词条 | Heinz Nigg |
释义 |
LifeNigg grew up with two siblings. His parents came from a working-class family and a farmer's family in Maienfeld, Canton of Grisons. His mother was a housewife and dressmaker, whilst his father worked for a non-profit housing association. In 1967/68 Nigg spent one year as an exchange student in the US, where he was inspired by the artistic expression and politics of the Counterculture of the 60s – the Hippies and Yippies.[2] From 1969 to 1976 he studied history, political science, and social anthropology at Zurich University. At this time he was also an activist in the youth movement and in the rebellious local art scene. During this period he wrote articles about exhibitions of Minimal and Conceptual art for the Tages-Anzeiger, and for the Kunstnachrichten, a journal of international [https://www.swissbib.ch/Record/262137593 art]. In 1974, he traveled to New York as assistant of Johannes Gachnang, director of the Kunsthalle Bern.[3] There he met the artist On Kawara and received a series of postcards from his project I Got Up. In 1975 Nigg collaborated with Izi Fiszman on the international art event Salto Arte in Brussels.[4] From 1976 to 1979 Nigg lived in London where he did ethnographic fieldwork on the use of audiovisual tools in Community action and Community organizing, which was published as his dissertation in 1980 in Zurich.[5] The book was widely distributed and discussed in the UK:[6][7] What Nigg and Wade's research indicates is that video is a medium of rich potential, that is just waiting to be released. They make it clear that were professionals and amateurs have become dedicated to introducing some control over the usually authoritarian medium of TV, and where the monopoly of that resource can be broken down, spirited initiatives are possible. Community Media implies that low-gauge video is far from being just a toy invented to enable the nuclear family better use of programmed TV schedules.[8]From 1979 to 1980 Nigg was a lecturer at the Ethnologisches Seminar of Zurich University.[9] Because of a controversial video documentation about the Zurich youth movement and the Opera-House Riots he was banned from teaching at the university.[10] This case of censorship led to a wave of international solidarity with Dr. Nigg and Prof. Lorenz G. Loeffler, head of the department. Jonathan Benthall, director of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (RAI) in London: Dr. Nigg was required to leave the seminar and is no longer, at any rate for the time being, in academic life. What are the main issues? It is implied in some press accounts of the affair that Professor Loeffler is considered to be a political subversive; but as far as I know there is no evidence to support such a charge. He is a serious and distinguished scholar. He gives every impression of being a liberal and a relativist. Nigg's view of the ethics of social research is that the anthropologist's findings should be shared at all stages with the subjects of his research, and that he should identify with their cause if he thinks it a just one. Loeffler agrees with Nigg that the seminar should be free to support the interests of underprivileged groups, even at the expense of scientific purity which he considers to be a fiction.[11]Since 1980 Nigg has been active as a visual anthropologist and community artist. His fields of interest are social movements, participation in urban development, and the documentation of migration and mobility. In 2017 he curated Rebel Video for the Swiss National Museum,[12] an exhibition about the alternative video movements of the 1970s and 1980s in Switzerland and the UK. He mostly works with portraits, based on the methods of Oral History,[13] and he also maintains his involvement in art and photography projects.[14] Heinz Nigg is father of a son (* 1981) and lives with his life partner in Zurich, Switzerland. PublicationsIn English
In German
References1. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.isek.uzh.ch/de/ethnologie/Profil/videointerviews.html|title=Video interviews about the history of ethnology in Zurich. With Annik Tonti, Danielle Bazzi, Hanspeter Müller, Heinz Nigg, and Mario Erdheim. Zurich 2016, in german.|last=Probala|first=Rolf|date=|website=Institut für Sozialanthropologie und Empirische Kulturwissenschaft, Zurich University, Switzerland|archive-url=http://www.isek.uzh.ch/de/ethnologie/Profil/videointerviews.html|archive-date=2017|dead-url=|access-date=February 1, 2018}} 2. ^The many protest events of 1968 were documented on film by the Newsreel Collective. They are archived by [https://www.twn.org/catalog/specialcollect/specialcollect.aspx?sc=17 Third World Newsreel], New York. 3. ^Nigg, Heinz. Eine Kunstreise nach New York. Tages-Anzeiger Magazin Nr. 2, January 11, 1975, pp. 26-29 4. ^Video documentation (40 min) of Salto Arte event on the website Le Salon 5. ^Nigg, Heinz and Graham Wade. Community Media. Community Communication in the UK: video, local TV, film, and photography. A documentary report on six groups. Zurich/London 1980, Regenbogen Verlag, available online. 6. ^{{Cite journal|last=Fiddick|first=Peter|date=May 13, 1980|title=Putting the word around|url=https://theguardian.newspapers.com/image/259514282/?terms=community%2Bmedia%2Bwade%2Bnigg|journal=Education Guardian|volume=|pages=1|via=}} 7. ^{{Cite journal|last=Garrett|first=Elizabeth|date=September 1980|title=Community Media–Community Communications in the UK.|url=|journal=Youth in Society, UK|volume=|pages=1|via=}} 8. ^{{Cite journal|last=Bassam|first=Steve|date=1980|title=Community Media|url=|journal=TV + Home Video|volume=|pages=1|via=}} 9. ^Probala, Rolf. Video interviews about the history of ethnology in Zurich. With Annik Tonti, Danielle Bazzi, Hanspeter Müller, Heinz Nigg, and Mario Erdheim. Zurich 2016, in german, available online. 10. ^Schmid, Christian. Researching the City with Video. In: Heinz Nigg. Rebel Video. The Video Movement of the 1970s and 1980s. London, Basel, Bern, Lausanne, Zurich 2017: Scheidegger & Spiess, S. 232ff. Can also be consulted as a video portrait on Rebel Video: [https://rebelvideo.ch/portraits/christian-schmid/ german] or with [https://rebelvideo.ch/en/portraits/christian-schmid/ english subtitles]. 11. ^{{Cite journal|last=Benthall|first=Jonathan|date=April 1981|title=The Attack on Professor Loeffler|url=|journal=RAIN. Royal Anthropological Institute News, London|volume=1981 Number 43|pages=3|via=}} 12. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.nationalmuseum.ch/d/microsites/2017/Zuerich/RebelVideo.php|title=Rebel Video. Die Videobewegung der 1970er- und 1980er-Jahre.|last=|first=|date=|website=Website of the Swiss National Museum|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=February 1, 2018}} 13. ^See list of publications Nigg (German): 1995–2017 14. ^Miavista, Art of Seeing External links
Interviews
3 : 1949 births|Swiss anthropologists|Living people |
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