DIY: 2016 – Oreet Ashery & Anna Colin ‘The Art Curriculum, Memory or Imagination’
What do we mean by Art Pedagogy?
Project summary
What can we learn from historical changes in art pedagogy and how can these apply to contemporary art practices, especially those which are immaterial and socially engaged?
This 2-day workshop is set to performatively explore aspects of the Art Curriculum since the 1940s, such as the use of memory versus imagination in drawing exercises (‘draw a red pepper from your memory’ – or – ‘draw a red pepper from your imagination’) and the implications those evolving educational approaches have on our understanding of art and its agency today.
We will explore, discuss, analyze, reenact and undertake hands-on art related exercises found in the art curriculum.
Background
A conference titled Adolescent Expression in Art and Craft, held at Bretton Hall in 1956, encapsulated the immense divisions in the art education world brought about by the advent of the so-called Basic Design movement. Basic Design represented a radical challenge to many of the educational values of the time.
Developed by a variety of teachers and personalities, Basic Design called for the end of an expressionist and representational approach to art and instead introduce a more interdisciplinary, collaborative, abstracted, modernist and cognitive pedagogy that takes its cues from the worlds of science, technology and design, as well as the every day world and popular culture. Formal exercises looking at point, line, shape relationship, colour and construction were set to expand visual perception and adventure.
Basic Design principles have contributed to the accreditation of Art as a certified degree course and have formed the basis of Art Foundation courses in the UK still now. The two-day workshop aims to question and unfold how those turns in art education can be useful when we look at current immaterial and socio-politically engaged practices.
Through conversations and practical exercises we will attempt to articulate our own experiences of art pedagogy and where we would like to see art pedagogy going.
Participants
The workshop is intended for anyone interested in art, performance, education, pedagogy and the social, political and philosophical trajectories of art education in the UK. We are looking for diverse participants who have a background or an interest in art, education, community or pedagogy.
The application includes writing a short statement on your current practice, or attaching a CV. We also ask you to include a drawing of a red pepper.
For those wishing to apply from outside the region, the Old Manor House is 5 minutes walk from YSP, charging around £36 per night. Once we have a sense of potential participants we will provide further details regarding accommodation and possible car/lift shares.
Application deadline
19 September 2016, 5pm
Any questions?
Email [email protected]
Please note that all applications must be done via the online form, rather than being emailed direct to DIY artists.
Dates, times and location
Dates: 7-8 November 2016
Times: 10am – 5pm
Location: The National Arts Education Archive, Yorkshire Sculpture Park
This DIY is supported by Yorkshire Sculpture Park
The artists
Anna Colin is the co-director and co-founder of Open School East and the Co-curator of the current British Art Show 8. Oreet Ashery is an interdisciplinary artist and an educator.
Banner image credit:
Photo credit: Shutterstock
We are looking for a better quality image for this page or to replace it if it's missing.
Part of DIY: 2016
Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists
DIY: 2016 – Aaron Williamson ‘Average Jo/e Modelling Agency’
depicting a fantasy-fiction average lifestyle
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Angela Bartram ‘Be Your Dog’
Lots of dogs, lots of humans: experiencing what it is to be the other through collaboration
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Call for Proposals
Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Curious (Leslie Hill & Helen Paris) ‘PRIVATE KEEP OUT!’
A weekend by the sea side exploring the very British obsession with privacy
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Eloise Fornieles ‘You’re an Animal!’
An opportunity to make an animal of yourself
Read moreDIY: 2016 – FK Alexander ‘HEAVY META(L) – The Power of Collective Action and of Power Chords’
durational, task based actions, silence and drone metal
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Hunt & Darton ‘You’re Not Local’
Becoming local – contextualising work for a place or context in which you don’t necessarily belong
Read moreDIY: 2016 – immigrants and animals ‘unprofessional class’
for the dancer who doesn’t give a fuck about being professional
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Jade Montserrat & Ria Hartley ‘The Rainbow Tribe: Affectionate Movement’
celebrate social media’s power to transform cultural currency into empowerment
Read moreDIY: 2016 – James Stenhouse ‘Survival Skills for Artists’
A 3-day expedition to find out what it means to survive as an artist
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Karen Christopher ‘Dream Audience’
a mutual response group for giving and getting feedback
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Katherine Araniello & Laura Dee Milnes ‘Playing The Victim’
Wallowing in the pathetic
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Katie Etheridge & Simon Persighetti ‘342843 DavidBowie’
Bowie, Stargazing and Performance Writing
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Louise Orwin ‘Oh Yes! Oh No!: A Good Girl’s Guide to Liberating Your Orgasm’
Let’s talk about sex, baby.
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Rhiannon Armstrong ‘DIY Public Selfcare System’
exploring acts of self care we have to perform in public
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Season Butler ‘Stet* – Performative Writing and Doing History’
a performative writing retreat on commemoration and constructive forgetting
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Stacy Makishi ‘Kick My Butt’lins!’
Hello Campers! Do you need a break? Do you need a boot up the ass?
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Stephen Hodge ‘T(r)ipping points: the architect-walker and the destabilised city’
exploring notions of ‘tripping’ and ‘tipping points’ through the lens of the ‘architect-walker’
Read moreAlso
DIY: 2017 – Marikiscrycrycry: THE T R A P LAB
A dance workshop series, curated club night, open laboratory, and curated self-care night to dance our dreams into reality
Read moreDIY: 2018 – Nigel Barrett & Louise Mari: Tiny Revolutions
How to make a working political theme park for babies and early years
Read moreDIY: 2018 – Ana de Matos & Ria Hartley: Queer.Actions.360
Exploring possibilities of presence, sense and sound in VR performance
Read moreDIY: 2016 – FK Alexander ‘HEAVY META(L) – The Power of Collective Action and of Power Chords’
durational, task based actions, silence and drone metal
Read moreDIY 2020: Fabiola Santana – Mothers, Grandmothers, and Their (post) colonial Children
Autobiographical sessions for postcolonial diaspora. Bodies as places of legacy; voice as ancestral calling; sharing stories; rituals; being vulnerable together.
Read moreDIY: 2016 – Karen Christopher ‘Dream Audience’
a mutual response group for giving and getting feedback
Read more