Mutating Ecologies in Contemporary Art

Mutating Ecologies in Contemporary Art
What role might art exert in light of the challenges posed by climate
change, resource depletion, and the diverse political and cultural crises our
societies face in the twenty-first century? The hypothesis guiding this book
is born of Félix Guattari’s claim that in confronting the multi-faceted problems
of our global political economy we need to develop a more complex
analysis of nature, culture and technology, shifting from catastrophic, endof-
the world narratives to productive, generative, trans-species alliances
for the sake of the sustainability of life on the planet. Because capitalism
is no longer understood merely as a mode of production but as a system
of semiotization, homogenization, and of transmission of forms of power
over goods, labour and individuals, only the emergence of other relational
subjective formations would be able to counteract the fixation of desire towards
capital and its diverse crystallizations of power. New social practices,
new aesthetic practices and new practices of the self in relation to the
other are summoned to undertake an ethical-political reinvention of life.
As Guattari argues, it is about reappropiating universes of value and paving
the way for the emergence of processes of singularization involving a
mutating subjectivity, a mutating socius, and a mutating environment.
This book is engaged in thinking about the conjunction of the ecological
turn in contemporary art and the attention given to matter in recent humanist
scholarship as a way of exploring how new configurations of the
world suggest new ways of being and acting in that world. Contributors explore
the means by which art can act as an existential catalysist, providing
ways of changing our modes of relation beyond traditional modes of representation
and, in doing so, instituting transformation.