Course detail
Research Through Art and Design 1
FaVU-4RTA-1Acad. year: 2022/2023
The course consists of lectures followed by seminars. Lectures familiarize students with the historical roots, institutionalization, and current developments of artistic research. In seminars, students engage in a discussion about the production of knowledge in the field of art and about the new avenues that artistic research opens up in this respect. Students develop their ability to recognize and describe research aspects of their work and to articulate research contribution of their artistic practice.
Language of instruction
Number of ECTS credits
Mode of study
Guarantor
Offered to foreign students
Learning outcomes of the course unit
Prerequisites
Co-requisites
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
Assesment methods and criteria linked to learning outcomes
Course curriculum
2. Historical origins and institutionalization of artistic research.
3. Typologies of research in art and design: practice-led research, research-led practice, design research, art-based research, artistic research, research about/for/through art, art about/for/through research.
4. Artistic research as a hybrid practice: convergences and collisions of art and research, specific and singular methods, “singularization of knowledge,” “undisciplining.”
5. “Turning”: educational turn, research turn, “postresearch condition.”
6. Methods of artistic research and artistic research as a method.
7. “Articulations” and “expositions” of artistic research: articulating practice as research, “expositions” of artistic research in Research Catalogue.
Work placements
Aims
Specification of controlled education, way of implementation and compensation for absences
Recommended optional programme components
Prerequisites and corequisites
Basic literature
Recommended reading
Elkins, James, ed. 2009. Artists with PhDs: On the New Doctoral Degree in Studio Art. New Academia Publishing. (EN)
Hannula, Mika, Juha Suoranta, and Tere Vadén. 2005. Artistic Research — Theories, Methods and Practices. Helsinki and Gothenburg: Academy of Fine Arts Helsinki and University of Gothenburg. (EN)
Holert, Tom. 2009. “Art in the Knowledge-Based Polis.” e-flux, Journal #3, February. https://www.e-flux.com/journal/03/68537/art-in-the-knowledge-based-polis/ (EN)
Jobertová, Daniela, and Alice Koubová, eds. 2017. Artistic Research: Is There Some Method? Prague: Academy of Performing Arts (AMU Press). (EN)
Klein, Julian. 2017. “What Is Artistic Research?” JAR — Journal for Artistic Research, April 23. https://www.jar-online.net/what-artistic-research (EN)
Rogoff, Irit. 2008. “Turning.” e-flux, Journal #0, November. https://www.e-flux.com/journal/00/68470/turning/ (EN)
Rogoff, Irit. 2010. “Practicing Research: Singularizing Knowledge.” MaHKUzine: journal of artistic research 9: 37–42. https://issuu.com/hku-online/docs/mahkuzine09_web (EN)
Schwab, Michael. 2019. “Expositionality.” In Artistic Research: Charting a Field in Expansion, edited by Paulo de Assis, and Lucia D`Errico, 27–45. London and New York: Rowman & Littlefield. (EN)
Steyerl, Hito. 2010. “Aesthetics of Resistence? Artistic Research as Discipline and Conflict.” MaHKUzine: journal of artistic research 8: 31–37. https://issuu.com/hku-online/docs/mahkuzine08_web (EN)
Wilson, Mick, and Schelte van Ruiten, eds. 2013. SHARE: Handbook for Artistic Research. ELIA — European League of Institutes of the Arts. (EN)
Classification of course in study plans