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Digital Art History Journal #6: Horizons of Mixed Realities

Francesca Albrezzi

The International Journal of Digital Art History (DAHJ) responds to cutting edge scholarship con- cerning extended reality technologies. Today, mixed reality is poised to be just as transformative as analog film and photography, which radically reorganized many domains of modern life (includ- ing communication, science, politics, and art). This potential has become increasingly apparent in the face of our current global pandemic, wherein virtual landscapes have begun to serve as criti- cal contact zones for practitioners of social distancing.

Despite an increasing awareness of these technologies (or perhaps, because of it), the role of mixed reality as a tool for art history and cultural heritage poses a series of unanswered ques- tions for our community:

- Embodied VR’s ability to register phenomenologically significant aspects of visual culture that cannot be relayed by photography (immersion, motion parallax, stereopsis).

- Augmented Reality displays and mobile interfacing in museum contexts.

- Mixed Reality as a historical phenomenon: potential intersections with prior constructions/ dis- courses of spectacle and realism.

- Virtual landscapes and emergent technologies in art and art history.

- Mixed reality applications that empower marginalized communities or engage at-risk heritage sites.

The title of our sixth issue will be Horizon of Mixed Reality. In art, the horizon line directs the view- er’s gaze, grounding them in a specific place that notionally extends towards infinity. Horizons are also liminal spaces — thresholds through which new frontiers are discovered and navigated. This issue of DAHJ seeks to identify and explore those spaces for art history.

Art historian, curator, and digital humanist Francesca Albrezzi will be the guest editor of this issue. She currently works as a Digital Research Consultant at UCLA’s Institute for Digital Research and Education. Her research interrogates modes of publishing, display, and information capture in museums and archives that illustrate a break from “traditional” models, and argues that digital modalities provide a distinctly different paradigm for epistemologies of art and culture.

The featured author will be Britt Salvesen. Britt Salvesen joined LACMA in October 2009 as cura- tor and head of the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department and the Prints and Drawings Department. Her recent curatorial projects at LACMA include Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect

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Medium (2016); Guillermo del Toro: At Home with Monsters (2016); Alejandro G. Iñárritu: Carne y Arena, virtually present, physically invisible (VR installation, 2017–18); and 3D: Double Vision (2018).

We welcome articles from art historians, curators, conservators, information scientists, and writ- ers from other related disciplines who are concerned with these topics. This open call aims to include marginalized scientific perspectives from different and diverse global communities.

The call is now open and first articles are to be published in the first quarter of 2021. To submit articles, please register first at https://dahj.org/ contribute and then submit articles (6,000 words max.). We will be publishing articles on a rolling basis.

For more information please visit “Information for Authors” on our site at https://dahj.org/authors.

LINK

https://dahj.org/contribute CONTACT

DAHJ-Editors: editors@dahj.org

Reference:

CFP: Digital Art History Journal #6: Horizons of Mixed Realities. In: ArtHist.net, Nov 5, 2020 (accessed Feb 27, 2022), <https://arthist.net/archive/23865>.

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