Distributed for Intellect Ltd
Hyper-imaging in Art, Media and Visual Communication
This book makes a case for images not as static representations, but as active practices.
Hyper-Imaging: New Languages for Art, Media and Communication describes a condition in which images are processes and no longer end points—relays of action instead of representations. This, in turn, redefines curating as a form of active mediation between human attention and the invisible systems shaping it. Throughout the book, Alfredo Cramerotti weaves theoretical perspectives with case studies drawn from his curatorial experience and deeply engages with artists and thinkers whose work interrogates these shifting dynamics.
This is a book about how images function: how they move, mutate, and coauthor meaning with machines, publics, and institutions. The goal is to equip curators, artists, scholars, and readers to better navigate this terrain: to engage critically, act creatively, and think infrastructurally. In the age of hyper-imaging, what is seeing is not the point; it is the system of seeing that must be curated.
Table of Contents
Author’s statement
Foreword by S. Venus Jin
1. The Image: What It Is and What It Does
Rethinking Representation and the Performativity of the Image
Framing the Contemporary Image
Rethinking the Visual Vocabulary
A Living Glossary
2. Seeing Through: From Perception to Operation
From Cognitive Image Formation to Infrastructural Aesthetics
Image as Agent
Visual Content and Machinic Operation
The Contemporary Regime of Visuality
Images After Representation
3. Early Trajectories: Transformative Perspectives on Photography and Mass-Media
McLuhan, Flusser, Vaccari: Historical Legacies and Theoretical Inflections
Precedents and Frameworks
Marshall McLuhan: Pattern and Intuition
Vilém Flusser: Code and Apparatus
Franco Vaccari: The Technological Unconscious
4. Encoding the Visible
Compression, Circulation, and Modulation in Image Behavior
The Image as Modus Operandi
Circulationism: The Structure of Imaging
Operational Aesthetics
5. Visualizing Futures: Approaches Across Disciplines
Journalism, Sociology, Technology, and Art: Reframing Visual Paradigms
Looking, Seeing, Imaging as Thinking Practice
Journalism after the Evidentiary Image
Sociology and the Media Machine
Technology as Mechanism and Milieu
Image Systems and Artistic Production
Segue: From Disciplines to Practices
6. Practices of Hyper-imaging
Case Studies: Steyerl, Goudal, Syms, Bridle, Quayola
The Next Field: Hyper-imaging in Action
Hito Steyerl: Image as Disappearance / Weapon / Echo
Noémie Goudal: Layering the Visual
Martine Syms: Horizontality and Images
James Bridle: The Network and the Image
Quayola: Computation and Images
Working the Image
7. Curating the Image-World
Exhibition-making as Knowledge Device: On Expansion and Pristina Case Studies
The Evolution of Cultural Interactions
On Expansion and Hyperimaging!
The Aesthetic Experience: Non-Linear, Uncertain, and Unfinished
Erica Scourti: Reauthoring the Algorithm
Thomas Galler: The Aesthetics of Accumulation
Margo Wolowiec: Context and Images
Brilant Pireva: Distributed Subjectivity
From Visual Intimacy to Navigational Method
8. The Possibility of an Image
The Intermediacy of Appearance, Code, and Experience
In-between Object, System, and Experience
Systems Thinking: From Object to Instruction
Collapsing the Frame
Image-Making as Aggregation
Triangulating Appearance, Code, and Experience
9. The Transparent Layer
Final Propositions: Toward a Politics of Perceptual Mediation
The Invisibility of the Image
Curating in the Age of Hyper-imaging
From Visual Life to Curatorial Attitude
Toward an Ethics of Hyper-visual Mediation
Afterword by Melanie Lenz
Author’s postscript: A Future Layer
Bibliography and Sources
Projects and Works Referenced
Index