Weekly Twitter Round-Up



Fall is definitely in the air, and the flexibility and long days of summer freedom are certainly fading fast. I spent much of my weekend working on projects, proposals, and conference papers for this academic term, along with all of the other mundane organizational tasks that so many of you are also dealing with as the new year takes shape. In many ways, the cooler weather helps ease this transition and I have already been enjoying getting into a routine and also having a chance to meet and get to know many of the new students enrolled in my lectures and seminars. The Twitterverse has also been brisk with activity, and I am glad to see so many new arts and visual culture based and academic players starting to show up and take advantage of what this dynamic social networking platform has to offer. Got to run-- Sunday pot roast is almost done in the oven!-- but grab a cup of coffee and enjoy a few of my favourite tweets from this past week:

Uncreative Writing, Unoriginal Genius, and the New Literary Plagiarism




The Guggenheim Connection: Fame, Riches and a Masquerade: As painted by the authorities




Views: #Highered isn't dying, but radical change is on the way




Untangling the web: how the internet will grow through rites of passage  




Damien Hirst diamond skull is perfect emblem for "Make Wall Street Pay" activism campaign




Florida art dealer accused of faking Monets, Pollocks, Rothkos




The future influences the present just as much as the past.#Nietzsche

Art School, Confidentially Speaking


While many are familiar with the movie inspired by the same name, Art School Confidential
was originally produced as a comic book poking fun at the art school experience. 

As the season of art exhibition openings and festivals gets under way along with a new academic year, I wanted to share a catalogue essay I had the privilege of writing for the faculty art show of the Department of Fine Arts at Kwantlen Polytechnic University. Opening this Friday, September 16th at the Cloverdale studio from 6-9pm, “Art School Confidential: Then and Now” features an intriguing set of themes related to the art school experience, but also presents them in a powerful framework that juxtaposes fantastic art projects from the participants' past (when they too were in art school) with art works from present-day practices. 

Having read over the summer the complete version of Steven Henry Madoff’s important edited book of essays and interviews contributing to conversations about the future of art school, Art School (Propositions for the 21rst Century), I began my observations through the lens of those debates.  As both an instructive and highly conceptual show, the final exhibition raises many critical questions about what the art school experience can offer to both its students and the broader public. 

 *note* Where possible, I have included direct links to personal websites and/or CVs all of the artists featured in my essay—the individual art works can be viewed at the Cloverdale show and will also have an afterlife as a virtual exhibition (link to be posted when available). 
  


ART SCHOOL, CONFIDENTIALLY SPEAKING
Dorothy Barenscott

“No school is a school without an idea.”
Steven Henry Madoff, Art School (Propositions for the 21st Century)

What is it about art school, and the art school experience in particular, that signals such mystery, fascination, and fear? Perhaps it has something to do with the enigma of the artist’s role in our modern world—the power possessed to extract, focus, and represent the best and worst of who we are— or maybe it has more to do with the wider question of what a liberal arts education delivers in an increasingly utilitarian and results-oriented university environment.  However we approach the question, the spectre of art school conjures notions of alchemy, a touch of danger, and the profound capacity for transformation.    

In the past, art education based on the European model was forged in the tradition of the atelier or “workshop” method where apprentices were taught a valuable skill set from a principle master. Starting as early as the Greek era and gaining force and recognition in the late medieval period, the focus of art making was based upon a system of empiricism and the handing down of abilities to reproduce observed phenomena. Mimesis ruled the curriculum, as did the ability to follow a strict set of rules for art-making.

Over time, art schools have evolved to facilitate a much more subjective endeavour, foregrounding individual creative interpretation and discovery, together with a more issues based approach to the making of art objects that takes into account the long history and theory of art. Along with this shift, the focus towards group evaluation and negotiated feedback via the studio crit now predominate. For some students, this signals a difficult challenge. This is perhaps best characterized in the film from which this exhibition takes its title, Art School Confidential (2006), where the protagonist must adapt his own vision about what it means to be an artist to those of his instructors, his fellow students, and the world around him. In a favourite line from the movie, Professor Sandiford, an acerbic art school instructor played so brilliantly by John Malkovich, exposes the fatal error made by many an aspiring artist:  “Now, everyone don't be so hard on Jerome. He is attempting to achieve the impossible. He is trying to sing in his own voice using someone else's vocal cords.” In this sense, the process of falling apart or going to pieces and then coming back together again appears to typify the experience of many art school students.

A special chapter was even recently devoted to the mysteries of the art school “crit” in Sarah Thornton’s wildly popular ethnography Seven Days in the Art World (2008), exploring the many subcultures constituting today’s contemporary art scene. Therein, her interview with famed CalArts studio instructor and artist John Baldessari reveals something elemental about the ritual of group critique utilized by almost all North American art schools.  “Art comes out of failure…you have to try things out” he explains, adding “You can’t sit around, terrified of being incorrect, saying, ‘I won’t do anything until I do a masterpiece.’ Students need to see that art is made by human beings just like them.” 

