and traveling to the stars.
About the Authors
I. N. ZakharchenkoRussian Federation
Irina N. Zakharchenko, Cand. of Sci (History), associate professor
bld. 6, Miusskaya Sq., Moscow, 125993
O. M. Shchedrina
Russian Federation
Olga M. Shchedrina, M. A. master student
bld. 6, Miusskaya Sq., Moscow, 125993
References
1. Calos, N. (1974), “Electricity and motion in my kinetic art works”, in Malina, F. (ed.), Kinetic art theory and practice. Selections from the journal Leonardo, Dover Publications, New York, USA, pp. 3–5.
2. Johnson, J.L. (2014), “Frank Malina: America’s Forgotten Rocketeer”, IEEE Spectrum, no. 8, pp. 50–67.
3. Malina, F.J. (1968), “Some Reflections on the Differences between Science and Art” [Online], in Hill, A. (ed.), Data: Directions in Art, Theory and Aesthetics. Faber, London, pp. 134–149, available at: http://archive.olats.org/pionniers/malina/arts/differencesScienceArt_eng.php (Accessed 31.01.2021).
4. Malina, F.J. (1970), “On the Visual Fine Arts in the Space Age”, Leonardo, vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 323–325.
5. Malina, F.J. (1971), “Comments on Visual Fine Art Produced by Digital Computers”, Leonardo, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 263–265.
6. Malina, F.J. (1975), “Electric Light as a Medium in the Visual Fine Arts: A Memoir”, Leonardo, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 109–119.
7. Malina, F.J. (1986), “The Rocket Pioneers”, Engineering & Science, no. 11, pp. 8–13. Malina, F.J. and Popper, F. (1963), “Conversation of Frank J. Malina on His Artworks with Frank Popper”, Leonardo [Online], available at: http://archive.olats.org/pionniers/malina/arts/entretMalinaPopper.php (Accessed 31.01.2021).
8. Malina, R.F. (2005), “Rodger Malina’s Memories of His Father Frank Malina”, in Com. bi.nacion, Science meets Art, Museum Kampa, Prague, p. 3.
9. Malina, R.F. (2012), “Frank J. Malina: Astronautical Pioneer. Dedicated to International Cooperation and the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space”, Proceedings of the fortieth History Symposium of the International Academy of Astronautics, Valencia, Spain, 2–6 October 2006, vol. 37, pp. 567–580.
10. Popper, F. (1963), “Movement & light in today’s art”, The UNESCO Courier, no. 9, pp. 12–23.
11. Popper, F. (1966), “Pohyb světla ve výtvarném umění”, Acta scaenographica, vol. 6, no. 8, pp. 145–147.
12. Popper, F. (2000), “Frank Malina, Artist and Scientist: Works from 1936 to 1963 by Frank Popper”, Leonardo [Online], available at: http://archive.olats.org/pionniers/malina/arts/monographUS.php (Accessed 31.01.2021).
13. Popper, F. (2007), From technological to virtual art, The MIT Press, Cambridge MA.
Supplementary files
For citation: Zakharchenko I.N., Shchedrina O.M. The nature of the image within technological art in the mid – 20th century. Lumino Kinetic experiments by Frank Malina. RSUH/RGGU Bulletin: “Literary Teory. Linguistics. Cultural Studies”, Series. 2021;(4):110-125. https://doi.org/10.28995/2686-7249-2021-4-110-125
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.