Weekly Twitter Round Up

Banksy delivers an inspired art project to Occupy London-- see tweet below.

Just returned from D.C. and sorting through the Monday morning avalanche of email. The trip was fantastic and well worth the ridiculous flight schedule I was assigned (two transfers both ways, one of which was delayed and landed me in Phoenix Arizona of all places for an extra night!). While I catch up, I wanted to pass along some of my favourite tweets of the week. I also wanted to wish a Happy American Thanksgiving to my friends south of the border—I am indeed jealous for the extra days off this late in the semester!

Who knew the last 5 min. of a writing session were so important? Check out this article that explains why



Why they Buy - and Why They Will Buy From You 




Adbusters editorial in Washington Post on the future of #OCCUPYWALLSTREET:  #OWS #OCCUPY



Art to download is little more than dead-eyed commercialism 




A grab bag of great avant-garde 20th century discs for you to snag thru the back door [MP3]



20 Artworks Inspired by the Occupy Wall Street Movement




Idea! Book deal. Wine. Toast. Type. Wine. Drunk dial @AlecBaldwinNap. Pulitzer dream. Reread. Stare. Delete all. Refund advance. Tweet.

Weekly Twitter Round Up

Twitter pictures streamed in this weekend from MOCA's Annual Gala
art directed by Marina Abramovic. Controversy circulated all week around the event (see Tweet below)

Now that the craziness of midterm marking is winding down and my short bout with the flu is subsiding, I am finding some time to enjoy the gorgeous fall weather we have been having here in Vancouver. Nothing like a weekend spent catching up with loved ones and indulging in the luxury of reading the weekend papers cover to cover to help recharge the batteries! I am also looking forward to another conference trip this week- this time to Washington D.C. to attend and give a paper at the ASEEES (Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies). I hope to get a visit to the National Gallery and maybe stroll the Corcoran Gallery of Art while there. Here are some favourite tweets to check out-- have a great week!

Read the Full Text of Yvonne Rainer’s Letter Denouncing Marina Abramovic’s LA MoCA Gala



Great panel discussion on the future of cinema as it relates to technology and exhibition via@VIFFest



The world's most expensive photographs - in pictures




The myth of the tech-savvy student




Call for Writers | The New Culture Wars: What’s at Stake? | Art21




In case you missed it: Who occupied @museummodernart better? Diego Rivera or #occupymuseums#ows



How YOU can protect street art history 

Focus on Research: HackCollege and Other Blogs That Help You Work Smarter, Not Harder

Over the course of an average week, I meet with at least one or two students who are struggling with time management and organizing a mounting pile of assignments. This is not an uncommon scenario, especially as many students feel overwhelmed with the task of figuring out for themselves how to accomplish many small tasks with firm deadlines. Since beginning this blog, I have made it a point to gather as many resources as possible to help students bring some direction and focus to the process of preparing for exams, writing papers, and learning how to navigate the differences between lecture and seminar classes. Still, I have also found that it is sometimes best to get this information directly from other students working their way through the challenges of university. Enter the world of student blogs.

HackCollege provides daily doses of tips and
useful info for university students written by
university students.
Perhaps the most useful, relevant, well-written (and humorous) blog I refer students to is HackCollege. Their motto "Work Smarter, Not Harder" is one of my favourite all time mantras and the student-run site is fully devoted to revealing "insider" tips and tricks to help get fellow students through the academic process. If you understand the original meaning of the term "hacker"-- an individual who is a clever and creative programmer and part of a subculture of individuals looking to best the system, you start to see the guiding ethos of a blog like this. Some recent posts such as "You Suck at Studying: 3 Lessons from a College Hacker," "Autopilot Your Meals for Cheap,"and "How to Find a Job in a Down Economy" give you a taste of what the site offers in terms of useful and pragmatic advice. Hack College also has their own YouTube channel and can be followed via their Facebook page or on Twitter.

Other similar and useful student-created blogs worth checking out include:

StudyHacks: originally launched by an MIT graduate student in 2007, the blog features useful content about becoming a successful and well-balanced (read happy) university student.

Studenthacks.org: sporadically updated, but retains archived content full of useful tips and strategies for students.

PhinisheD.org: primarily for graduate students writing theses but also very useful information, resources, and forums for all levels of university study. Don't let the retro-formatting of the site fool you-- this site literally saved me during my dissertation writing years!-- as it continues to help those braving the final years of grad school.

A motto for life, not just academia.
No doubt there is something refreshing and more authentic about  learning of the reality of academia from your own peers. This includes professors by the way-- I am an avid follower of ProfHacker, the Chronicle of Education's informative and popular blog devoted to disseminating tips about teaching and career management, featuring very candid posts from those working within academia about the trials and challenges of working within the university system (for any of you contemplating a career in grad school and beyond, I highly recommend a peak at this site from time to time!). Just remember, the best tips are usually the ones that help bring balance, simplicity, and more focus to your life. Work smarter, not harder.

New Course for Spring 2012: Art of the Historical Avant-Garde

As registration for Spring 2012 academic courses begins, I have been fielding questions regarding new courses I will be teaching in January. In addition to previously taught courses which I will be instructing again, FPA 111: Issues in Fine and Performing Arts (SFU) and ARTH 1130:Introduction to Film Studies (Kwantlen), I will also be involved with teaching a new upper level seminar—see detailed description below. Once again I am looking forward to a dynamic and engaging term in all classes!

Kwantlen Polytechnic University (Thursdays 4:00-6:50pm, Fir D128)
This seminar examines the shifting field of visual art and culture in Europe and North America during the first half of the twentieth century (c. 1900-1955) with special emphasis given to the movements of the historical avant-garde. Considering these major movements (such as Fauvism, Futurism, Expressionism, Cubism, Dada, Surrealism) in the context of the social, economic and political upheavals of this complex and multi-faceted time period, key to the course will be the broader question of modernity itself and its transformation through a time of radical technological, social and political change. 

Blindman. Ed. Henri-Pierre Roche, Beatrice Wood, 
and Marcel Duchamp. New York, 1917.

Topics such as the social and representative meanings of abstraction, the internationalization of art production, the development of modernism and its attendant theories, and the impact of new technologies on the production and dissemination of art objects will be explored. And while the seminar itself will be organized around the familiar “isms” that have historically constructed the canon of avant-garde studies, careful consideration will be given to the fabricated nature of these designations, reading instances of art practice for aesthetic significance together with connections and responses to specific historical and social developments. Traditional media such as painting, drawing and sculpture will be examined alongside the newer media of photography, assemblage, film and collage.



Weekly Twitter Round Up

Discovered via Twitter this week: Modern CuCoo Clock (see tweet below) 
Marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, pause to sleep, marking, marking, marking, pause to eat, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, pause to check Twitter, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, marking, (you get the point...)


The 'starving artist' stereotype is officially over according to new study 




Amazing faceted modern clock




Cooper Union, famously tuition-free, may not be so much longer




Why do academics hog conversations?




10 Contemporary Performance Artists You Should Know




PDFs of Michel De Certeau's great The Practice of Everyday Life, Vol 1 and Vol 2



Protests Aim to "Shut Down" Goldman Sachs-Owned Art School, Money Pours in for Ai Weiwei, and More Top Stories