In this exhibition, we bear witness to objects created precisely within this context of vulnerability, transformation, and the very human process of experimentation. These are faculty and department associate and support projects, past and present, which constitute the ambitious and multiple roads to success forged in art school and beyond.  The interrelated themes of the exhibition, much like a student’s rear view at the end of their art school years, are set within the conceptual frame of “Then” and “Now” orienting viewers through the gallery space.

The passage of time is marked out in a number of provocative ways. At its most literal, we see the material and unintended marks of deterioration in Maria Anna Parolin’s "Carega" Chair—the consequence of an art student’s rookie mistake of not framing and storing art work properly—but also in her more recent project Consumed Series, which deals with the juxtaposition of littered manmade and organic objects. At its most symbolic, the theme of time is played out in theory-based transitions within long established practices—Frank Fan’s early ceramic works give way to an exploration of the semiotics of pot making in Times River, while the spirit of collaboration and human desire to shape the natural world unites Scott McBride’s special interest in new media art with Kent Anderson’s bold experiments in sculpture in Suspended Wall.  
The interrogation of identity so key to the art school experience is likewise a principle theme of the show. We see approaches moving from the more distinctly personal and individuated, as in Robert Gelineau’s early Untitled double portraits set alongside his more recent explorations into the transgression of socially constructed boundaries in How Do I Look?, together with Paulo Majano’s interrogation of “uncanny” figurations in Valley Woman, Man and Kira Wu’s poignant and intimate image capture of her mother in Woman with the Bracelet.  Sibeal Foyle’s timely My Sister in Benghazi series bridges the personal with the historical, reflecting on comparative experiences of violence and the view of war at a distance. This emphasis on identity and the contours of history—critical to an understanding of how we construct our collective experience—is also present in other components of the exhibition, played out in Eryne Donahue’s study of memory preservation in Family History, Merrell Gerber’s recollection of dark moments in human activity with Faggots, and Nicole Brabant’s reflections on human/animal correlation in Hive Study.

As an exhibition seeking to instruct as much as it seeks to question, the themes linking Art School Confidential also reveal traces of knowledge gained through years of sustained art practice. Nancy Duff’s The Artist’s Studio: A Real Allegory (after Courbet) confronts emerging artists with the weight of art history and the cult of artistic “genius”, while Excerpts from the Artist Taxonomy Series recognizes the present-day conditions of artists’ many artificial worlds. Traces of this wisdom and dialogue also emerge in the installation of Alison MacTaggart’s interactive Promising Objects examining notions of invention and problem-solving set alongside the visible struggle to mediate traditional painting within a post-industrial context in Elizabeth Barnes’ Proliferation of Possible Plausibilities.  We are still reminded, however, of the instructive dimension of art objects through David Lloyd’s Candle Lanterns, initially conceived as class demonstration pieces for beginner’s projects.  Other works reveal the consistency of exploring core themes over the span of a career. This is seen in Ana Black’s investigations into the conflict between viewer and performer and the model of experience in Teen Beauty and Audition Series, together with Terry Sawatzky’s kinetic experimentations culminating in the mash-up between past and present 3D and 2D forms in the Albatross Series.

What then is the place of the art school today and what role does art education play in the shifting and rapidly changing world that we inhabit?  We find clues in the exhibition through Kent Anderson’s ironic wall sculpture Bright New Idea, reminding and even warning us of grand claims to ingenuity. Still, Scott McBride’s whimsical Sketch for a Video advises students of the value associated with play, humour, and “fun”—hinting at key components to success and longevity in an arts career. But more than ever before, these are critical questions to ask as we all seek creative and out-of-the -box solutions to an accumulation of unanticipated and pressing global challenges. At the same time, artists themselves face a confluence of institutional change, including the increasing pressure to professionalize early, the growing influence of contemporary art market trends, and the revolution in new media and information technology (together with their many new theories)—which all threaten to transform the terms of current art making practices.

Most recently, these issues were probed by poet and writer Ann Lauterbach in a poignant essay “The Thing Seen: Reimagining Arts Education for Now” in Steven Henry Madoff’s Art School: Propositions for the 21st Century (2009). At the conclusion of her treatise, Lauterbach asserts the urgency and importance of art education to the vision and fabric of democratic social space: “How do we inform the public that art is not a luxury, not mere entertainment, that artists are not spoiled children of an indulgent culture? Perhaps most important, how do we slow down our responses so that our opinions are aligned to judgements that are informed by what we know? How do we convince the public that neither complexity nor difficulty in art—in thinking about and responding to art—is a formula for estrangement but an invitation to imagine solutions to seemingly intractable problems and predicaments in contemporary life?”

