Truest Art of Them All: Paleolithic Cave Paintings of ChauvetTruest Art of Them All: Paleolithic Cave Paintings of Chauvet
by kali manitu
The wall paintings of Chauvet are instinctive and emotional; they reveal a choiceless impulsiveness, unpolluted by the... more The wall paintings of Chauvet are instinctive and emotional; they reveal a choiceless impulsiveness, unpolluted by the intellect. Paradoxically, an insightful investigation also divulges intellect as the root of freedom inherent in true art. Language, conscious communication, technology, and even self-consciousness reflect the emergence of human intellect in Chauvet cave art. In its naturalness, Chauvet cave art displays instinctive impulsiveness of creativity and freedom of communication rooted in intellect that is recognizable as the substratum in all artistic endeavors.
THINK ALOUD EXHIBITION FOR INTERACTIVE MEDIA ARTWORKS
by Maxim Bakaev
IASDR 2007, Hong Kong, Nov 2007. P. 1-9.
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Seen by:Practice in the Flesh of Theory: Art, Research, and the Fine Arts PhD (2012)
Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol 37, No 1 (2012)
This essay offers an anecdotal engagement with the Fine Arts PhD at a moment when it is just emerging in North... more This essay offers an anecdotal engagement with the Fine Arts PhD at a moment when it is just emerging in North America. I argue that doctoral activities that cross theory/practice lines, at their best, offer a unique opportunity to rethink what constitutes academic knowledge production and assessment by necessitating that these lines be made porous and responsive to each other. This reconfiguration, to the extent that it calls into question both the subject and object of knowledge, is one that benefits from the insights of feminism in its “new materialist” incarnation.
Evaluation of the stability of waste-based geopolymeric artificial aggregates for wastewater treatment processes under different curing conditions
I. Silva, J. Castro-Gomes, A. Albuquerque
Advances in Science and Technology, 2010, V. 69, 86-91.
Waste geopolymeric artificial aggregates (WGA) with different atomic ratios of mining waste mud/Na2SiO (4 to 5) and... more
Waste geopolymeric artificial aggregates (WGA) with different atomic ratios of mining waste mud/Na2SiO (4 to 5) and Na2SiO/NaOH (1.25 to 5) were produced using curing temperatures of 20ºC and 130ºC and its structural stability and pH variation after immersion in water was observed during 3 months. Results showed that WGA with mud/Na2SiO and Na2SiO/NaOH of 5 and 4, respectively, cured at 20ºC presented good stability in water and pH decreased from 10 to 7
in 24 days. Compressive strength was determined in additional samples cured at 20ºC and 80ºC in dry conditions, for 13 curing ages and 15 water immersion periods (up to 14 weeks). Results of this second stage showed that increasing temperature to 80ºC accelerated compressive strength gain but
only during the first 3 weeks (up to 15.4 MPa). After 24 h in water compressive strength decreased to half of the initial values determined in dry conditions in all samples and, therefore, the increase of temperature did not bring benefits to WGA strength in water. Regardless the curing temperature and the dry curing age comprehensive strength stabilizes between 1 MPa and 2 MPa after 4 weeks immersion in water, which are values that makes WGA suitable to be used as bed material for wastewater treatment processes.
Potential for reuse of tungsten mining waste-rock in technical-artistic value added products
J. Castro-Gomes, A. Silva, R. Cano, J. Suarez, A. Albuquerque
Journal of Cleaner Production, 2012, V. 25, 34-41
Mining and quarrying activities in Europe generate approximately 55% of total industrial wastes, according to a recent... more Mining and quarrying activities in Europe generate approximately 55% of total industrial wastes, according to a recent Eurostat report. Most of these wastes are directly dumped on land or deposited in landfill sites. The first solution may lead to negative environmental impacts on land (removal of vegetation, deforestation, land slope changes and increased risk of erosion), water (pollutant transport through surface runoff, soil infiltration and contamination of water resources), may lead to the contamination of agricultural goods and may impose risks on human health. In Portugal, about 20% of industrial waste produced originates from mines and quarries, particularly from Panasqueira mining, one of the largest tungsten mines in the world. Currently, Panasqueira mining generates almost 100 tonnes of waste-rock, per day. Such waste-rock have accumulated over a number of years into very large heaps and it is desirable to seek new economic solutions that can contribute towards their reuse. In this context, this work discusses the potential for reuse of waste-rock piles of Panasqueira tungsten mine, which may be a case statement to be followed. The proposed solution described in this paper consists in developing innovative polymer-based composite materials, obtained from non-contaminated waste-rock tailings. Such materials must have suitable properties for technical-artistic value added applications, such as conservation, restoration and/or rehabilitation of historic monuments, sculptures, decorative and architectural intervention, or simply as materials for building revetments.
