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Fluidity, Shift and Bloom: Understandings of an Oceanic Sublime in an Age of Ecological Collapse


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1 University of New South Wales, NSW, Australia
     

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The idea of an "Oceanic Sublime" exerted a strong presence in the art and literature of the Romantic Era, a time which saw explorative and philosophical forays into an Unknown. The persistence of current investigation into the sublime marks a new journeying into the vast unknown of globalisation and technology, a return to an anxious relationship with the natural world. In a world of increasingly new ways to perceive human space, our understanding of an "oceanic sublime" is located in a state of fluidity, shift and bloom: part of the new mobilities within which we conduct our existence presently. Humans beings have intervened in all but the most unknowable of geographies: where an experience of the sublime may have been historically sought in nature as a material geography, it is now mapped by the invisible trajectories of technology, the "global hypermobility" of Nicolas Bourriaud. This paper looks at examples of Visual Arts pactice in the Asia Pacific region which address notions of an Oceanic Sublime in an age of ecological collapse Oceans increasingly threaten civilisation with its nihilistic capacities, spilling beyond boundaries. The terror and awe historically inspired within the canon of the sublime are now become dualistic: the terror is induced by the fragility and vulnerability of wilderness sites and the collapse of the oceanic system itself. This paper seeks to examine ways in which current arts practice in the Asia Pacific Region acknowledge the role of the ocean as a site for a contemporary sublime. The potential for eco-collapse, the toxic bloom, the network of infinite technologies traversing it, the commodification of the sublime experience, all subvert our reading of a Kantian Sublime. Never before has the ocean, in its vast unchangeability, been on such a precarious position. Contemporary Visual Art and Poetry can both divulge the secret places of the sea, but retain the privilege of disclosing an imminent disaster.

Keywords

The Sublime, Eco-Collapse, Aquatic Aesthetic, Visual Art.
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  • Fluidity, Shift and Bloom: Understandings of an Oceanic Sublime in an Age of Ecological Collapse

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Authors

Fiona Edmonds-Dobrijevich
University of New South Wales, NSW, Australia

Abstract


The idea of an "Oceanic Sublime" exerted a strong presence in the art and literature of the Romantic Era, a time which saw explorative and philosophical forays into an Unknown. The persistence of current investigation into the sublime marks a new journeying into the vast unknown of globalisation and technology, a return to an anxious relationship with the natural world. In a world of increasingly new ways to perceive human space, our understanding of an "oceanic sublime" is located in a state of fluidity, shift and bloom: part of the new mobilities within which we conduct our existence presently. Humans beings have intervened in all but the most unknowable of geographies: where an experience of the sublime may have been historically sought in nature as a material geography, it is now mapped by the invisible trajectories of technology, the "global hypermobility" of Nicolas Bourriaud. This paper looks at examples of Visual Arts pactice in the Asia Pacific region which address notions of an Oceanic Sublime in an age of ecological collapse Oceans increasingly threaten civilisation with its nihilistic capacities, spilling beyond boundaries. The terror and awe historically inspired within the canon of the sublime are now become dualistic: the terror is induced by the fragility and vulnerability of wilderness sites and the collapse of the oceanic system itself. This paper seeks to examine ways in which current arts practice in the Asia Pacific Region acknowledge the role of the ocean as a site for a contemporary sublime. The potential for eco-collapse, the toxic bloom, the network of infinite technologies traversing it, the commodification of the sublime experience, all subvert our reading of a Kantian Sublime. Never before has the ocean, in its vast unchangeability, been on such a precarious position. Contemporary Visual Art and Poetry can both divulge the secret places of the sea, but retain the privilege of disclosing an imminent disaster.

Keywords


The Sublime, Eco-Collapse, Aquatic Aesthetic, Visual Art.