Marq is Founding Director of the Institute for Modern and Contemporary Culture; Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Visual Culture; publishes widely on the visual and cultural study of bodies, technologies, and sexualities in Modernity; has monographs forthcoming with Yale University Press and Reaktion Books; is supervising PhD students on projects around Visual Culture Studies, the body, technology, the human and post-humanism; and is an AHRC Peer Review Panel Member. Marquard Smith was educated at the Universities of Northumbria (BA Hons) and Leeds (MA, PhD). His research concerns lie in two sometimes interwoven areas of interest: the intellectual, institutional, and political tasks of Visual Culture Studies, Cultural Studies, and Art History as interdisciplinary fields of inquiry; and the changing dynamics between bodies, technologies, and sexualities in the visual, material, and immaterial culture of Modernity. Recent major publications are detailed below. His forthcoming single-authored monographs are The Erotic Doll: A Tale of Artificial Love (Yale University Press) and Bio Art: The Future of Life (Reaktion), and he has collections in development on archives, interdisciplinarity, and hope. Prior to arriving at Westminster, Marq was Reader in Visual and Material Culture and Head of Public Programmes in the Faculty of Art, Design, and Architecture at Kingston University, London, where he was co-director of the Visual and Material Culture Research Centre, and Founding Editor of KIOSK, a magazine of art, design, and architecture. He has also taught at Birkbeck, Middlesex, Goldsmiths, Leeds Met, and University of Leeds, and spent time working in the world of commercial publishing as a Commissioning Editor for Reaktion Books. Marq was a Founder (1992) and Editor (1992-98) of the Cultural Studies journal parallax (Routledge/Taylor & Francis), and the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of the international peer-refereed Journal of Visual Culture (Sage, 2000-onwards). As part of this ongoing commitment to developing collaborative projects, he is currently involved in heading three arts and humanities network projects on: Visual Culture Studies in Europe; Bio-Cultures; and the Network for Editors of Interdisciplinary Journals. Marq has programmed conferences and events at The ICA, Tate, The Whitechapel Gallery, and The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamsburgh, Mass, USA. He has made contributions to recent events at: MIT; Bilgi University, Turkey; University of Cambridge; European Humanities University, Lithuania; Hong Ik, Seoul, South Korea; Goldsmiths; ICA, London; UC Berkeley; The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute; Universitat Zurich, Switzerland; University of London; Victoria & Albert Museum; Centre d'Art Santa Monica, Barcelona; Utrecht Graduate School of Visual Art and Design; The London Consortium; and the Whitechapel Gallery. Dr Marquard Smith would welcome approaches from students wishing to develop MRes and PhD projects on Visual Culture Studies, the Post-Humanities, and bodies, technologies, and sexualities in the visual, material and immaterial culture of Modernity. Marq is currently Director of Studies or Supervisor for a number of PhD projects including: Bjorn Franke, 'Post-Humanism, Techne, Phenomenology' (RCA) Juliette Kristensen, 'Writing Acts: Body, Technology, and Practice' (Kingston) Ghassan Massri, 'Lebanon: Privacy, Curation, Publicness' (Westminster) Kirsten Norrie, 'Your Body is Out There! Animating Artificial Anatomy (Prosthesis) in the Everyday Extension of Performative Human Form and Identity, from Dada to Jimmy Durham (The Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, Oxford) Portia Ungely, 'Leon Bakst: The Intersection of Orientalism and Visual Culture in Avant-Garde Paris' (Kingston) Julijonas Urbonas, 'Gravitational Aesthetics' (RCA) Gemma Ward, 'Installation, Phenomenology, Time' (Westminster)
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Introduction: Visual Culture Studies: History, Theory, Practice Visual Culture, Everyday Life, Difference and Visual Literacy - Interview with Nicholas Mirzoeff Mixing it up: The Media, the Senses and Global Politics - Interview with W.J.T. Mitchell Globalization, cosmopolitanism, politics and the citizen - Interview with Susan Buck-Morss in conversation with Laura Mulvey and Marquard Smith On the State of Cultural Studies - Interview with Paul Gilroy Disability Studies, the Humanities and the Limits of the Visible - Interview with Lennard J. Davis Naming, Networks and Scientific Regimes of Vision - Interview with Lisa Cartwright Phenomenology, Mass Media and Being-in-the-World - Interview with Vivian Sobchack Performance, live Culture and Things of the Heart - Interview with Peggy Phelan Cultural Cartography, Materiality and the Fashioning of Emotion - Interview with Giuliana Bruno Visual Studies, Historiography and Aesthetics - Mark A. Cheetham, Michael Ann Holly and Keith Moxe in Conversation That Visual Turn: The Advent of Visual Culture - Interview with Martin Jay Polemics, Postmodernism, Immersion, Militarized Space - Interview with Hal Foster The Object of Visual Culture Studies and Preposterous History - Interview with Mieke Bal