Michael Betancourt
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Michael Betancourt (born 1971) is a
critical theorist A critical theory is any approach to social philosophy that focuses on society and culture to reveal, critique and challenge power structures. With roots in sociology and literary criticism, it argues that social problems stem more from socia ...
, film theorist, art & film historian, and
animator An animator is an artist who creates multiple images, known as frames, which give an illusion of movement called animation when displayed in rapid sequence. Animators can work in a variety of fields including film, television, and video games ...
. His principal published works focus on the critique of digital capitalism,
motion graphics Motion graphics (sometimes mograph) are pieces of animation or digital footage which create the illusion of motion or rotation, and are usually combined with audio for use in multimedia projects. Motion graphics are usually displayed via e ...
,
visual music Visual music, sometimes called colour music, refers to the creation of a visual analogue to musical form by adapting musical structures for visual composition, which can also include silent films or silent Lumia work. It also refers to methods o ...
,
new media art New media art includes artworks designed and produced by means of electronic media technologies, comprising virtual art, computer graphics, computer animation, digital art, interactive art, sound art, Internet art, video games, robotics, 3D pri ...
, theory, and formalist study of
motion pictures A film also called a movie, motion picture, moving picture, picture, photoplay or (slang) flick is a work of visual art that simulates experiences and otherwise communicates ideas, stories, perceptions, feelings, beauty, or atmosphere ...
.


Early life and education

Betancourt was born in
New Jersey New Jersey is a state in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern regions of the United States. It is bordered on the north and east by the state of New York; on the east, southeast, and south by the Atlantic Ocean; on the west by the Delawa ...
in 1971. He enrolled at Temple University for film studies and received an MA in Film Studies at the
University of Miami The University of Miami (UM, UMiami, Miami, U of M, and The U) is a private research university in Coral Gables, Florida. , the university enrolled 19,096 students in 12 colleges and schools across nearly 350 academic majors and programs, i ...
, studying under film historian William Rothman. He also received his Ph.D degree from the University of Miami in Interdisciplinary Studies, focusing on Art History, Communications/Film Studies, and History. In addition to scholarly work, he has written popular articles and reviews on art, art theory, and culture for magazines, including ''The Atlantic,'' ''Make Magazine,'' ''Miami Art Exchange'' and ''Art Scene''. Betancourt's father is the archaeologist Philip P. Betancourt and his brother is the author John Gregory Betancourt. Michael spent his summers in both
Crete Crete ( el, Κρήτη, translit=, Modern: , Ancient: ) is the largest and most populous of the Greek islands, the 88th largest island in the world and the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, Sardinia, Cyprus, ...
and
Greece Greece,, or , romanized: ', officially the Hellenic Republic, is a country in Southeast Europe. It is situated on the southern tip of the Balkans, and is located at the crossroads of Europe, Asia, and Africa. Greece shares land borders wi ...
and worked as a photographer on his father's excavation at
Pseira Pseira ( el, Ψείρα) is an islet in the Gulf of Mirabello in northeastern Crete with the archaeological remains of Minoan and Mycenean civilisation. History The island was explored in 1906–1907 by Richard Seager and partially documente ...
.


Career

His first film exhibition was ''Archaeomodern'', shown at the ''Ann Arbor Festival of Experimental Film'' in 1993. In 1995, his film, ''a self-referential film in 30 sentences,'' won a Director's Citation award at the ''Black Maria Film Festival.'' Other works have screened in ''Art Basel Miami Beach, Contemporary Art Ruhr, Athens Video Art Festival, Festival des Cinemas Differents de Paris, Anthology Film Archives, Millennium Film Workshop,'' the San Francisco Cinematheque's ''Crossroads,'' and ''Experiments in Cinema,'' among others. His video ''Telemetry'' screened as an installation during the first ''Athens Video Art Festival.'' Other installations were site-specific: as part of Art Basel Miami Beach, the ''Sites-Miami'' project in 2004, and at the South Florida Art Center's 800 Lincoln Road exhibition space as part of the ''Face-to-Face'' series in 2011.


