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- Bowman, Jason E., 1967
(author)
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PARSE Journal Issue #2 The Value of Contemporary Art
- 2015
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In: http://www.parsejournal.com/issue/2. - Göteborg : University of Gothenburg. - 2002-0953. ; 1:2
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Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
- With Professor Andrea Phillips (University of Gothenburg) and Dr. Suhail Malik (Goldsmiths, University of London) , I co-edited the second edition of the peer-reviewed PARSE (Platform for Artistic Research Sweden) Journal. This edition dealt specifically with questions of value in contemporary art and included a total of 11 peer reviewed contributions.
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- Wilson, Mick, 1964
(author)
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White Mythologies and Epistemic Refusals: Teaching Artistic Research Through Institutional Conflict
- 2020
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In: Teaching Artistic Research: Conversations Across Cultures. - Berlin : De Gruyter. - 3110662396
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Book chapter (peer-reviewed)abstract
- This essay outlines a heuristic model of a teaching practice that attempts to operate within the fundamentally contested field of artistic research by exploring the terms and processes of conflicted institutional practices and rhetorics. Taking account of the different ways in which artistic research has become a highly visible moment of institutional conflict, this paper outlines an approach to teaching early-stage researchers through active processes of knowledge conflict. The model outlined here proposes a group process by which fault-lines of conflict and disagreement may be thematized and operationalized within a teaching praxis. The provisional model being proposed is based upon concrete experiment and application over the last decade in a range of formal and informal educational settings.
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- Gunve, Fredric, et al.
(author)
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Madness and The Bastard in Motion: Learning/Teaching through Performance Studies (in Tilburg)
- 2015
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In: 7th Teachers' Academy 2015 ENACT: learning in/through the Arts Tilburg, The Netherlands.
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Artistic work (other academic/artistic)abstract
- This paper performs a dialogue/an encounter between Madness (or the false mad Demidamia from the opera La Finta Pazza performed in Venice in 1641) and the Bastard (the illegitimate love child of arts, performance and education). Entangled they move through time, talking, confronting, shaping and diffracting a non‐existing form. Their method is about diffracting every inch of their journey. Meeting obstacles, facing resistance, walking into bubbles of flair and comfort, stepping into dilemmas and borderlands. Continuously asking themselves: What happens in the microscopic moment? When no/thing could even be imagined. On their way they challenge both time and existence. Learning through teaching through learning. Their journey is an ornamenting becoming in itself. It is an example of mattering as in meaning-‐making and knowledge processing, based on a performance of the indeterminable and affinity. The outcome in the performative encounter in itself – a potential model for teaching and learning in higher arts education.
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- Jewesbury, Daniel, 1972, et al.
(author)
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The Infinite City, episode 1: Talking Heads and Magic Jugs
- 2018
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In: The Infinite City podcast. - Belfast, UK : PLACE (Planning Landscape Architecture Community Environment) Northern Ireland.
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Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
- First episode of a new podcast exploring the urban environment, regeneration and development, in which artist and writer Daniel Jewesbury conducts the listener on a walk through Belfast - past and present. Tthree moments in Belfast’s public cultural history give insight into enduring questions about art, publicness, exclusion and the city. The Infinite City is produced by Rebekah McCabe and Conor McCafferty for PLACE, with assistance from Maria Postanogova and Stuart Gray. Music for this episode was composed by Conor McCafferty. The podcast is supported by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios and Arts and Business Northern Ireland.
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Intersections PARSE JOURNAL
- 2020
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In: PARSE JOURNAL. ; Summer:11
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Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
- This issue of PARSE journal concludes the theme of “Intersectional Engagements in Politics and Art”, first initiated as a research arc within PARSE in 2018. Under this theme, artists, scholars and students, as well as a wider public have gathered to share a critical exploration of the nexus of race, coloniality, gender and sexuality in contemporary art-making, scholarship and artistic research. Focusing on socially engaged practices related to memory, history, embodiment and alterity, the journal issue offers yet another set of considerations that brings together research by practitioners and scholars from a wide range of fields, disciplines and contexts. The theme began as a way to address and explore interest within arts research about the notion of intersectionality as a mode of creative practice, as well as a form of critical analysis. This interest, arguably following a turn towards the intersectional in feminist artistic practice and pedagogy, came as scholars in the humanities and social sciences were already debating the various appropriations and reifications that had seemingly made intersectionality into “a grand theory of everything”, to use Kimberlé Crenshaw’s words, with the effect of positioning intersectionality as a deeply contested, seemingly overdetermined concept.
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Human Population : Västerås 2020
- 2020
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Artistic work (peer-reviewed)abstract
- I Human Population tar konstnären med en grupp deltagare på en guidad tur genom stadscentrum. Framför olika byggnader och på gator breder hon ut en stor genomskinlig byggplast på marken.Ett frottage (en gnuggbild) med pastellkrita växer fram och synliggör markens struktur. Samtidigt berättar Torell om tillgänglighet som en mänsklig rättighet. Om rösträtt och inkludering. Om asfalt mot vågiga betongplattor - inte för att de är dekorativa, utan för riktningarna de skapar för den som har nedsatt syn. (Katrin Ingelstedt/Västerås konstmuseum)
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