Keywordlanguage

  • Jane Bacon & Vida L Midgelow Creative Articulations ProcessEmbodied Awareness and Creative Languaging

    Jane Bacon & Vida L Midgelow Creative Articulations ProcessEmbodied Awareness and Creative Languaging

    A workshop introduction to ‘Creative Articulations Process’, for working with practice research offered to PhD candidates attending the week long teaching intensive, Univeristy of Chichester, June 2019.

  • Eleanor Bauer No Time for Judgement / More Time for Judgement

    Eleanor Bauer No Time for Judgement / More Time for Judgement

    In conversation with colleague Ellen Söderhult, Eleanor Bauer discusses her PhD Artist Research Project, choreo|graphy, addressing the relationship between thought in language and thought in dance through various metaphorical operations regarding vocabulary, syntax, grammar, structure, and culture.

  • Marie Fahlin Wridden– wringing writing and riding

    Marie Fahlin Wridden– wringing writing and riding

    Wridden is a text collage, join(t)ing the concepts of writing and riding using past (was wridden yesterday) and future perfect (will have been wridden tomorrow) tense to reflect on the now of writing and riding (choreographing). The title Wridden also alludes to the Swedish word ‘vriden’; twisted or wringed. The text collage uses twisting, turning and wringing; letters, words, concepts and images. The circle and semicircle, broken circles and double circles, will be used as visual forms to bend the readers eye and the writer’s I. Wridden is a form of writing that simultaneously looks at itself as it is in the midst of becoming, its own past and future, now. Involved is: The rider. The reader. The eye. The writer. The I.

  • Maipelo Gabang 10 Things to Considerif You are an Artist of Colour Entering an Academic Research Institution

    Maipelo Gabang 10 Things to Considerif You are an Artist of Colour Entering an Academic Research Institution

    These 10 Considerations are offered as a resource to anyone entering, or already ensconced in, an Academic Research Institution, a reminder that inclusion is something to work on together, all the time and in every way imaginable. The text has been informed by the written reflections of seven Southern African Academics/Artists of Colour, who prefer to remain anonymous. It was developed using the 10 Statements structure from Everybodys Toolbox. everybodystoolbox.net/index.php?title=STATEMENTS

  • Sara Giddens Some Thoughts about Writing…for Those about to Embark on a Practice-Based PhD

    Sara Giddens Some Thoughts about Writing…for Those about to Embark on a Practice-Based PhD

    A PhD demands languaging. As makers and researchers, we must find ways that speak of, alongside and out of the body, particularly within such a text-based academic economy. As such, this writing is intended as an invitation. An invitation to consider the need to write about and from practice, from a makers’ point of view. To wrestle with and adequately articulate experiential somatically based practices, so that the body doesn’t simply disappear.

  • Alys Longley Reflections on Smudge Skittlean inventory of resources entangling artistic practice and writing

    Alys Longley Reflections on Smudge Skittlean inventory of resources entangling artistic practice and writing

    In artistic research, the value of intuitive, playful and unpredictable studio methods is well accepted (Ellis 2016, Melrose 2007). In some circumstances, traditional academic forms of writing and the values underpinning them – of proof, explanation, analysis and rational linear argument, may constrain, rather than enable, creative research. This resource reflects on writing practices that could be particularly suited to practice-led researchers, emphasizing the vitality of language and interdisciplinary approaches merging writing with drawing, photography or page design which offer playful alternatives to the pre-set rules of thesis structure.

    Smudge Skittle (Longley 2018), explores methods of writing that support studio practice through a series of writing tasks, based around 10 provocations for artist-researchers. In 2018, it has been published as 1) A deck of cards 2) A digital website/game 3) the present text in which I discuss this resource in relation to its critical context in the field of artistic research.

  • Susan Melrose with Stefanie Sachsenmaier Writing ‘Practice’ /Practising/ ‘Writing’(in the doctoral research context)

    Susan Melrose with Stefanie Sachsenmaier Writing ‘Practice’ /Practising/ ‘Writing’(in the doctoral research context)

    In this paper we outline some of the issues involved in the ‘practice research’ context and make a few suggestions as to ways to tackle these in a Practice-as-Research (PaR) undertaking. We begin by writing about the ‘problem with writing’ for all researchers whose primary interest lies in creative processes, and about the question of research metapractices. We then focus on those ‘mixed-mode’1 research metapractices and how they might be addressed in the combined PaR submission. Our interim conclusion is that research writing is best produced dialogically, with the ongoing

  • Amaara Raheem Speaking Dancer in-residence

    Amaara Raheem Speaking Dancer in-residence

    Speaking Dancer is a ‘persona’. She emerged from my practice, from years of moving, and speaking, and perhaps she also emerged from my art/life relations. As a female, brown, immigrant, independent, dance artist I am of multiple belongings. I have strong allegiances with more than one place, inhabit more than one ‘home’, more than one social, cultural, disciplinary belonging. My experience of ‘home’ and ‘identity’ – as a person, as a dancer – is not fixed, rather continually made and unmade by relations.

  • John-Paul Zaccarini A writing practice

    John-Paul Zaccarini A writing practice

    This practice has its roots in psychoanalytic procedure. It posits creative writing as a useful way to situate the artist with the field of research, specifically using memoir to trace the genealogy of the research question.

  • 10Nivel2019
  • Researching (in/as) Motion978-952-353-012-6 © 2019 Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki Accessibility statement
  • ADiE is a partnership between Zodiak Centre for New Dance, Kiasma Theatre Museum and University of the Arts Helsinki (FI), Weld and Stockholm University of the Arts (SE), and Dance4, University of Chichester and Middlesex University (UK), funded by Erasmus+.