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Global Cities in Transition: New York and Madrid in the Films of Chus Gutiérrez Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-27 Sagrario Beceiro, Bego?a Herrero, Ana Mejón, Rubén Romero Santos
In her triple condition of emigrant, artist and woman, the work of Spanish filmmaker Chus Gutiérrez is a privileged and singular object of study. Through her filmography it is possible to approach the changes that have taken place in the cities on both sides of the Atlantic. Chus Gutiérrez resided in New York during the decade of the 1980s and returned to Madrid to witness the changes that this city
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Gudáang ‘láa Hl ?íiyanggang: I Am Finding Joy in Haida Repatriation and Research Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-21 Lucy Bell Sdahl ?’awaas
Over 12,000 Haida belongings and 500 Haida ancestral remains were collected and locked away in museums at the height of colonization in the late 1800s to early 1900s. It has been my lifelong quest to undo the colonial harm done to my Ancestors and their belongings. With gudáang ‘láa, (joy) as a foundational philosophy and methodology, I am researching and telling the story of Haida repatriation and
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Analyzing the Place of Isparta Governor’s Building in the Urban Memory Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-21 Nurcihan Akda?, ?efika Gülin Beyhan
Public buildings, which have an essential place in the urbanization process, reveal their existence in the city through their location. Depending on the selection of the site, how memory is shaped and oriented or whether memory enters an extinction cycle forms the main problem of this study. Public spaces in the city center hold an essential place in urban memory. These spaces hold a place in the urban
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Behind the Scenes: Insights on Pedagogy during Implementation of an RbT Open Educational Resource Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Susan Cox, Matthew Smithdeal, Michael Lee
Research-based Theatre (RbT) offers a powerful stimulus for dialogue about the challenges of graduate supervisory relationships. This paper traces the implementation process for Rock the Boat, an open-access educational resource that includes four professionally acted scenes, a facilitator’s guide, and supplementary reading materials. The resource has been used extensively in online, in-person, and
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Robots, AI, and the Metaverse: Distinguishing the Intelligent Images in Science Fiction Movies Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-11-14 Chen Yu
The metaverse represents a significant leap forward in the creation of immersive and intelligent imagery. The evolution of intelligent imagery in sci-fi movies is characterized by the emergence, de...
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A Brave New World: Maneuvering the Post-Digital Art Market Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-16 Claudia Sofia Qui?ones Vilá
The digital revolution has launched myriad new technologies in the field of art and cultural heritage law, including digital art, NFTs (non-fungible tokens), artificial intelligence (AI)-generated art, virtual reality and reality augmentation, online viewing rooms and auctions, holograms, immersive experiences, and more. As a $67.8 billion industry, the art market is a global driver of innovation,
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Teacher's Views of Art Education in Primary Schools in Scotland The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-11-10 Anna Robb
The majority of art education research in the United Kingdom originates from England; however, the devolved nations each have responsibility for education resulting in four different curricula working concurrently across Great Britain. It can be argued that in comparison to England, art and design education research in Scotland is an under-researched area though one that is increasingly garnering interest
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Theatre in Transition: Lars Ellestr?m's Media Modalities and the Rise of “Video Theatre” Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-11-15 Eleni Timplalexi
During the COVID-19 pandemic, pre-recorded and recorded videos were extensively live-streamed or displayed on online platforms, usually as a substitute for the “real thing”. Online theatre became a...
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The Disparity View: The Metaverse as an Equivalent of Life Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Feng Wang
The metaverse and real life are not in opposition. From the long-term perspective of technology development, nearly all forms of life are shaped by technology. The metaverse, temporarily in juxtapo...
