This article analyses the gazes, looks, stares and glares in Laurence Anyways (Xavier Dolan, 2012), and examines their affective, interpretive, and symbolic qualities, and their potential to create viewer empathy through affect. The cinematic gaze can produce sensations of shame and fear, by offering a sequence of varied “encounters” to which viewers can react, before we have been given a character onto which we can deflect them, thus bypassing the representational, narrative and even the sympathetic power of the medium to create “raw”, apparently unmediated sensations. Through the POV shot and direct address, the viewer is the object of the gazes it receives, and experiences their hate and rejection before actually being presented with the...
Academic research on the gaze has been widely criticised within visual art in recent years. This a r...
My three artworks Gaze 1, Gaze 2 and Gaze 3 depict the individual experience of looking but at the s...
This article argues that the affective, visceral dimension of cinema spectatorship is a central comp...
Eyes and eye lines are one of the key ways in which the perspective on a story is established in fig...
Eyes and eye lines are one of the key ways in which the perspective on a story is established in fig...
Coined by English art critic, John Berger, in 1972 and popularized by British feminist film theorist...
This article considers how staring informs the ways we know each other and the world around us. Star...
The article examines the role of moods in aesthetic experience. In the last decades emotions have be...
In Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, Laura Mulvey uses psychoanalytic theory to explain the acti...
This article aims to join the contemporary effort to promote a psychoanalytic renaissance within cin...
This article explores and presents the reciprocal nature of looking between two objects, making the ...
When investigating early and contemporary cinema, the presence of the male gaze is a much-discussed ...
This article discusses the role of empathy based on evolutionary, human developmental, and neuropsyc...
This essay explores how director Andy Flickman both captures, indulges, subverts and parodies Laura ...
Within the ethnographies, memories, and archives produced throughout a capitalist empire, the ‘gaze’...
Academic research on the gaze has been widely criticised within visual art in recent years. This a r...
My three artworks Gaze 1, Gaze 2 and Gaze 3 depict the individual experience of looking but at the s...
This article argues that the affective, visceral dimension of cinema spectatorship is a central comp...
Eyes and eye lines are one of the key ways in which the perspective on a story is established in fig...
Eyes and eye lines are one of the key ways in which the perspective on a story is established in fig...
Coined by English art critic, John Berger, in 1972 and popularized by British feminist film theorist...
This article considers how staring informs the ways we know each other and the world around us. Star...
The article examines the role of moods in aesthetic experience. In the last decades emotions have be...
In Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, Laura Mulvey uses psychoanalytic theory to explain the acti...
This article aims to join the contemporary effort to promote a psychoanalytic renaissance within cin...
This article explores and presents the reciprocal nature of looking between two objects, making the ...
When investigating early and contemporary cinema, the presence of the male gaze is a much-discussed ...
This article discusses the role of empathy based on evolutionary, human developmental, and neuropsyc...
This essay explores how director Andy Flickman both captures, indulges, subverts and parodies Laura ...
Within the ethnographies, memories, and archives produced throughout a capitalist empire, the ‘gaze’...
Academic research on the gaze has been widely criticised within visual art in recent years. This a r...
My three artworks Gaze 1, Gaze 2 and Gaze 3 depict the individual experience of looking but at the s...
This article argues that the affective, visceral dimension of cinema spectatorship is a central comp...