Visual music

Betancourt is both a historian and practitioner of visual music. He exhibited his videos at visual music showcases such as the iotaCenter and SoundImageSound. He created a system for designing abstract animations based on
synesthesia Synesthesia (American English) or synaesthesia (British English) is a perceptual phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway. People who re ...
that he uses in his animations. Betancourt discovered that the inventor
Mary Hallock-Greenewalt Mary Elizabeth Hallock-Greenewalt (Sept. 8, 1871 – Nov. 27, 1950)Ancestry.com. Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963 atabase on-line Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Pennsylvania (State). Death certific ...
produced the earliest hand-painted films known to exist; these were used with the earliest version of her
Sarabet Mary Elizabeth Hallock-Greenewalt (Sept. 8, 1871 – Nov. 27, 1950)Ancestry.com. Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963 atabase on-line Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Pennsylvania (State). Death certific ...
machine that automatically synchronized colored lights with records. The Sarabet device was an early music visualizer of the type now included with computer audio-players. Even though these films were not designed to be motion pictures themselves, they were created with templates and aerosol sprays, which produced repeating geometric patterns in the same way as the hand-painted films of Len Lye from the 1930s. He wrote a short
monograph A monograph is a specialist work of writing (in contrast to reference works) or exhibition on a single subject or an aspect of a subject, often by a single author or artist, and usually on a scholarly subject. In library cataloging, ''monogra ...
and a large collection of short essays, pictures, and other archival material about the visual music group ''Lumonics'' composed of Mel and Dorothy Tanner of South Florida. Most of his other visual music-related scholarships take the form of anthologies of technology patents or reprints of earlier texts on
visual music Visual music, sometimes called colour music, refers to the creation of a visual analogue to musical form by adapting musical structures for visual composition, which can also include silent films or silent Lumia work. It also refers to methods o ...
machines designed for live performance.


Formalist motion pictures

Using psychological studies of motion perception, Betancourt argued that the motion seen in motion pictures is identical to the motion seen in paintings. He terms this second type ''painterly motion'' and argues that the subjective viewer invents both kinds: "Unlike motion in the real world that is physically eminent, the motion we see in movies and through the technique of painterly motion is entirely a result of human perception. The motion we see does not exist outside our perception." Work by painters
Francis Bacon Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban (; 22 January 1561 – 9 April 1626), also known as Lord Verulam, was an English philosopher and statesman who served as Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England. Bacon led the advancement of both ...
and
Peter Paul Rubens Sir Peter Paul Rubens (; ; 28 June 1577 – 30 May 1640) was a Flemish artist and diplomat from the Duchy of Brabant in the Southern Netherlands (modern-day Belgium). He is considered the most influential artist of the Flemish Baroque tradit ...
present the type of motion effect identified by Betancourt as being psychologically the same as the real motion of actual objects in the world. Betancourt's construction of formalism suggests a broader scope for applications of
film theory Film theory is a set of scholarly approaches within the academic discipline of film or cinema studies that began in the 1920s by questioning the formal essential attributes of motion pictures; and that now provides conceptual frameworks for u ...
than simply
motion pictures A film also called a movie, motion picture, moving picture, picture, photoplay or (slang) flick is a work of visual art that simulates experiences and otherwise communicates ideas, stories, perceptions, feelings, beauty, or atmosphere ...
since it focuses on both painting and
experimental film Experimental film or avant-garde cinema is a mode of filmmaking that rigorously re-evaluates cinematic conventions and explores non-narrative forms or alternatives to traditional narratives or methods of working. Many experimental films, parti ...
. This approach was developed in his book, ''Structuring Time: notes on making movies.'' He approaches the motion picture as a series of distinct, but related domains of aesthetic manipulation: camera, image, editing, projection, screen, and sound. His construction of formalist motion pictures argues against a medium-specific definition and chooses a broad description of formal potentials instead.