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Make First: Exploring Methods to Deliver Anti-Racist and Anti-Ableist Craft Learning The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-11-12 Zoe Dennington, Rebecca Goozee
In 2021 the Crafts Council launched its national education programme, Craft School, alongside the pedagogical framework Make First. Both Craft School and Make First were a culmination of decades of learning, experience, and research from staff at the Crafts Council and are underpinned by anti-racist and anti-ableist learning methodologies. Through this we hoped to work towards methodologies for equal
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Architecture of Medieval Armenia as a Field of Research for Russian and Italian Scholars: Comparative Analyses of the Historiography Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Armen Kazaryan
For the first time in the literature, this study provides an analysis of the activities of two major architectural–archeological missions that investigated the architectural heritage of the Armenian Highlands: the Russian Ani Archaeological Expedition (1892–1893 and 1904–1917) and the Italian academic programs of the Universities of Rome and Venice and that of Milan Polytechnic (from 1966 to the 1980s)
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War and Contemporary Georgian Theatre Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-07 Lasha Chkhartishvili
How is war and its consequences reflected in the theatre? How, in particular, has the Georgian theatre reacted to war, and to what degree does its presence impact Georgian theatre directors and audiences? When and under what circumstances do theatre companies stage plays on the theme of war? Since war never loses its relevance for Georgians, new texts are written continually on this topic and subsequently
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Ferdynand Ruszczyc: A Polish Painter at the Crossroads of Cultures Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-02 Agnieszka Rosales Rodríguez
The oeuvre of beloved Polish painter Ferdynand Ruszczyc (1870–1936) reflected the patriotic Neo-Romantic landscape trend of the fin-de-siècle prevalent in Germany and the Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden). It should be considered in the context of Nordic visual culture for two reasons: (1) until the affiliation of Central and Eastern European nations with the Soviet Union in the wake
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Who Is an Artist? Identity, Individualism, and the Neoliberalism of the Art Complex Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Amelia G. Jones
The fantasized artist-as-origin began as the quintessential figure manifesting Enlightenment European concepts of individual autonomy and sovereign subjectivity—and thus of identity and meaning as these come to define and situate human expression as well as securing educated, middle-class, European white male hegemony in the Euro-American context. While we think of this conventional figure of the straight
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The Future: Missing Children, Time Travel, and Post-Nuclear Apocalypse in the Dark Series (Netflix) Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Tomasz ?ysak
The concept of the post-apocalypse, a cultural imagination of nuclear energy, the temporality of trauma, and time travel are linked herein in order to arrive at a political reading of the Dark series. This show is a commentary on the phasing out of nuclear power in Germany in response to the nuclear disaster in Fukushima. Two readings of this series are proposed: a meditation on the possible futures
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Ecological Thinking about the Metaverse from a Posthumanist Perspective Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-11-05 Yigang Liu
The metaverse is a burgeoning technological domain, ranging from data-driven algorithms to advanced artificial intelligence. Immersive virtual reality does not reflect the ecological crisis in fict...
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Amazonian Indigenous Artists as Agents of Interface: Artworks, Networks, and Curation Strategies in the COVID-19 Crisis Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-31 Giuliana Borea
In this article, I analyse how the COVID-19 crisis crystalised and fuelled the vigorous role of Amazonian indigenous artists as, what I call, “agents of interface”, enabling connectivity, translation, networking and bridging information, ontologies, claims, and aesthetics. With the pandemic’s spatial restrictions and the reduction of global activity in the arts with a return to focusing on the local
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The Vicissitudes of Representation: Critical Game Studies, Belonging, and Anti-Essentialism Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Soraya Murray
Video games are enjoying a flourishing of critical studies; they are finally taken as consequential forms of visual culture worthy of historical, theoretical, and cultural attention. At one time, their scholarship was largely overdetermined by issues of medium and treated largely as an entertainment product. But with the complexifying of the form, combined with a new generation of dynamic scholars
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Rethinking the Medieval Visual Culture of Eastern Europe: Two Case Studies in Dialogue (Serbia and Wallachia) Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-04 Maria Alessia Rossi, Alice Isabella Sullivan
This article explores how the visual culture of Eastern Europe has been studied and often excluded from the grander narratives of art history and more specialized conversations due to political and cultural limitations, as well as bias in the field. The history and visual culture of Eastern Europe have been shaped by contacts with Byzantium, transforming, in local contexts, aspects of the rich legacy
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“Life Is a Poem”: Oral Literary and Visual Arts of the Northwest Coast Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-31 Ishmael Khaagwáask’ Hope
