社论前言:流行病、物质与树上的风

A. Archer, David M. Challis, Chris Marshall
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摘要

《澳大利亚和新西兰艺术杂志》(ANZJA)第21.2期的封面展示了英国当代艺术家科妮莉亚·帕克的短片《左、右、中》(2017)中的一幅剧照。帕克的电影延续了她作为“官方艺术家”的角色,受委托对2017年英国大选做出创造性回应。在这段令人震惊的分裂时期,所有的悲剧、乏味和沮丧在这里都被简化为一系列长镜头,显示了下议院信箱里一个神秘的空房间。影片进行到一半时,一架无人机飞入视野,在这个过程中散布了数百张英国媒体评论,每一张都突出了英国脱欧前那些有毒的日子里的混乱和激烈。因此,编辑们认为这张图片可能构成一个合适的封面。不是因为它与帝国主义有着密切的联系。但更确切地说,是因为它能够捕捉当前的情绪:即我们此刻所处的无望的混乱(至少,一位编辑愉快地建议)。这张照片也在一个更平淡无奇的层面上与我们合拍,因为我们正在努力完成该杂志编辑任务常规清单上的最后一项任务:将文章按编号顺序排列。尽管我们认识到这项工作的必要性,但它确实让我们觉得是一项有点无关紧要的任务。毕竟,谁还会按顺序阅读期刊?谁会把这本杂志作为一本从封面延伸到封面的硬拷贝、纸装订的手工艺品来访问呢?鉴于疫情倾向于加速图书馆作为物理空间的广泛关闭,从而将我们的注意力重新集中在从广泛的数字图书馆和期刊聚合器下载个人pdf的原子化过程上,我们与期刊的零散接触如今尤其普遍。因此,当我们满怀渴望地看到下议院飘来的所有实物新闻纸时,对阅读这本杂志的顺序和体验施加编辑控制的想法确实让我们觉得是一个相当奇怪的想法。尽管如此,如果我们仍然认为对ANZJA这期公开文章的顺序提供一个至少名义上的顺序是有帮助的,那么以下是我们
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Editorial Foreword: Pandemia, Materiality and the Wind in the Trees
The cover of Issue 21.2 of the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art (ANZJA) features a still from the short film, Left, Right & Centre (2017) by British contemporary artist, Cornelia Parker. Parker’s film follows on from her role as an ‘Official Artist’ commissioned to produce creative responses to the 2017 United Kingdom general election. All the tragedy, tedium and dismay of that phenomenally divisive period is here reduced to a series of long shots showing a mysteriously empty chamber of the dispatch box of the House of Commons. Midway through the film, a drone flies into view, scattering hundreds of sheets of British press commentary in the process, each highlighting the chaos and acrimony of those inflammably toxic pre-Brexit days. So the editors thought that this image might constitute an appropriate cover. Not because of its heavily imperialist associations. But rather by virtue of its ability to capture the current mood: viz, the hopeless mess that we’re all in at the moment (or so at least, one of the editors cheerfully suggested). The image also chimed with us on a more prosaic level as we struggled with one of the last duties on the customary list of the journal’s editorial tasks: to arrange the articles into an ordered sequence of numbered contributions. While recognising the necessity of this job, it did nonetheless strike us as a somewhat irrelevant undertaking. Who, after all, reads journals in sequence anymore? And who will ever access this journal as a hard copy, paper-bound artefact stretching from cover to cover? Our piecemeal engagement with journals is especially prevalent nowadays given the pandemic’s tendency to hasten the widespread shutting down of libraries as physical spaces, and thus to refocus our attention onto the atomised process of downloading individual pdfs from a wide array of digital libraries and journal aggregators. So, as we wistfully beheld all that physical newsprint wafting through the House of Commons, the idea of exerting editorial control over the order and experience of reading this journal did strike us as a rather quaint notion. If it is still nonetheless considered helpful for us to proffer an at least notional order to the sequence of articles in this open issue of ANZJA, then here’s what we
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