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Proceeding of ISEA 2008, The 14th International Symposium on Electronic Art. ISBN: 978-981-08-0768-9
Although most terms of place associates to space, the concept of place in the online communication implicates with... more
Although most terms of place associates to space, the concept of place in the online communication implicates with social interaction rather than merely physical setting. The interrelations between place and persons are mutual as a place cannot exist without people, while the interaction between people makes it possible to form a place without space. This spaceless notion of place will be discussed further in terms of online social interaction.
The outcome of this research was implemented in an installation project atCopenhagen Airport, Denmark. With an intention to promote social interaction among passengers, the installation aimed to re-establish the sense of place by facilitating anindirect communication, where the people could share their dreams with the others.
SUBJECT TO EMBODIMENT : Rethinking Embodiment, Presence and the Body
Gothenburg University, ISSN: 1651-4769
With an objective to expand knowledge of physicality as an artistic tool, this paper explores the terms of... more With an objective to expand knowledge of physicality as an artistic tool, this paper explores the terms of phenomenological embodiment from the different perspective that is commonly applied in art theory. By presenting current researches from the field of new media development, the concept of embodiment is broadened from theory and practice of minimal art. The sense of presence and the body in relation to human experience is also investigated for a better understanding in how we perceive and interact with the world. By conducting a research-in-practice, the outcome of the finding is also implemented into an interactive installation which focuses on an embodied experience.
Moving to Become Better: The Embodied Performance of Musical Groove
Published in Journal for Artistic Research 1, 2011
Starting from the knowledge that the perception, experience and creation of music is always a bodily activity, the... more Starting from the knowledge that the perception, experience and creation of music is always a bodily activity, the exposition explores the influential and intrusive power of musical ‘groove’. Whereas the concept of groove has been extensively discussed both as a general phenomenon and from the perspective of the listener, the exposition looks at the ways in which groove can specifically affect and influence the performers during a musical performance. Interested in testing whether groove can constitute an infringement of the performers’ bodily autonomy, and thereby influence their interaction, the exposition introduces the composition Moving to Become Better, a piece of practice-based research designed to explore the connections between the mutual influences of groove and the performance of musicians.
Breaking as making: A methodology for visual work reflected in writing
Paper presented at the SECAC November 2011 conference, Savannah, Georgia, USA
Rather than using writing to analyse artwork I have attempted to make writing reflect the approach of my artwork. I... more Rather than using writing to analyse artwork I have attempted to make writing reflect the approach of my artwork. I have collaged different research material in a similar way and using similar sources to my sketchpad. Mary Ann Francis has suggested that when an artist writes the writing could benefit from the artist’s aesthetic awareness, including their understanding of the content-form relationship. In my work the content of the writing, ‘breaking’, is reflected in its form both physically and philosophically leading to a methodology of breaking. Through this I will propose a space for making art that reflects the elements of risk, uncertainty and paradox.
Delineating disease: a system for investigating Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva
by Lucy Lyons
PhD Thesis, SHU, 2009
This thesis explores a particular method of drawing which I describe as delineation. This is seen here to be a... more
This thesis explores a particular method of drawing which I describe as delineation. This is seen here to be a phenomenological activity. Its application within the setting of a rare congenital disease called Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva (FOP) suggests delineation as a viable method of revealing new insight and understanding of this phenomenon in a way that aims to dignify and remains respectful of the subject.
The use of the term delineation in this investigation originates from its use by the 19`s Century pathologist Sir Robert Carswell. It has been developed here to mean a drawing system that is realistic and based in observation. Unlike a scientific model, the activity of delineation is presented from the first person point of view and focuses on relationships that develop between delineator and object; and delineation and viewer. The emphasis is on coming to understand a phenomenon through the activity of drawing it.
In this thesis I show delineation as a way to record experiences continuously throughout the duration of an encounter, with focus on unique visual experiences as opposed to generic archetypes. Relevant detail is emphasised without additional embellishment or alteration of information, offering clarity to the understanding of the delineator and the viewer.