Elder Nora Marks Dauenhauer, Kheixwnéi, a poet and oral literary scholar and a mentor of the author, told the author “Life is a poem”. This essay will explore the ways in which the oral literary and visual arts of the Northwest Coast interact, how artists across multiple disciplines attain knowledge and develop as artists, and the ways in which the arts sing the poetry of Tlingit life. Examining the
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Word, Image, and (Re)production in Francis Picabia’s Mechanically Inspired Abstractions Arts Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Stephanie Chadwick
Francis Picabia’s Bobinage (Bobbin, Winding or Coil) is a pencil and ink work produced on gouache-painted paper between 1921–1922. The free-floating forms in this piece appear, at first glance, to be studies in geometric abstraction. Yet, they, and the work’s title, make both semiotic and real-world references. The admixture of perspectives is notable, for it retains traces of the Cubist visual language
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Reconsidering the “Popular View” (俗覧 zokuran): Tracing Vernacular Precedents in a Modern Illustrated Hagiography of Kakuban 覺鑁 (1095–1143) Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-28 Matthew Hayes
As a supplement to sermonizing, the use of images has been crucial to growing the lay Buddhist following in Japan since at least the tenth century. While it may be the case that Buddhist images, much more so than texts, have historically been better able to draw in popular audiences through their accessible means of communication, the emergence of contemporary literate audiences meant new modes of
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Correction: Leyda and Sulimma (2023). Pop/Poetry: Dickinson as Remix. Arts 12: 62 Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-30 Julia Leyda, Maria Sulimma
In the original publication [...]
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Crafting Recognition: Understanding Gendered and Ethnicised Experiences in an Arts-Based Integration Project Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-30 Stella Grace Conard, Elena Horton
In Denmark, heightened public interest surrounding migration politics has become embodied in the arts, leading to the development of migration-related arts projects. In this study we explore the experiences of women taking part in an arts-based integration project designed for migrant and Danish women to knit, sew, and crochet in female company, with a view to professionalise their handicrafts. Our
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“Lo que se ve, no se pregunta”: Creating Queer Space in the Work of José Villalobos Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-26 Alana J. Coates
This article examines the work of multidisciplinary artist José Villalobos through a queer Latinx lens using the theory of “disidentification” as put forth by José Esteban Mu?oz and argues that Villalobos makes space for queer visibility and representation within Tejano norte?o culture by subverting culturally specific objects that often perpetuate, sometimes violently, traditional Mexican and Mexican-American
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“Heed the Mute Language of Nature”: An Ecosemiotic Approach to Urban Wildlife Photography as Translation of Solastalgia1 Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-24 Xany Jansen van Vuuren, Helen-Mary Cawood
This paper attempts to conceptualise urban wildlife photography as so-called intersemiotic translation by reconceptualising the photographer as a translator who acts as “a mediator in an experienti...
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Paper Thin? The Evidence for 12th-Century Gothic Design Drawings Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-24 Robert Bork
No Gothic design drawings on paper or parchment have survived from the 12th century, and only a few have survived from the 13th century. For this reason, most recent scholars tend to concur at least broadly with Robert Branner, who argued in an influential 1963 article that such drawings were first produced only after 1200. This conclusion deserves critical re-examination, however, for two principal
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Tokenized and Tactile: Frank Stella’s Geometries (2022) Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-26 J. Cabelle Ahn
On 8 September 2022, the American artist Frank Stella launched a series of twenty-two digital art works minted as Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) in collaboration with Arsnl, the in-house platform by the Artist Rights Society (ARS). Titled Geometries, each “package,” included the NFT that would affirm ownership and the corresponding geometric model designed by Stella in JPG (image), MP4 (video), SLS (3D
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Design in a Colonial Periphery: Guilds, Artisans, and Non-Artisans in 18th-Century Sonsonate, El Salvador Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-27 José Ricardo Castellón Osegueda
Historical studies on the subject of Central American design are scarce. This article attempts to fill the gap as well as to overcome the exclusive correlation of design with industrialization. It highlights the relationship in a space and time other than those studied customarily: in the present case, 18th-century Sonsonate, El Salvador. With this purpose, it analyzes crafts, based primarily on an
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“Amphions Harp gaue sence vnto stone Walles”: The Five Senses and Musical–Visual Affect Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-23 Katie Bank
In 1582 George Whetstone described the feeling of entering a barren Great Chamber the morning after a night of sparkling social and musical entertainments. Recounting the previous night’s activities, he reflected on the relationship between musical activity and space, saying ‘the Poets fayned not without reason, that Amphions Harp gaue sence vnto stone Walles’. This article explores the complex relationships
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Ruinscapes and Temporalities in Lauren Beukes’s Zoo City Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-19 ?evket Sarper D?rter
Zoo City is set in an alternative Johannesburg, in which animals and humans, and magic and science, co-operate and co-exist. In this alternate setting, people who commit murder are “animalled” with...
