The Visual Culture of the Selfie from the Perspective of ‘Visual Identity’

The Issues of the Selfie within Contemporary Art

Keywords: visual culture, contemporary art, the selfie, visual identity, the biopower concept, the docile bodies, an image, ORLAN

Abstract

The essay attempts to outline the issues of the visual culture of the selfie from the perspective of “visual identity” that has referred to contemporary art. In this paper, I analyze examples of the following artworks: The Reincarnation of Saint ORLAN by the French artist ORLAN, the Bodies© INCorporated website, designed by Victoria Vesna, The Little Revenge from the Periphery by José Bedia Valdés, The Chief: He Who Sold Africa to the Colonists and Autoportraits by Samuel Fosso. In addition, this paper is focused on an analysis of the “biopower” concept which refers to Michel Foucault’s “docile bodies.” This concept is based on the neoliberal power process over the production of living beings and exercising control over them is an updating of the development of political, democratic, and economic institutions, as well as information and biocybernetic technologies. The “docile bodies” concept strengthens the conviction of the bodies must become the object of biopower interventions for the “perfect body” concept to act upon the strictly defined appearance of the body consistent with the standards and norms of “beauty” adopted by visual culture. In this situation, the selfie and photographic images produce homogeneous images, which function as “ideological texts” making our “visual identity” and self-image. This concept is given a lot of considerable space in this paper because the selfie can be regarded as an “personality identity” shaping the visual appearance of our bodies. In the essay’s conclusion, I claim that the visual culture of the selfie seems to be an aesthetic phenomenon shaped by a visual medium such as digital photography. However, photography does not is the key medium of the selfie. My analyses were aimed at showing that this role plays an “image,” no matter how it can be understood.

Author Biography

Konrad Chmielecki, an independent researcher

Ph.D. is a post-doctoral independent researcher in the field of Culture and Religion Sciences (before 2018 Cultural Studies). His academic interests are inter-and transdisciplinary approaches to Picture Theory, Image Science (Bildwissenschaft), Visual Studies, New Media Studies, and Film Studies. His doctoral dissertation won a distinction in the second edition of the competition of the National Centre of Culture for the best doctoral dissertation within the area of Cultural Studies and in the third edition of the competition of the Polish Society of Aesthetics for Professor Stefan Morawski’s Prize. He is the author of two monographs, Estetyka intermedialności (An Aesthetics of Intermediality) (2008) and Widzenie przez kulturę. Wprowadzenie do teorii kultury wizualnej (Seeing Through Culture. An Introduction to Visual Culture Theory) (2018), and the editor of the article collection Teoria obrazu w naukach humanistycznych (Picture Theory in the Humanities) (2015). Between 2009 and 2012, he was the head of a research project in the field of art studies, implemented at the Academy of Humanities and Economics in Łódź, funded by the post-doctoral grant of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, whose subject was the issues of Visual Culture Studies. Currently, he is working on two peer-reviewed monographs in Polish, entitled Teoria intermedialności (The Theory of Intermediality) (2024) – a new corrected and supplemented edition and Intermedialna estetyka ruchomego obrazu (An Intermedial Aesthetics of the Moving Image) (2026) as well as he has been collaborating with the Strzemiński Academy of Fine Arts in Łódź, since 2016.

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Published
2023-08-22
How to Cite
[1]
Chmielecki, K. 2023. The Visual Culture of the Selfie from the Perspective of ‘Visual Identity’: The Issues of the Selfie within Contemporary Art. Perspectives on Culture. 42, 3 (Aug. 2023), 201-226. DOI:https://doi.org/10.35765/pk.2023.4203.16.
Section
Areas of Cyberculture