Regimes of Invisibility in Contemporary Art, Theory and Culture

This book places a focus on the regimes of in/visibility and representation in Europe and offers an innovative perspective on the topic of global capitalism in relation to questions of race, class, gender and migration, as well as historicization of biopolitics and (de)coloniality. The aim of this volume is to revisit theories of art, new media technology, and aesthetics under the weight of political processes of discrimination, racism, anti-Semitism and new forms of coloniality in order to propose a new dispositive of the ontology and epistemology of the image, of life and capitalism as well as labor and modes of life. This book is firmly embedded in the present moment, when due to rapid and major changes on all levels of political and social reality the need for rearticulation in theoretical, artistic and political practices and rethinking of historical narratives becomes almost tangible.


Marina Gržinic´ (PhD) is a philosopher and artist who lives in Ljubljana and works in Ljubljana and Vienna. She is researcher at the FI SRC SASA (Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Science and Arts) Ljubljana and professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna.

Aneta Stojnic´ (PhD) is a Belgrade-born theoretician, artist and curator. She is assistant professor at the Faculty of Media and Communications in Belgrade.

Miško Šuvakovic´ (PhD) is Dean of Faculty for Media and Communications, Singidunum University, Belgrade, and professor of theory of art and media in the PhD program of transdisciplinary humanities and theory of art.

Contributions by: Marina Gržinic, Adla Isanovic, Alanna Lockward, Federica Martini, Aleksa Milanovic, Andrea Pócsik, Aneta  Stojnic, Miško Šuvakovic, Šefik Tatlic, Jelena Todorovic