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Colonial Carpenters: Construction, Race, and Agency in the Viceroyalty of Peru during the 16th and 17th Centuries Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-18 Francisco Mamani Fuentes
This article examines colonial documents to shed light on the presence of non-white carpenters in the carpentry trade during the first two centuries of Spanish colonial rule in Peru. It first offers a general definition of carpentry work during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and then explores the specific environments in which Indigenous, black, and mixed-race carpenters carried out their
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Small is Beautiful: Japanese Aesthetic Consciousness in the Animated Adaptation of The Borrowers Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-16 Sijia Wu
British writer Mary Norton’s well-known novel The Borrowers was successfully adapted into the Japanese animated film Arrietty the Borrower (Karigurashi no Arrietty), rewritten by Hayao Miyazaki and...
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Notes towards a pedagogy of be-longing: Rewilding art and design education The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-10-18 Si Poole
This article reflects on 4?years of research activities in the fields of horticulture and creative praxis. The initial project was a personal one and set out with a simple methodology of collecting, observing, and recording a specific genus of plants, that of Mentha. But as the specific question of whether a garden can, or should, be thought of as a work of art was raised it developed into an interactive
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Correction Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-15
Published in Critical Arts: South-North Cultural and Media Studies (Ahead of Print, 2023)
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Brief Remarks on the Strategic Experimentation of Belonging and the Instauring of Cosmicities in the Context of Art Education The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-10-17 Dennis Atkinson
This article considers the notion of belonging as an always incomplete and evolving journey integral to which is the gift of otherness; a journey that consists of a continuous mutation of self, others and world. This contrasts with the more fixed notion of ‘belonging-to’ that suggests prescribed identities affiliated to an established order, which can then invoke the negation of ‘not belonging’ and
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Manifesting Rights on Cloth: Regalia and Relations on the Northwest Coast Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-13 Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse
Using buttons and beads sewn on wool and calico, Northwest Coast First Nations women fashion the robes and aprons essential to ongoing expressions of inherited prerogatives and rights. Each piece of regalia is carefully crafted to include signifying materials and motifs, telling of the origins or relations of their owners. These creations exist as part of a holistic system that integrates material
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Opening Up Opportunities: Trainee Teachers Experiences of Teaching Pupils with Visual Impairment The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-10-13 Harriet Dunn
Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) secondary art and design trainees facilitated an art education project for pupils at a specialist school for visual impairment (VI) in the Northwest of England. This paper focuses on the ways in which the art education project was designed to better prepare PGCE trainees for working with pupils with VI. There is an exploration of a series of reflections
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Friction and Failure in the Secondary Art Classroom: Cultivating Decolonial Transformative Pedagogies of Hope The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-10-13 Clare Stanhope
This article explores how the colonisation of womens bodies, as perpetuated through the art trope of the female nude, has constructed a specific bodily ideal that still resonates and informs how we view women's bodies in contemporary life. I address how the same narratives that restrict our understanding of the female body, also restrict our understanding of drawing. I share part of my PhD practice
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Aleijadinho’s Mesti?o Architecture in Eighteenth-Century Brazil: Inventing Brazilian National Identity via a Racialized Colonial Art Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-10 Laura Ammann
Ant?nio Francisco Lisboa (Aleijadinho) is arguably the most famous Brazilian colonial artist, known for his Baroque sculptures and architecture. The reception of his life and work, which often centered on biographical aspects such as his mesti?o identity and his disability, conferred him a mythological positioning in Brazilian history. From the first sources from the 19th century to the modernist reappraisal
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The Soviet and Stalinist Works of the Michell Wolfson Jr. Collection Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-10 Matteo Fochessati
This paper offers a survey of the Soviet propaganda works collected by Mitchell (Micky) Wolfson Jr. since there 1980s and now preserved at the Wolfsonian—FIU (Florida International University) in Miami Beach and at the Wolfsoniana—Palazzo Ducale Fondazione per la Cultura in Genoa. The first collection to include the art of the regimes in a larger panorama of cultural production, the Wolfsonian offers
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Shame, Techne and Embodied Translation in Lara Foot’s Tshepang: The Third Testament Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-03 Abigail Wiese
This article discusses the techne of performance aesthetics in Lara Foot’s play Tshepang: The Third Testament (2004) in relation to the emotion of shame and the question of how the performers and a...
