Gilbert-Rolfe wrote about art and related topics, including
poetry,
fiction,
fashion, with particular regard to its interaction with
photography,
digital technology, and the general state of things in art and how the present situation seems to have emerged. His publications include two anthologies of his essays, a book about
Frank Gehry's architecture co-authored with the architect,
Beauty and the Contemporary Sublime, and other essays and reviews.
Beauty and the Contemporary Sublime reformulates the traditional definition of the differential relationship between beauty and
the sublime, in which beauty is a sign of the passive and feminine and the sublime of the active and male—heroic or terrifying depending on one's perspective, or of course both. In Gilbert-Rolfe's version Winckelmann's masculine active becomes instead androgynous transitivity, while intransitivity replaces passivity as a still entirely feminine characteristic, the feminine as intransitivity being a sign or force that stands for, or embodies, power as a kind of powerlessness. As well as redefining the differential,
Beauty and the Contemporary Sublime's argument also relocates the sublime from nature to technology, and with it subjectivity, from wherever it imagined itself to be to within techno-capitalism. Here and elsewhere Gilbert-Rolfe suggests that techno-capitalism and the subjectivity that accompanies it are largely made out of all that
Martin Heidegger warns against and denounces in his post-war essays on technology, for example the telephone's capacity to sever the mutual dependence of space and time. He has returned to some aspects of this argument in two essays in particular. ==Honors==