Glitch videos

Betancourt has written about
glitch art Glitch art is the practice of using digital or analog errors for aesthetic purposes by either corrupting digital data or physically manipulating electronic devices. Glitches appear in visual art such as the film '' A Colour Box'' (1935) by Len L ...
as both an artist and a critic and employs glitches in his videos. José Manuel García Perera, a Universidad de Sevilla painting professor, criticized Betancourt's work with glitch, stating:
Michael Betancourt's video work, part of the so-called glitch art, which focuses on the failure that can occur within the digital realm, has been here the basis for a comparative study between different concepts of movement in art, as well as between a current and a past art, a comparison that allows us to see clearly how technological advances have produced radical changes in the physical, spatial and mobile nature of the artwork. Betancourt's investigation proposes a new kinetic art that becomes critical through error, mimics the real-time movement that contemporary culture demands, and uncovers the artificiality of images that mimic reality as if they wanted to replace it."
The use of glitch art to create critical media is a focus of Betancourt's theoretical writing on glitch art. David Finkelstein, in writing about his glitch video series ''Going Somewhere'' on ''Film International'', stated:
In Betancourt's hands, data moshing becomes a form of cultural resistance. Instead of utilizing the smooth, illusionistic motion of digital cinema, which you would typically see in a commercial movie theater, he deliberately pulls apart the codes and exploits its errors to deconstruct the movies and show us how they do their tricks. He pulls apart the narrative tropes of Sci-Fi at the same time that he pulls apart the pictures, pixel by pixel, creating a radically open form that resists the hypnotic myth-making of Hollywood.


The digital

In a series of articles collected as The Critique of Digital Capitalism, Betancourt criticized what he called the "immaterialism" of digital technology, specifically the claims that digital technology ends scarcity through being able to create value without expenditure, unlike the reality of limited resources, time, and expenses; it is based on denying the actual costs of access, creation, production, and maintenance of computer networks and technologies. He sees the "aura of the digital" as both the capitalist fantasy of continuous expansion made possible by digital technology and as the anti-capitalism fantasy of a world without scarcity or needs for capitalist production.


The aura of information

Betancourt's concept of the "aura of information" is the separation made possible by digital technology of the information and the ways that information is carried by technology. This idea claims the digital transcends physical form by separating meaning from the physical objects that present meaningful information to its audience. It is the tendency to ignore the particular physical details of how we encounter information, in favor of just paying attention to the information itself.


Digital capitalism

In "Immaterial Value and Scarcity in Digital Capitalism," Betancourt proposed that the illusion of a rupture between physical and virtual production posed by the aura of the digital can be observed in the political economy of the United States, most especially in the Housing Bubble that burst in 2008. His analysis states that "Financial 'bubbles' are an inevitable result of a systemic shift focused on the generation of value through the semiotic exchange and transfer of immaterial assets." Several features marked this economy: (1) a disassociation between the physical commodity and its representation in financial markets that is global in scope, (2) a reliance on
fiat currency Fiat money (from la, fiat, "let it be done") is a type of currency that is not backed by any commodity such as gold or silver. It is typically designated by the issuing government to be legal tender. Throughout history, fiat money was some ...
, (3) a financialization of the economy based on debt. Part of this analysis is a discussion of the relationship between affective labor and what he has termed " agnotologic capitalism." Affective labor is the enabler for the creation of the bubbles that are characteristic of the digital capitalist economy, Where the reduction of alienation is a precondition for the elimination of dissent. Affective labor is part of a larger activity where the population is distracted by affective pursuits and fantasies of economic advancement.


