Sunday, 5 November 2017

Study Task 3 - IMAGES AND THEORY

Following my research into relevant texts, I have identified a variety of concepts and problems that could drive my research practice. Noel Carrington's essay has provided the base for my primary explorations of tradition in visual media and the boundaries of craftsmanship within heritage practices.

TASK 3A 


IDENTIFIED TERMS/CONCEPTS

-tradition
-commodity fetishism
-indigeneity
-vernacular
-popularity
-heritage
-craftsmanship

IMAGES/ EXAMPLES

-Grayson Perry's ceramics
-Grayson Perry's 'All in the best possible taste'
-Folk Art/ Industrial Art - fairgrounds/ canal boats/ signage
-Contemporary heritage driven practices - Alice Patullo/ Emily Sutton
-Eames 'form follows function' approach within craftsmanship vs. art dilemma

INTERPRETATIONS

-How does common/ traditional visual media assert the status of art or not? What are the barriers between craft and high art?
-How are boundaries of craftsmanship pushed in contemporary art practice?
-Has the resurgence of folk art brought status to traditional practices?

TASK 3B





LAUIL501                    Research Questions – Initial Ideas – Feedback
Specific areas of interest – Question?
Heritage of visual objects and visual/ cultural awareness through traditional art and craft practices.


What have you found out so far?
Heritage - culture of visual objects and awareness
Social relationship with art through accessible objects - books and toys
Importance and role of tradition
Knowledge is determined by socio-cultural influence
Industrial art
Low art vs. high art
Personal collections
Accessibility
The people’s art


What are your core texts - (choose four - ish) – quotes?
Popular English Art - Noel Carrington
Design as Art - Bruno Munari
Ways of Seeing - John Berger
Mythologies - Roland Barthes
The Unsophisticated Arts - Barbara Jones
Playing to the Gallery - Grayson Perry
Case studies - what images, examples, phenomena
How does it link together with your proto-question and quotes?
Toys and their value - toys derivative of certain social/ class groups
Meaning of certain toys as asserted by lower class societies
Nostalgic relationship with objects - personal memories of childhood objects
Canal Boats - objects of industry, decorated with folk art/ imagery of heritage and tradition
Fairground rides - public, rotating galleries
How does the painting of a carousel horse differ from an oil painting of a horse?


Thoughts on practical?
Collage as a starting point for reappropriation of imagery
Subvert context of traditional imagery - industrial/ working class objects in a museum/ gallery context
Use bookbinding to create more tangible outcomes - concertina timeline?


Presenting my current overview to my peers, the main issue that was identified was the idea of a 'social relationship with art', posing the idea that our awareness of art could very much be paved by our own social context and personal connection with visual objects. From these discussions I may look into the meaning and value of certain visual objects, perhaps taking a more psychological approach to the research, considering cognitive development and how visual objects can be pivotal in the preliminary stages of coining a creative awareness or how socio-cultural influences can shape our acknowledged definition of art.

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