Collaborative workshops with medical illustrators and archaeologists were undertaken to understand differences and correlations between related practices. Evaluation included engagement with clinical experts, patients and a variety of informed individuals to establish an understanding of value in and consequences of the practice of delineation. A portable compendium of 66 delineations was created consisting of museum samples, living patients and the bodies of two donors undergoing processes of preparation for display. This has provided useful additional insight into FOP and has added evidence to support clinical studies concerning areas of ossification in a form that can be easily accessed and added to by future researchers. This inquiry shows that the activity of delineation has brought new knowledge to FOP by revealing detail of each specific phenomenon while preserving dignity and respectfulness.
Using artistic form for aesthetic organizational inquiry: Rimini Protokoll constructs Daimler's Annual General Meeting as a theatre play
Culture and Organization
This paper reviews and analyses an artistic intervention in the context of aesthetic organizational inquiry and... more This paper reviews and analyses an artistic intervention in the context of aesthetic organizational inquiry and theatre in organizations. Having served as inspiration and as a tool within organizations, theatre now has returned the favour: Rimini Protokoll, a group of directors, used Daimler's 2009 Annual General Meeting in Berlin as a ready-made and constructed it as a theatre play entitled Hauptversammlung. Two hundred theatre spectators were channelled into the event via the purchase of shares. This study focuses on the aesthetic experience of the event and underlines the potential of artistic forms for aesthetic organizational inquiry. Implications suggest that a so-called postdramatic, nonlinear aesthetic form can be most promising for enabling critical interpretations of organizational issues.
Wirtschaftsästhetik: Wie Unternehmen die Kunst als Inspiration und Werkzeug nutzen
book
Dieses erste deutsche Standardwerk zur „Wirtschaftsästhetik“ analysiert, wie
Unternehmen Ästhetik und Kunst als... more
Dieses erste deutsche Standardwerk zur „Wirtschaftsästhetik“ analysiert, wie
Unternehmen Ästhetik und Kunst als Inspirationsquelle nutzen und als Werkzeug zur
Wertschöpfung einsetzen. Im globalen Zeitalter hilft Kunst, Produkte und Manager zu
inszenieren, Mitarbeiter zu motivieren und Kunden anzulocken. Sie unterstützt die
Entwicklung von Führungskräften, Mitarbeitern und Strategien.
Das Buch geht Fragen nach wie: Was haben Manager und Künstler gemeinsam? Warum
werden Unternehmen als Theater oder Jazzband verstanden? Wie wird Kunst, von der
Bildersammlung über die Firmenhymne bis zum Theaterworkshop, in Unternehmen
eingesetzt? Wie wirken Managerauftritte und Firmenarchitektur? Und schließlich: Wie
reagieren kritische Künstler auf diesen Trend?
Das Buch bereichert die wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Forschung um interdisziplinäre
Ansätze der Kultur-, Kunst- und Sozialwissenschaften und eröffnet neue Herangehensweisen
für dieses immer wichtiger werdende Feld.
Inhalt
Ästhetik und Unternehmen
Ästhetische Phänomene in der Wirtschaft
Metaphern aus der Welt der Kunst
Einsatz von Kunst in Unternehmen
Künstlerische Kritik
The Laboratory and the Institution: Encounters of The Workcenter of Jerzy Grotowski and Thomas Richards in three university settings"
Roundtable discussion, in development as a proposal for ATHE 2012 (PENDING).
CO-AUTHORED WITH: Kris Salata, Michael Hunter, Rachel Joseph and Kyle Gillette
SUMMARY
This panel investigates institutional dynamics, tensions and shifts encountered while hosting the... more
SUMMARY
This panel investigates institutional dynamics, tensions and shifts encountered while hosting the Workcenter of Jerzy Grotowski and Thomas Richards in our respective universities (events initiated and organized by Kris Salata, Michael Hunter and Kyle Gillette). We consider interactions of the Workcenter with the university and partner institutions at four levels: administration, faculty, students, and community. Our questions, analysis and documentation examine challenges across a spectrum from institutional structure to student experience. At the heart of our project lies a single question: what are the relational possibilities between art and the university?
