POV 8 / Materiality

“Design and Immateriality, What of it in a Post Industrial Society?”

by Abraham Moles

from: Design Issue 4 ,nos. 1/2, 1988, pg. 25-32

 

This text can be found in the course book, Design Studies: A Reader

Section Five: 5.2 / Industrialization and Post-Industrialization  # 56, pg. 377

 Discussion Leaders: Joel S. & Natasha M.

EC: Open Engagement 2013 – International Conference for Art and Social Practice – MAY 17th-19th

REGISTER HERE

SCHEDULE HERE

Themes this year

Contexts

The tenor of a conversation, the demographic of a neighborhood, the unwritten rules of a profession. What exactly do we mean when we speak about the “context” of a socially engaged artwork? The choices that practitioners make when speaking about the frame around their work have become virtually as important as the work itself. Context is firmly established as a site for creative activity and sensitive response. It must be negotiated, reported on, and occasionally sought out. Speakers and projects in this category emphasize a direct address of the context from which they draw content, participation, and in which they seek to create social impact. Discussions will address histories, places, people, issues, social relations, and more.

Publics

“If you are reading (or hearing) this, you are part of its public. So first let me say: Welcome.”
—(Michael Warner, Publics and Counterpublics)

What constitutes a public? How is a public formed? Where is the public in public art? Who is affected in socially engaged art? Who is engaged? Who is excluded? Who benefits? Who is your public(s)? In this line of programming we are investigating the concept of publics (communities, audiences, organizations, strangers, participants, consumers) and the issues relating to working in the public sphere (public art, civic engagement, education, journalism and more).

Institutions

The Institutions line of programming investigates the role of the socially engaged artist within the structure of formal organizations such as museums, governments, corporations, non-profit organizations, and schools. It asks:

What are the dichotomies and tensions for artists working with institutions? How do socially engaged artists (and the institutions who seek to support them) find balance between freedom and compromise; credibility and experimentation; engaging new publics and maintaining old audiences?

Sometimes the institution itself becomes a medium. Who are the leading sculptors of institutions in art and social practice? What is it like to build a new program, organization, idea within an existing institutional context? When does the institution itself become art?

POV 7 / Mass & Limited Production

Integration of Scales – Mass-Produced Plus Locally Made Parts”

by  Stuart Walker

from: Sustainable by Design: Explorations in Theory and Practice

This text can be found in the course book, Design Studies: A Reader

Section Five: 5.1 / Labor, Industrialization, and New Technology    # 52, pg. 354

 

Discussion Leaders: Joel S. & Teressa C.

POV 6 / Sustainability


“Designing for a Safer Future”

by Victor Papanek

 

 

from  The Green Imperative: Natural Design for the Real World pg. 29-37

This text can be found in the course book, Design Studies: A Reader

Section Six /  6.3  Sustainability    # 69, pg. 469

Discussion Leaders: Dan N. & Tim  P.

Barbara Tversky Lecture

Barbara Tversky Lecture “Finding Ideas”

Thursday, May 9, 6:00 pm

White Stag Building Room 15

Renowned cognitive psychologist, Dr. Barbara Tversky has made groundbreaking contributions to the areas of memory, perception, categorization, and spatial cognition. A characteristic of Tversky’s research is a persistent interest in the relations between people’s cognitive systems and the technologies they use to augment and reconstitute them—from cave paintings to scientific diagrams to cartoons to computerized visualization. As a result of making these connections, her work is cited widely by computer scientists, educators, architects, and geographers as well as by her fellow psychologists.   Her lecture, “Finding Ideas” will focus on the relationship between spatial cognition and the technologies we use to visualize information