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2Aesthetics without Objects and Subjects: Relational Thinking for Global Challenges – A Book ReviewEspes the Slovak Journal of Aesthetics. forthcoming.The book review of Perullo, N. (2025) Aesthetics without Objects and Subjects: Relational Thinking for Global Challenges. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.
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176Aesthetics without Objects and Subjects: Relational Thinking for Global Challenges – A Book Review (review)Espes 14 (2): 226-234. 2025.The book review of Perullo, N. (2025) Aesthetics without Objects and Subjects: Relational Thinking for Global Challenges. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.
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284En plein air filmmaking. Some notes on sea waves, wind and early cinemaPhilm. Rivista di Filosofia e Cinema 4 (Gesto, figura): 257-274. 2025.This article analyzes Louis Lumière's early film "Boat leaving the port" through two lenses: Adorno's reflections on the concepts of natural beauty and artistic beauty, and Ingold's idea of "correspondence". Drawing on early film experiments, it explores the film set as a space where key aesthetic dynamics emerge.
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689Montage as a Space for Resonance. Between Dialectical Praxis and Theoretical TensionsPhilm. Rivista di Filosofia e Cinema 3 (Comporre, scomporre, ricomporre.): 31-49. 2024.The article employs the concept of the “Resonance Relationship” to examine the theoretical and practical tensions inherent in the process of artistic creation as it pertains to the practice of film montage. A re-reading of the film Blow-Up will facilitate an examination of the interplay between the two conceptual poles of control and uncontrollability as they manifest in artistic practices. The study will be supported by an analysis of various perspectives on interrelated issues, including the “…Read more
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University of GrazDoctoral student (Part-time)
Erfurt, Thuringia, Germany
Areas of Specialization
1 more
| Aesthetics |
| Philosophy of Film |
| Art and Artworks |
| Theodor W. Adorno |
| Walter Benjamin |
| Immanuel Kant |
Areas of Interest
1 more
| Aesthetics |
| Philosophy of Film |
| Art and Artworks |
| Theodor W. Adorno |
| Walter Benjamin |
| Immanuel Kant |