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  3. Oil Media. Changing Portraits of Petroleum in Visual Culture between the US, Kuwait, and Switzerland
 

Oil Media. Changing Portraits of Petroleum in Visual Culture between the US, Kuwait, and Switzerland

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/164431
Date of Publication
November 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Kunstges...

Author
Hindelang, Lauraorcid-logo
Institut für Kunstgeschichte
Subject(s)

400 - Language

400 - Language::490 -...

700 - Arts

700 - Arts::720 - Arc...

700 - Arts::740 - Dra...

700 - Arts::770 - Pho...

Series
Centaurus
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0008-8994
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1111/1600-0498.12418
Description
This article examines three cases of mid-20th-century oil media—oil-related imagery, iconographies, and media—in visual culture: a series of popular science books entitled The Story of Oil published in the US, an oil-themed set of Kuwaiti postage stamps (1959), and an art exhibition in Zurich (1956) titled Welt des Erdöls: Junge Maler sehen eine Industrie (World of Petroleum: Young Artists See an Industry). While depicting crude oil in its natural habitat was a common photographic theme in the early 20th-century United States, the material discussed shows that, by the mid-20th century, crude oil no longer had the same visual presence. The iconography of oil in the three case studies came to rely increasingly on images of oil infrastructure and on context-specific depictions of living within petro-modernity or petro-culture, meaning lifestyles fueled by cheap fossil energy. However, it is not just the changes in visual representations of petroleum that matter; any debate about the visibility and invisibility of petroleum has to take into account the very media through which petroleum has become visually communicated—that is, the precise forms of oil's mediatization. The aesthetic negotiation of petroleum through media-based visual representations has been crucial for the dematerialization of fossil matter in its conversion to fossil energy, as well as the decoupling of sites of extraction from sites of production and consumption in the public imagination. As petro-culture has morphed into national or even global culture (rather than representing just one possible energy source among many), oil media has paved the way for our intimate relationship with fossil energy-dependent lifestyles, which is one of the biggest drivers of climate change.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/66701
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Centaurus_-_2021_-_Hindelang_-_Oil_media__Changing_portraits_of_petroleum_in_visual_culture_between_the_US__Kuwait__and.pdftextAdobe PDF1.36 MBpublishedOpen
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