Margaret Iversen
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Diaristic diagrams
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Many contemporary artists are interested in the effects that new technologies have had on daily life, labour, and art practice. Some are concerned with the rationalisation of our experience of time and natural phenomena. They make diagrammatic diaries showing how the technological conditions of modern life override, what Jonathan Crary calls ‘the periodic textures of human life’. Other artists investigate the alienating effects of the penetration of technologies into workers’ lives. Their work explores contemporary conditions of life and labour through a systematic documentation of their own activities. Artists working in this diaristic diagrammatic mode may convey information in graphs, charts, and grids, but in doing so, they point to the limitations of those means to convey the affective and sensory dimensions of our experience. The work registers modernity’s rationalisation of time and work, but they also show the diagram disrupted. The work captures the way that the rhythms of natural light or the infinite variations of the colours of the sky dissolve the strictures of the diagram. Or it shows a body with its own behavioural unconscious and particular rhythms, habits, and moods, overflowing the confinement of the grid. Margaret Iversen traces these divergent tendencies as two branches of practice that reveal different dimensions of what she calls ‘diaristic diagrams’.

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Lifework

On the autobiographical impulse in contemporary art, writing, and theory

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