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Translation as Metamorphosis in the Animated Poetry-Film Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-03 Diek Grobler
Adapting or translating poetry to a new medium destabilises the significance of each of the elements of a poem’s make-up. Hanna Andrews states that in translating poetry, the “idea or emotion itsel...
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Depictions of Black Defiance and Sovereign African Personhood in SEK Mqhayi’s U-Don Jadu Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-08 Nomalanga Mkhize, Melathisi Ncityana
SEK Mqhayi’s novel u-Don Jadu has most commonly been characterised as a novel depicting an idealistic aspiration for social equality between Black and white in South Africa. In the novel, the prota...
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Comprehensive Analysis of the Trade of NFTs at Major Auction Houses: From Hype to Reality Arts Pub Date : 2023-10-07 Christine Bourron
On 11 March 2021, amidst the lingering grip of the COVID-19 pandemic, the art world witnessed an extraordinary event. Christie’s, the renowned auction house, hosted a groundbreaking auction counting just one lot: a Non-Fungible Token (NFT)—a digital asset that had been generating buzz in recent times. The astounding price fetched by the NFT sent shockwaves through the art world. While the 255-year-old
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Contemplating Light: Experiencing Victor Moscoso’s Psychedelic Lithographs in the Museum Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-27 Aleisha Barton
Beginning in 1966, Victor Moscoso designed many of his psychedelic posters for the stroboscopic light shows of the San Francisco dance halls. Moscoso innovated a new mode of print that depended on its environment—kinetic lithography, a product of creative experimentation. He developed multiple iterations of this medium; however, installing it outside of its original context of the psychedelic dance
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Phenomenology as Experiential Translation: Towards a Semiotic Typology of Descriptive and Expressive Ways of Making Sense of Experience Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Jakob Boer
This paper critically assesses and argues for the value of first- and second-person phenomenological approaches to researching aesthetic experiences. Against the background of a review of academic ...
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Cultural Heritage and Tourism in Africa Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Jianmei Yang, Suiqi Lou
Published in Critical Arts: South-North Cultural and Media Studies (Ahead of Print, 2023)
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Post-Merge Carbon Footprint Analysis and Sustainability in the NFT Art Market Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Zhongbo Tian
The market for non-fungible token (NFT) art is expected to reach USD 44.2 billion in 2021 and increase by 67.57 percent in 2022, revolutionizing the relationship between artists, collectors, and investors. Despite this, concerns regarding the environmental impact of blockchain technology’s high energy consumption persist. NFT art transactions will continue to generate significant carbon emissions after
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Sonorous Touches: Listening to Jean-Luc Nancy’s Transimmanent Rhythms Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Adi Louria Hayon
Luigi Russolo’s Intonarumori together with his manifesto L’arte dei rumori?(1913) marked a break with the art of clear signification. From here on, noise and dispersed sounds replaced the concept of music reverberating the harmony of the spheres by propelling the quandaries of immanence contingent on palpable resonance performing the differential relational manner of heterogeneous existence. This somatic
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The Community Museum of Sierra Hermosa (Zacatecas): Rethinking the Museology, Landscapes, and Archives from the Desert Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Natalia De la Rosa
This article presents the methodology and collective work strategies that constitute the Club de Lectura y Museo Comunitario de Sierra Hermosa (Sierra Hermosa Community Museum and Reading Club) in Zacatecas, Mexico, a space founded by visual artist Juan Manuel de la Rosa, a native of this place. The museum emerged as a small library in 2000; and a short time after its founding, the museological program
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The City of Muses Project: Creating a Vibrant and Sensual Metropolitan Landscape through Architecture Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Antonella Contin
