Publication: The Dogs Who Outlived Philosophy: On Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook's 'Some Unexpected Events Sometimes Bring Momentary Happiness' (2005)
| dc.contributor.author | Vale, Dorian | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2025-10-16T06:39:11Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2025-08-26 | |
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| dc.description.abstract | The Dogs Who Outlived Philosophy : On Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’s Some Unexpected Events Sometimes Bring Momentary Happiness (2005) By Dorian Vale In this quietly devastating reflection, Dorian Vale examines Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’s 2005 video work Some Unexpected Events Sometimes Bring Momentary Happiness through the lens of Post-Interpretive Criticism. Rather than analyzing the dogs, their dying, or the death they face, the piece invites the viewer to endure them—without commentary, without resolve. Vale argues that these dogs, abandoned yet alive, offer a kind of sacred presence that survives beyond theory. They do not symbolize death. They resist being used as metaphor. Instead, they remain—breathing, ailing, present—while the camera holds still and the world looks away. This essay is not an interpretation. It is a vigil. Vale, Dorian. On Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’s Some Unexpected Events Sometimes Bring Momentary Happiness (2005). Museum of One, 2025. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.16945906 Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Dorian Vale, Post-Interpretive Criticism, contemporary Thai art, Some Unexpected Events Sometimes Bring Momentary Happiness, art and death, ethics of witness, dying animals in art, aesthetic of silence, witnessing suffering, art of presence, slow video art, moral proximity, non-interpretive art writing, visual elegy, sacred presence, trauma in Southeast Asian art, art without metaphor, art and abandonment, ethics of stillness, dogs in contemporary art | |
| dc.description.provenance | Submitted by Dorian Vale (thefinalcritique@museumofone.art) on 2025-10-16T06:39:11Z No. of bitstreams: 1 The Dogs who Outlived Philosophy Araya.pdf: 125932 bytes, checksum: 2f5efde75f0dc9acd0145e9e9ea856a7 (MD5) | en |
| dc.description.provenance | Made available in DSpace on 2025-10-16T06:39:11Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 The Dogs who Outlived Philosophy Araya.pdf: 125932 bytes, checksum: 2f5efde75f0dc9acd0145e9e9ea856a7 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2025-08-26 | en |
| dc.description.sponsorship | MUSEUM OF ONE | |
| dc.identifier | 10.5281/zenodo.16945905 | |
| dc.identifier | 10.5281/zenodo.16945906 | |
| dc.identifier | 10.5281/zenodo.16996527 | |
| dc.identifier | 10.5281/zenodo.16996526 | |
| dc.identifier.other | doi_dedup___::3dea4444f906388e384d0ffd3fce1210 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://africarxiv.ubuntunet.net/handle/1/10462 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://doi.org/10.60763/africarxiv/10206 | |
| dc.publisher | MUSEUM OF ONE | |
| dc.source | Datacite | |
| dc.subject | Interpretation vs. Witnessing | |
| dc.subject | MTT | |
| dc.subject | The Viewer as Evidence | |
| dc.subject | Interpretive Restraint | |
| dc.subject | Post-Interpretive Criticism | |
| dc.subject | Art as Ontology | |
| dc.subject | Language as violence | |
| dc.subject | Restraint in front of art | |
| dc.subject | Witness Aesthetics | |
| dc.subject | Quiet philosophy of art | |
| dc.subject | Custodianship of Art | |
| dc.subject | Museum Of One | |
| dc.subject | Ethics in Art Criticism | |
| dc.subject | Visual Culture Studies | |
| dc.subject | Epistemology of witness | |
| dc.subject | Absential Aesthetics | |
| dc.subject | Moral proximity | |
| dc.subject | Theory of Misplacement | |
| dc.subject | Custodian of Witness Aesthetics | |
| dc.subject | Art as Presence | |
| dc.subject | Presence-Based Criticism | |
| dc.subject | Art Writer and Theorist | |
| dc.subject | Dorian Vale | |
| dc.subject | Independent Philosopher of Art | |
| dc.subject | Ontology of beauty | |
| dc.subject | Criticism and Reception Theory | |
| dc.subject | Hauntmark Theory | |
| dc.subject | Founder of Post-Interpretive Criticism | |
| dc.subject | Alternative art criticism | |
| dc.subject | Aesthetics | |
| dc.subject | Language as Custody | |
| dc.subject | Radical art restraint | |
| dc.subject | Museum of One | |
| dc.subject | Witness over interpretation | |
| dc.subject | Interpretive silence | |
| dc.subject | The Custodian's Oath | |
| dc.subject | Philosophy of Art | |
| dc.subject | Message-Transfer Theory | |
| dc.subject | Ethical art theory | |
| dc.subject | Post-Interpretive Lexicon | |
| dc.subject | Interpretation and Meaning | |
| dc.subject | Art Theory | |
| dc.subject | Displacement Theory | |
| dc.subject | Erasure as Afterlife | |
| dc.subject | Epistemology of Art | |
| dc.subject | https://www.museumofone.art/ | |
| dc.subject | Aesthetic mercy | |
| dc.subject | The Doctrine of Post-Interpretive Criticism | |
| dc.subject | Stillmark Theory | |
| dc.subject | Criticism beyond interpretation | |
| dc.subject | Art as Truth | |
| dc.subject | Displacement | |
| dc.subject | Post-Aesthetic Critic | |
| dc.subject | The Canon of Witnesses | |
| dc.subject | Erasure as ethics | |
| dc.subject | Museum of One Manifesto | |
| dc.subject | Aesthetic Philosopher | |
| dc.subject | Comparative Aesthetics | |
| dc.subject | Silence as method | |
| dc.subject | New art criticism movement | |
| dc.subject | Art encounter ethics | |
| dc.subject | Phenomenology and Art | |
| dc.subject | Contemporary Aesthetics | |
| dc.subject | Misplacement | |
| dc.title | The Dogs Who Outlived Philosophy: On Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook's 'Some Unexpected Events Sometimes Bring Momentary Happiness' (2005) | |
| dc.type | Article | |
| dspace.entity.type | Publication |