Automated labor

Automation is a recurring theme in Betancourt's discussion of digital technology and capitalism. In his discussion of the
New Aesthetic The New Aesthetic is a term, coined by James Bridle, used to refer to the increasing appearance of the visual language of digital technology and the Internet in the physical world, and the blending of virtual and physical. The phenomenon has been ...
, he argued that the transformations of production being created by computers and automated assembly lines belong to a larger shift in the digital capitalist economy: The replacement of human labor by automation poses a problem for capitalism according to Betancourt because capitalism is dependent on the exchange of labor for wages that are then spent purchasing the production of that labor. The elimination of labor by automation follows what Betancourt has called a fundamental law of the ideology of automation: "Anything that can be automated, will be." Following the automation of physical production, the transformation of formerly intellectual labor by "autonomous production that began as a "labor-saving" procedure now saves all human labor in/as the productive machine: it is this specific dimension of automated (immaterial) labor using digital technology that reflects an ideology of production-without-consumption." The elimination of labor by automated labor presents a paradox for Betancourt's digital capitalism because the wages paid to workers for their labor are the basic element around which all of capitalism is built.


As an artist

Betancourt's movies are usually abstract and belong to the tradition of
visual music Visual music, sometimes called colour music, refers to the creation of a visual analogue to musical form by adapting musical structures for visual composition, which can also include silent films or silent Lumia work. It also refers to methods o ...
. He has claimed these videos are related to his work as a theorist. He has exhibited his work since 1992 when ''Archaeomodern'' screened at the
Ann Arbor Film Festival The Ann Arbor Film Festival is an annual film festival held in Ann Arbor in the U.S. state of Michigan. Established in 1963, it is the fourth-oldest film festival in North America (after the Yorkton Film Festival, 1947; Columbus International Fil ...
; since then he has produced many videos that have screened on television and in festivals, galleries, and museums. He described his video ''Telemetry'' as "a documentary whose subject is those things that fall outside our direct perception. It adopts an abstract form precisely because what is represented has no direct physical form... instead of our electronic intermediaries, satellite and deep-space probes, send back numerical data we interpret intellectually to understand what it is like in those places we cannot go, what those things we cannot see look like." This concern with the relationship of scientific and speculative interpretations of space appears throughout his work. The Experimental TV Center's Video History Project has a biography.


Notable works


Videos

:* ''Aurora,'' 2001, Microcinema International :* ''She, My Memory,'' 2002 :* ''Year,'' 2003 :* ''Telemetry,'' 2005 :* ''Casual Wave,'' 2007 :* ''One,'' 2010 :* ''Disks of Newton,'' 2010 :* ''Contact Light,'' 2012 :* ''Dancing Glitch,'' 2013 :* ''The Dark Rift'' 2014 :* ''The Dogs of Space'' 2015 :* ''Going Somewhere'' 2015


Aesthetic Hazard project

Betancourt's ''Aesthetic Hazard'' is a public installation project that imitates the more common barrier tapes marked "Caution" or "Police Line - Do Not Cross," but instead states: ''Aesthetic Hazard--Do Not Look.'' He installed this project in a variety of locations in Miami and Chicago.


Publications

* ''Glitch: Designing Imperfection,'' eds. Iman Moradi, Ant Scott, Joe Gilmore, Christopher Murphy, Mark Batty Publisher, 2009, * ''Stickers: Stuck-Up Piece of Crap: From Punk Rock to Contemporary Art,'' eds. DB Burkeman, Monica LoCascio, Rizzoli, 2010, * ''100 Artists' Manifestos,'' ed. Alex Danchev, Penguin Books, 2011, * ''The Manifesto in Literature, vol. 3, The Literature of Society Series,'' St. James Press, 2013 * ''What's Next? Kunst nach der Krise: Ein Reader,'' Kulturverlag Kadmos, 2012