The Metropolitan Architecture Project aims to create an artistic metropolitan landscape, which captivates visitors. It focuses on the relationship between the form’s image and the surrounding context, emphasising the structural image in architectural design. The project draws inspiration from the City of Muses Project, incorporating a symbolic mediator as a propeller, which represents the connection
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Professionalism and Artist–Teachers in Adult Community Learning in the UK The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Abbie Cairns
The professionalism of artists and further education (FE) teachers is often questioned. This research will evaluate the impact this has on artist–teachers working in FE. Sch?n defines a professional as an individual who works in a highly specialized occupation. This article examines how this applies to artists and FE teachers, with reference to historical and contemporary cross-disciplinary research
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The Shape of International Art Purchasing-The Shape of Things to Come Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Benjamin Duke
This article is about the role of cryptocurrencies, for example, decentralized autonomous organisations (DAOs) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), in the international art market. These are cryptocurrencies which can be used to work with local governments to deliver non-state-funded consultancy in, for example, funding bid writing or community risk assessment. Self-polycentric and cause-based DAOs typically
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Dravidian Futurities: A Creative Process Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-18 Meena Murugesan
In this article, author and artist Meena Murugesan analyzes their creative process and research in the making of Dravidian Futurities, a multi-channel video installation with live performance. Methodologies of auto-ethnography, visual aesthetics, embodied movement practices, Tamil historiographies, queer futurities, caste analysis, and poetics are applied to treat the issues at hand. Dravidian Futurities
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Clean-Up Workers (Deluxe Series): The Embodiment of Waste Values and Aesthetics Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-19 Gayle Matthias
Written from the perspective of practice-led research, this reflective case study rationalises and charts the production of ‘Clean-Up Workers (Deluxe Series)’—mixed media sculptures that embody notions of waste aesthetic, value and abjection. Integrating discourses surrounding waste theory and using the sink and plug as a metaphor to discuss Lacan’s theory of the objet petit a, the paper is presented
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Andalusi Defensive Architecture through Martín de Ximena Jurado’s Drawings (Mid-17th Century) Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-20 Luis José García-Pulido
The antiquarian Martín de Ximena Jurado was a pioneer in the historical cartography of the old Kingdom of Jaén (Andalusia, Spain), where he tried to represent emblematic areas with their military defences with his particular graphic language. Not surprisingly, this territory has a high concentration of medieval fortifications. The data and drawings that he made of castles, towers, and defensive enclosures
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The Role of Wushu Martial Arts Representation in the Contemporary Mass Culture of the World Critical Arts (IF 0.467) Pub Date : 2023-09-18 Chunlei Xue, Huizhong Bai, Yunfei Niu, Ruijie Zhang
Wushu occupies a considerable place in world culture as one of the most widely known martial arts. Wushu is a remarkable part of modern popular culture and is present in the context of cinema, comp...
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Decolonising Art and Design Education through Standpoint Theory, Embodied Learning and Deep Listening The?International Journal of Art & Design Education (IF 0.813) Pub Date : 2023-09-18 Belinda MacGill
Understanding and advancing pluralist worldviews through education is a tenet of decolonisation. This paper explores the importance of a decolonial pedagogical framework in visual art and design education by disrupting epistemic injustice through employing creative body-based learning (CBL). This approach focuses on relationality and inter-subjectivity through embodied strategies that create encounters
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Sign and Symbol in Picasso Arts Pub Date : 2023-09-14 Pepe Karmel
Writers on the semiology of Cubism have often cited Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler’s 1946–48 descriptions of Cubism as a form of writing. They seem, however, to have overlooked Pablo Picasso’s 1945–48 statements about art as a sign language. The first section of this essay argues that Kahnweiler was in fact inspired by Picasso’s statements. The second section retraces the origins of semiology in nineteenth-century