"Öteki" Kavramı Üzerine Görsel Çözümlemeler
Özet
ÖZESKİCİ, Evrim. Visual Analysis on the Notion of "the Other”, Doctor of Fine
Arts in Thesis, Ankara, 2017.
As a notion, the other signifies another. In a visual analysis, this notion changes
according to the societal structure and the period. The other is everyone. As "I”
will be "the other” to another, the relationship between I and the other can be
referred to countless times. "I” can also sense, feel and decide on all beings.
Therefore, the self is subjective and identifies the person themselves.
From the Renaissance to the modern-day many artists have incorporated the
other, the self, identity, marginalisation and gender in their works. The depiction
of divine individuals in the works of the other carry religious meaning in the
renaissance and baroque era. The events that have the most influence on the
change of the other in the modernist process is the French Revolution, World
War I and II. Instead of heroes, sublimation, splendour and religion; the
oppressed, those siding with the people, freedom and struggles were
addressed in romanticism. In realism, navvies, labourers, village sceneries and
society’s oppressed are noticeable. What Romanticists and Realists have in
common is that rather than glorification, they feed off society.
Another phenomenon in the modernist process is that it reflects on
developments regarding opposition, struggles, death, pain, tragedy and war.
When the artistic tendency of the era is examined, a political, expressionist,
antagonistic and critical approach can be referred to. It seems that where wars,
tragedies, problems and societal incidents occur, the "other” can emerge at any
moment.
The occurrences of coups, massacres and societal events after the 1960 and
1980’s in Turkey led to artists producing works on the other, memory, power,
identity, and marginalisation.
The contents of the thesis have followed a process regarding history of art and
personal applications of the other. The theme of the pictures in personal
applications are identity, form, and the relationship between the other and the
self. The characters in the pictures have been deformed on purpose. As the
identity of the role the characters play undergoes change, this concerns the
entire society. The criticism here is aimed at the ones excluded from the society
and the people who are marginalised. The inclusion of the history of art aspect
in the thesis clarifies why artists emphasise the concept of the other, how the
form is marginalised in contemporary art, and what kind of relationship it has
with which concepts.