Hon.Prof. Dr. Gabriele Jutz
Gabriele Jutz is Honorary Professor of Film and Media Studies in the Department of Media Theory. Her current research interests include the history and theory of moving image-based art from experimental film, experimental animation and hybrid forms (moving images combined with painting, photography, performance, sculpture, etc.) to artists’ moving images (in a gallery or museum) as well as image/sound relations in audiovisual practices anchored in artistic contexts.
Since 2021 she has been a partner in the research project “Moving in Every Direction: Künstlerische Forschung als Beitrag zur Entwicklung aktueller Raumkonfigurationen für das bewegte Bild,” a research project funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation. Since 2020 she has worked as a partner with “Ecstatic Truth,” an international research network that organizes an annual symposium exploring the interface between animation and documentary. From 2015 to 2017 she participated in the International Research Network’s “Film and the Other Arts,” funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC). From 2016 to 2019 she was a key member of “RESET THE APPARATUS! A Survey of the Photographic and the Filmic in Contemporary Art,” a project funded by the Austrian Science Fund/PEEK that dealt with “obsolete” media and technologies in contemporary art practices.
In 2010, her book Cinéma brut. Eine alternative Genealogie der Filmavantgarde (De Gruyter) discussed experimental film practices that reject the usual tools of filmmaking: films made without the use of a camera, films made of found footage, and films that expand the limits of the film “performance” beyond what takes place on the screen.
In 2010, she was a Professor of Film Studies at Johann Wolfgang von Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main; and in 1991 at Freie Universität Berlin. She has lectured at the Universities of Vienna, Salzburg, Graz, and at Danube University Krems. From 2001 to 2003 she received a scholarship from the Austrian Science Fund to pursue her postdoctoral research (habilitation). From 1988 to 1994 she participated in a French-Austrian exchange program between the Austrian Academy of Sciences and France/CNRS (Centre National de Recherche Scientifique). In 1987 she received a three-year research grant from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) to research Gender and Film. She finished her studies at Paris Lodron University of Salzburg in 1988 with a PhD on Fiction Film as a Source of Historiography. She received her MA (Lehramt) in History and Romance Studies in 1984 (University of Salzburg). In 1983 she received her Diplôme d’études approfondies (DEA) in film studies at University Paris 3 Sorbonne.
She is a member of several Director’s Boards: Synema – Gesellschaft für Film und Medien (Vienna); the Austrian Society of Semiotics; the Center for Avant-Garde Studies, University of Iceland; she is also the National Representative to the Executive Committee in the International Association for Semiotic Studies. She is a member of: NECS – European Network for Cinema and Media Studies; EAM – European Network for Avant-Garde and Modernism Studies; and of GfM – Gesellschaft für Medienwissenschaft.
Contact
Office Hours: by Appointment
Phone: +43-699 12108144
Email: gabriele.jutz[at]uni-ak.ac.at
Showroom: Gabriele Jutz
- title
- Audio-Visual Aesthetics in Contemporary Experimental Film
- type
- Chapter (Peer-Reviewed)
- keywords
- Media Research, Arts, Sound, Experimentalfilm, artists' moving image, Projection performance
- texts
- Description
- The aim of the article is to map the territory of the contemporary audio-visual cinematic avant-garde, which arose at the very moment of celluloid’s passage from mass use to obsolescence. The first group of films bears witness to the avant-garde’s ongoing interest in the formal organisation of sound/image-relationships. If one of the main concerns of sound in conventional film is to ‘naturalize’ the image, experimental film is interested instead in an anti-naturalistic use of sound. Films without sound or even without images (which still can be called ‘films’), the use of audiovisual polysemy, asynchronous or even synchronous sound as well as the visualization of code-based music are all means of revealing the constructed nature of the cinesonic event. But to pursue a productive reading of the contemporary cinematic avant-garde we have to broaden the scope beyond the formal level and lend an ear to the sounding of film’s material and its technological base. With the second group of films discussed we will enter the realm of the sound of technology itself, while the third group points out the creative potential of optically synthesized sounds. The fourth and last group, live generated sounds and images, attests to the agility of current projection performances.
- authors
- Gabriele Jutz
- editors
- Yael Kaduri
- publishers
- Oxford University Press
- date
- 2016
- location
- New York (USA)
- ISBN/ISSN/ISMN
- 978-0-19-984154-7
- published in
- title
- The Oxford Handbook of Sound and Image in Western Art
- pages
- 397-425
- language
- English
- material
- Paper