Epics, popular culture and politics in a modern work of art
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21301/EAP.v9i1.9Keywords:
modern art, ethnomusicology, cultural history, popular culture, noiseAbstract
“Death in Dallas” is a video-installation by Zoran Naskovski comprised of a) visual documentary material connected to the assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the president of the USA and materials about his public and private life; b) a soundtrack comprised of a poem accompanied by gusle by Jozo Karamatić with decasyllabic lyrics “Death in Dallas” by Božo Lasić. The unexpected and strange combo birthed a work of art which contains different layers of meaning and one of the most complete postmodern works of art in Serbian modern art. Naskovski had combined the seemingly incompatible codes of popular culture into a specific artistic method of its own genre – “Balkan noise”. Using the method of “noise” music, in which every noise, soundscape or voice has equal meaning and value; he included epics, tradition, politics, popular and folk culture. Finally, by doing so he had completely shifted the paradigm from modern to postmodern, from the substance of myth to a demystification of this type of representation.
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References
Čupić, Simona. 2013. “The First Political Superstar: JFK s the new image of History (1960-1963)”. In The JFK Culture, 7-45. Beograd: American Corner, Faculty of Philosophy.
Rinder, Lawrence. 2003. "The American Effect". In The American Effect: Global Perspectives on the United States, 1990-2003, 24-25. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art.
Timotijević, Miroslav. 2004. "Guslar kao simbolična figura". U Zbornik Narodnog muzeja, istorija umetnosti XVII/2, 253-279. Beograd: Narodni muzej.
Vågnes, Øyvind. 2011. “Death in Dallas". In Zaprudered: The Kennedy Assassination Film in Visual Culture, 102-117. Austin: University of Texas Press.
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