PARTICIPANTS
Kyle Gillette, Assistant Professor of Theatre, Trinity University
“Institutional Politics: Shielding the Workcenter”
Rachel Joseph, Instructor of Theatre and English, Trinity University
“Community Reactions: Incorporating San Antonio”
Michael Hunter, Post-Doctoral Fellow, Introduction to Humanities Program, Stanford University
“Institutional Collaborations: Stanford, SF MOMA, and the Performance Art Institute”
Kris Salata, Associate Professor of Theatre, Florida State University
“The Encounter of Apprenticeship and Pedagogy”
Kathryn Syssoyeva, Visiting Assistant Professor of Performance, Florida State University
"...strangely, suddenly, deliciously slanted...": Nurturing and Demonstrating Student Experience
ABSTRACT
In Social Works: Performing Art, Supporting Publics, Shannon Jackson writes: “Like any coordination of human welfare, performance requires an encounter with some very difficult problems that are both formal and institutional.” This panel investigates institutional dynamics, tensions and shifts encountered while hosting the Workcenter of Jerzy Grotowski and Thomas Richards in our respective universities (events initiated by Professors Salata, Hunter and Gillette). We consider interactions of the Workcenter with the university environment at four levels: administration, faculty, students, and community. Our questions, analysis and documentation examine challenges across a spectrum from institutional structure to student experience. At core, our investigation asks a single question: what are the relational possibilities between art and the university?
The praxis of the Workcenter proposes a form of "public" which insists on intimacy and direct connection as its basic condition. It depends upon slowness, accrual, rigour: both in the group’s work and, proportionally, in our approach to witnessing that work. If one meaningful definition of civic action is nourishing the quality of life in a community, then the meeting between the Workcenter and our institutions - the introduction of the laboratory model, the relational action of the performance, the transcultural interaction - constitutes a deeply civic engagement.
Panel members will briefly present challenges and solutions involved in the Workcenter’s encounter with their institutions and communities, as the prelude to a broader conversation about the university’s potential role in supporting forms of performance that might be compromised by the “interests” of bureaucracies, governments, even rigid communities.
THE WORKCENTER OF PONTADERA
After decades of influential and groundbreaking work, in 1986 Jerzy Grotowski founded his Workcenter in Pontedera, Italy, which eventually became the Workcenter of Jerzy Grotowski and Thomas Richards. Until his death in 1999, Grotowski worked intensively with Richards and a small group of actors, developing a systematic, continuous line of “performance research.” This research continues today at the Workcenter, under the leadership of Richards and Mario Biagini, and involves both extremities of what Grotowski called "the chain" of performing arts: "Art as vehicle" and "Art as presentation". The distinction between these two poles of performance is that "Art as vehicle" has as its aim the performer’s work on him/herself, with a view towards analysis of the ways in which certain modes and techniques of performance might lead to expansions of individual cognitive and perceptual capacities; while "Art as presentation," is oriented towards the perception of the spectator, with a view towards investigating questions regarding intersubjective communication and relationships.
THE RESIDENCIES
Richards and his Workcenter team engaged with the FSU community over eight days, through an extensive acting workshop, classroom visits, performances of The Living Room, and a conference. The FSU School of Theatre is a home for 400 students and multiple programs: BA, BFA, MA, MS, and Ph.D. Because of this broad range of training and educational focus, the visit by the Workcenter created a perceptional challenge, as their “post-representational performance” is not driven by dramatic text, doesn’t seem to have a plot, invests very little in theatrical illusion, and doesn’t seek the spectator’s engagement in the ways traditional performance might. In addition, the workshop revealed seemingly irreconcilable differences between the modes of work, expectations, and methodologies employed by the host and the visitors.
The workshops and performances in San Antonio took place at Trinity University and were largely attended by the Trinity community. The institutional framework of the visit made the participation of the larger theatre community small yet meaningful. Members of the community that attended the performances were skeptical at the outset, but enthusiastic after witnessing The Living Room. As the large proscenium theatre and black box space traditionally used for theatre productions at Trinity were not right for The Living Room, we utilized a space elsewhere on campus, typically used as a meeting room for faculty and administrators. The Faculty Gold Room's conventional uses intersected with the hospitality and warmth of the Living Room in several significant ways, framing it within the civic life of the university.