Bibliography


Books

* ''Two Women and a Nightengale: a novel in collage'' (2004) * ''Artemis: a tragedy of collage'' (2004) * ''Structuring Time'' (2004, second edition, 2009) * ''Re–Viewing Miami'' (2004) * ''Visual Music Instrument Patents (Volume 1)'' (2004) * ''The Lumonics Theater'' (2005) * ''Mary Hallock–Greenewalt: The Complete Patents'' (2005) * ''Thomas Wilfred's Clavilux'' (2006) * ''Jose Parla, Walls, Diaries, Paintings'' (2011) * ''The History of Motion Graphics: From Avant-Garde to Industry in the United States'' (2013) * ''The Critique of Digital Capitalism'' (2015) * ''Beyond Spatial Montage: Windowing, or the Cinematic Displacement of Time, Motion and Space'' (2016) * ''Glitch Art in Theory and Practice: Critical Failures and Post-Digital Aesthetics'' (2017) * ''Semiotics and Title Sequences: Text-Image Composites in Motion Graphics (Routledge Studies in Media Theory and Practice)'' (2017) * ''Synchronization and Title Sequences: Audio-Visual Semiosis in Motion Graphics (Routledge Studies in Media Theory and Practice)'' (2017) * ''Title Sequences as Paratexts: Narrative Anticipation and Recapitulation (Routledge Studies in Media Theory and Practice)'' (2018) * ''Harmonia: Glitch, Movies and Visual Music'' (2018)


Essays

* Educating Buffy: The Role of Education in Buffy the Vampire–Slayer, ''Transylvanian Journal,'' vol. 3, no. 2, 1998 * Chance Operations / Limiting Frameworks: Sensitive Dependence on Initial Conditions, ''Tout-Fait,'' 2002 * Disruptive Technology: The Avant-Gardness of Avant-Garde Art, ''CTheory,'' 2002 * Motion Perception in Movies and Painting: Towards a New Kinetic Art, ''CTheory,'' 2002 * Precision Optics / Optical Illusions: Inconsistency, Anemic Cinema, and the Rotoreliefs, ''Tout-Fait,'' 2003 * Welcome to Cyberia, ''Miami Art Exchange,'' September 19, 2003. * Labor/Commodity/Automation: A Response to "The Digital Death Rattle of the American Middle Class", ''CTheory,'' 2004 * Serial Form as Entertainment and Interpretative Framework: Probability and the 'Black Box' of Past Experience, ''Semiotica,'' issue 157, vols. 1-4, 2005 * Paranoiac-Criticism, Salvador Dalí, Arcimboldo and Superposition in Interpreting Double Images, ''Conscious, Literature and the Arts,'' vol. 6, no. 3, December 2005 * Mary Hallock-Greenewalt's Abstract Films, ''Millennium Film Journal,'' no. 45/46, Fall 2006 * Abstract Film Palimpsests: On the Work of Rey Parla, ''Bright Lights Film Journal,'' 2006 * The Aura of the Digital, ''CTheory,'' 2006 * Same As It Ever Was - Acts of Digital Re-Authoring, ''VJTheory,'' 2006 * Proposing a Taxonomy of Abstract Form Using Psychological Studies of Synaesthesia / Hallucinations as a Foundation, ''Leonardo,'' vol. 40, no. 1, February 2007 * The Valorization of the Author, ''Hz,'' 2007 * The Valorized Artist: Incorporation into the Perpetual Art Machine, ''Bright Lights Film Journal,'' 2007 * Synchronous Form in Visual Music, ''Offscreen,'' vol. 11, nos. 8-9 Aug/Sept 2007 * Wallpaper and/as Art, ''Vague Terrain 09: The Rise of the VJ,'' 1 March 2008 * Intellectual Process, Visceral Result: Human Agency and the Production of Artworks via Automated Technology, ''Journal of Visual Art Practice,'' Vol. 7 no. 1, 2008 * The State of Information, ''CTheory,'' 2009 * Technesthesia and Synaesthesia, ''Vague Terrain,'' 9 February 2009 * Immaterial Value and Scarcity in Digital Capitalism, ''CTheory,'' 2010 * The Birth of Sampling, ''Vague Terrain,'' 2011 * Automated Labor: The New Aesthetic and Immaterial Physicality, ''CTheory,'' 2013 * The Demands of Agnotology::Surveillance, ''CTheory,'' 2014 * Critical Glitches and Glitch Art, ''Hz,'' 2014 * The Limits of Utility, ''CTheory,'' 2015 * The Invention of Glitch Video: Digital TV Dinner (1978) (preview)


