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Funded by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, The Graduate Institute for Design, Ethnography & Social Thought at the New School incubates advanced transdisciplinary research and practice at the intersection of social theory and design and fosters dialogue on related themes across the university.

Lucien Castaing-Taylor

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Lucien Castaing-Taylor

Psycho-Geriatrie Eye Museum

This event is co-sponsored with the Consortium for Trans/disciplinarity.

Véréna Paravel and Lucien Castaing-Taylor are working on creating four to six single-screen looping video installations related to their film “De Humani Corporis Fabrica” (2022) for an exhibition in Holland in January 2024. “Psycho-Geriatrie Eye Museum” is one possibility: a single-shot sequence in a geriatric psychiatry award. Parts of it appear, in shortened form, in DHCF. This version restores the original flow, and provides additional context. It has not been color-graded, or the sound edited or mixed, but it gives an idea of what it might be like.

Psycho-Geriatrie Eye Museum (50 mins.)

Professor of Visual Arts and Anthropology and Founding Director of the Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard, Lucien Castaing-Taylor is an anthropologist whose work seeks to conjugate art's negative capability with an ethnographic attachment to the flux of life. His work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art and the British Museum, has been exhibited at the Tate, the Centre Pompidou, MoMA, the Whitney, Berlin Kunsthalle, PS1, Whitechapel Gallery, and London's Institute of Contemporary Arts, and has formed the subject of symposia at the Smithsonian Institution, the Musée du quai Branly, and the British Museum. His films and videos have screened at Berlin, Locarno, New York, Toronto, and other film festivals. Recent awards include the Alpert Award in the Arts (2013), and, with Véréna Paravel, the True Vision Award (2013), Los Angeles Film Critics' Circle Douglas Edwards Independent and Experimental Film Award (2012), and FIPRESCI (International Film Critics) Award (2012).

Castaing-Taylor and Paravel are currently at work on various installations set in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, as well forthcoming projects in Japan. Together with Ernst Karel, he and Paravel have recently completed Ah humanity!, an installation about the anthropocene. Earlier works include Leviathan (with Paravel), a film about humanity and the sea; and Sweetgrass (with Ilisa Barbash), an unsentimental elegy at once to the American West and to the 10,000 years of uneasy accommodation between post-Paleolithic humans and animals; as well as a series of audio-video installations and photographic Westerns that variously evoke the allure and ambivalence of the pastoral, including Into-the-jug (Geworfen), Turned at the Pass, Coom Biddy, Bedding Down, Hell Roaring Creek and The High Trail. In 2010, he was commissioned to make The Quick and the Dead / Moutons de Panurge, a four-channel video installation by the Berlin Arsenal to commemorate the four decades of the Berlinale Forum. In 1995, he collaborated with Isaac Julien and Mark Nash on their film Frantz Fanon: Black Skin White Mask. Earlier works (with Barbash) include In and Out of Africa, an ethnographic video about authenticity, taste, and racial politics in the transnational African art market, and Made in USA, a film about sweatshops and child labor in the Los Angeles garment industry. Most recently, Castaing-Taylor and Paravel completed their fourth feature, the astonishing De Humani Corporis Fabrica, described in Reverse Shot as “at once repugnant and entrancing, [as] it turns the body into the ultimate frontier, an alien landscape teeming with surreal visions, less a decaying vessel than an undiscovered planet.”

Written publications include Visualizing Theory (ed., Routledge, 1994), Cross-Cultural Filmmaking (with Barbash, University of California Press, 1997), Transcultural Cinema, a collection of essays by ethnographic filmmaker David MacDougall (ed., Princeton University Press, 1998), and The Cinema of Robert Gardner (coed., with Barbash, Berg, 2008). He was the founding editor of the American Anthropological Association's journal Visual Anthropology Review (1991-94).

Earlier Event: September 29
Kathleen Stewart
Later Event: October 27
Souleymane Bachir Diagne