In the Bay Area, Stanford’s initial support of the Workcenter’s visit sparked a broader collaboration with SFMOMA and the Performance Art Institute. Together, these institutions were able to support the Open Program of the Workcenter (with a team of 12 people) for a month-long residency, during which performances, workshops, and symposia took place at extremely diverse venues across the Bay Area. In the case of this residency, our focus will shift away from examining encounters directly between the Workcenter and the university, and look instead at how Stanford was able to participate in existing performance communities, as well as to help create a new community: over the course of the month, spectators and local arts professionals returned to participate in multiple performance events, creating a network of support and shared interest that was both based in the particular overlap between, on the one hand, the Workcenter’s traditions and the Open Program’s current explorations (notably the texts of Allen Ginsberg) and the Bay Area’s own social and aesthetic histories.
The design process as a way to increase participation in a research project about the art world
Hansson, K. (2011). The design process as a way to increase participation in a research project about the art world. Situating Ubiquity. Media Art, Technology, and Cultural Theory (p. 18). Stockholm.
This paper describes a design project that is used as a way of enhancing participation in an ongoing research project... more
This paper describes a design project that is used as a way of enhancing participation in an ongoing research project about the role of the artist in relation to digital media. This is achieved in two ways. First the design process is used as a means to concretize abstract theories through a practical case. The design thus function as a way of transforming the informants into participants in the research process contributing not only with empiric material but also in the analysis. Second, as a way to coordinate the design and expand the group of participants, we design a collaborative tool that mirrors the complex and dynamic system of the art world. In this tool a common assumption about equality as the base for participation is challenged; instead hierarchy is used as a way to motivate participation.
The result of the design process is; 1) Design guidelines drawn from theories about the art world. 2) A beta-version of a groupware that visualizes structuring processes.
The beta-version of the groupware uses a Wiki-like interface for discussion and collaboration, combined with a score level meter that shows the individual activities in relation to the total amount of activity. Participants are scored both for the level of their own activity and the score others put on this work. Scoring is done constantly and in different ways: Linking, commenting, liking/disliking, and rating. Just as in the art world co-branding is an important part of the scoring system, and the individual score level changes when the score value changes for the attached users. As a way to formalize the informal rules the system creates a visualization of the individual strategies in relation to others. The visualization of the score level also creates a kind of gaming experience that clarifies the strategies involved for achieving a higher score, and can serve as a way to motivate participation in the short run.
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Seen by:Performing Structure: Fine Art as a Prototype for Participation.
Hansson, K., Ekenberg, L., Fürst, J. G., & Liljenberg, T. (2011). Performing Structure: Fine Art as a Prototype for Participation. ISEA2011 Istanbul (p. 8). Istanbul.
The art project Performing Structure (more The art project Performing Structure (www.performingstructure.se) deals with the performance of organizational systems like democracy in a place structured by globalization. An art exhibition in the public space is employed as a way to better understand the conditions for democratic participation. In this work-in-progress, artists work in relation to research regarding e-democracy using the concept of art as a method to explore the context.
Prototyping for Participatory Democracy : Fine Arts as Means for the Study of Multi-modal Communication in Public Decision Making.
Hansson, K., Ekenberg, L., Danielsson, M., Fürst, J. G., Larsson, A., & Liljenberg, T. (2011). Prototyping for Participatory Democracy : Fine Arts as Means for the Study of Multi-modal Communication in Public Decision Making. The Interactive Media Arts Conference IMAC 2011 – The Unheard Avantgarde (p. 5). Copenhagen: Re-New Digital Arts Forum.
We present a thematic art project in a suburb of Stockholm as a
means to generate problem areas in focus for a... more
We present a thematic art project in a suburb of Stockholm as a
means to generate problem areas in focus for a research project on multimodal communication and democratic decision-making.
Through art we play with different techniques and ideas about
democracy in a particular location in order to obtain a better
understanding of the citizens and their environments. Artists'
actions, installations and mediations create a direct confrontation with the place and its inhabitants, and explore the dynamic relationships that constitute its context. The common denominator for the invited artists is that they work with situation-specific emancipatory art that in various ways relates to the physical and mediated public sphere. The art project Performing Structure is a collaborative process where the artists develop the project and take part in the contextualization in collaboration with researchers. This is achieved partly through a shared memory work on the theme of power / powerlessness. From this feminist research practice notions of democracy is examined in order to investigate, expose, enhance and / or remodel relations of the site.
The aim with the art project is to put the site and the individual in
a web of geographical, social and economic contexts. The aim is
also to contribute to a debate on artistic research by showing how art can be viewed as a qualitative method. Through the practice of the memory work method we contribute to the development of this methodology, and map out a space for art in the field of science.
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