Exhibition catalogs

* José Parlá, ''Adaptation / Translation,'' Elms Lesters Painting Rooms, London, 2008 * Rostarr, ''Oculus Velocitas,'' Il Trifoglio Nero, Genova, Italy, 2009


See also

*
Critical theory A critical theory is any approach to social philosophy that focuses on society and culture to reveal, critique and challenge power structures. With roots in sociology and literary criticism, it argues that social problems stem more from s ...
*
Culture industry The term culture industry (german: Kulturindustrie) was coined by the critical theorists Theodor Adorno (1903–1969) and Max Horkheimer (1895–1973), and was presented as critical vocabulary in the chapter "The Culture Industry: Enlightenment ...
*
Cultural studies Cultural studies is an interdisciplinary field that examines the political dynamics of contemporary culture (including popular culture) and its historical foundations. Cultural studies researchers generally investigate how cultural practices re ...
*
Glitch art Glitch art is the practice of using digital or analog errors for aesthetic purposes by either corrupting digital data or physically manipulating electronic devices. Glitches appear in visual art such as the film '' A Colour Box'' (1935) by Len L ...
* List of Glitch Artists * Popular culture studies


Notes


References


Further reading


"How to Write an AvantGarde Manifesto (A Manifesto)," Lee Scrivner
* Zoï Kapoula and Louis-José Lestocart, "Space and motion perception evoked by the painting "Study of a dog" of Francis Bacon," intellectica 2006/2, n° 44: Systèmes d'aide: Enjeux pour les technologies cognitive, pp. 215–226
"Summarizing Motion in Video Sequences," Kevin Forbes
* Piotr Zawojski
"Cyberculture as the vanguard of our time"
published in ''The age of avant-garde'', Edited by L. Bieszczady. Mountains, Kraków 2006.
Arthur Kroker, Simon Glezos and Michael Betancourt, The Future of Digital Capitalism, Digital Inflections, CTheory Global, Online Seminar on Critical Digital Studies, 2010.
* Vincent R. Manzerolle, "The Virtual Debt Factory: Towards an Analysis of Debt and Abstraction in the American Credit Crisis," tripleC: Journal for a Sustainable Global Information Society, 8(2): 221-236, 201
The Virtual Debt Factory: Towards an Analysis of Debt and Abstraction in the American Credit Crisis
* Vincent R. Manzerolle and Atle M. Kjosen, "The Communication of Capital: Digital Media and the Logic of Acceleration," tripleC: Journal for a Sustainable Global Information Society, 10(2): 214-229, 201
The Communication of Capital: Digital Media and the Logic of Acceleration
* R Bruce Elder, ''Harmony and Dissent: Film and Avant-garde Art Movements in the Early Twentieth Century,'' Wilfrid Laurier University Press, * José Manuel García Perera, "El movimiento como simulacro en el mundo virtual: Michael Betancourt y el arte de la inmediatez" ''Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Serie VII - Historia del Arte'' no. 4, 2016, pp. 143–15
El movimiento como simulacro en el mundo virtual: Michael Betancourt y el arte de la inmediatez.


External links

*
Aesthetic Hazard Information site

Microcinema International Director Profile

Experimental TV Center biography page


{{DEFAULTSORT:Betancourt, Michael Film theorists Critical theorists American installation artists American video artists Living people American experimental filmmakers Visual music artists 1971 births