For Lauterbach, as indeed for the multifaceted participants in this exhibition, the answer lies not just in the creation of critical and provocative art objects, but also in the facilitation of open and free-flowing conversations in the studio and classroom that generate new ways of seeing and challenging what students encounter in their world. “To teach persons to make art,” writes Lauterbach “is to teach them to resist the commodification of their wills and desires, to use flexibility and ingenuity in the face of adversarial forces, to build a capacity for the attention and response to which is not like them or belongs to them.” That is the real secret, the mysterious alchemy and transformational power of the art school experience represented by this exhibition. It is a secret that continues to play an equal role in art school’s great power and in its perceived and sometimes necessary danger. 

Weekly Twitter Round-Up



Happy new semester and welcome back to my humble weekly Twitter round-up. Fresh from summer vacation and having navigated the always jam-packed first week of classes, I have also resumed more regular activity on Twitter after over a month of self-imposed limited access. My ambitious plans to blog while in Europe were partially thwarted by irregular access to the Internet, but in the end, it turned out to be a welcome relief to recharge and draw back from both the blogosphere and the Twitterverse. Everyone needs a tech break, right? Back and refreshed, I look forward to continuing my musings on this first anniversary of my original blog start-up date.

 Today of course is the tenth anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York and the Twitterverse has naturally been fully abuzz with links, personal reflection, and feeds from the many commemoration and ceremonies taking place today around the world. It is interesting to think how differently the events would have been experienced and remembered with the advent of social media, and at times it is hard to believe that it was ten whole years since the incident took place. Like many of you, I spent some time remembering the events of that day in my own life. I was entering the final year of my Masters degree program at UBC and was excited to attend a much anticipated graduate seminar in the history and theory of photography with Dr. John O’Brian. I had woken up early the morning of September 11th to go out for a walk on Kitsilano beach, and I was first made aware of the attacks when I began listening to the morning radio on my portable player. Once I realized what was happening, I ran back home just in time to turn on the TV and see the second plane hit the WTC. Later that day, several of us students gathered for our seminar with John and talked about the events. As the semester unfolded, I processed my thoughts in a seminar paper I wrote concerning the thousands of photographic images that circulated after the event. That paper turned into my first journal publication with Postmodern Culture Journal and still brings me back to that time ten years ago whenever I read it. 

Now as we begin another term, I have included a few tweets that deal with 9/11, along with a few other of my favourites from around the Twitterverse. Here’s to new beginnings and a successful academic term.

The computer that predicts the future 




Adam Harrison Levy: On the controversial 9/11 image known as ”The Falling Man”



"Brands take over the artist" Interview with Street Artist JR




How do we prepare kids for jobs we can't imagine yet? Teach imagination 




Teaching 9/11: A Decade Later, What Do Textbooks Say?




"Dinner with Henry Miller", a 30 min. documentary meal with the 87 year-old writer in 1987




Google results as Zagat entries 

Welcome Back! Top 10 New Term Checklist


Yes, it is already that time once again. Welcome back! A new semester, a new set of classes, and a new set of goals and expectations. But do you have a plan for how to navigate the messy first few weeks of class? Like many of you, I literally walked off a plane from summer vacation Monday night and headed onto campus by Tuesday afternoon. No doubt that the energy of the first week will help many of us make it through the jet lag and uneasy transition to sitting in the classroom, but this checklist should also help organize those pesky new term details. Good luck and remember to soak up the remains of summer while they last!

1. Check your classroom listings: this is imperative to do, especially if you attend a large university or have classes that take place on more than one campus (yes, I always have students at the beginning of each term who make this mistake). It never hurts either to take a dry run finding your listed classrooms ahead of time and even scoping out the most advantageous seats and plug-ins for laptops. It sure beats the frustration and rushing around on the first day of class to make sure you find the place you are supposed to be. Online campus maps are also terrific for pre-planning, so Google your university’s name and map to begin the process.

2. Read over syllabi carefully: A syllabus is like a contract and establishes the mutual expectations for a class between student and professor. One of the first things you want to check immediately are the dates for any midterms and finals. These dates are written in stone, and if you cannot make them because of other plans (and no, a trip to Hawaii or a friend's wedding are not legitimate reasons to miss an exam), consider dropping the class.  Remember, deadlines are your responsibility. Also, make sure to check your syllabus before emailing your professor with a question about the course. I cannot tell you how many questions I get each term that are clearly answered by the syllabus. Consider keeping a copy with you whenever you attend the class.

3. Get your books (eventually): Ask any senior undergraduate or graduate student about purchasing books, and they will no doubt tell you what nobody ever reveals to you in your first year-- wait to buy your books. Yes, I said wait. And although some of you might find it really tough to resist the urge to line up with hundreds of other students and spend hours to buy books during the first week of class (something that always amuses me), you will have the luxury of shopping in relative peace and quiet and perhaps save some money if you do. First, it often helps to wait until after you go to your first class and find out if you need all of the books listed at the bookstore (many times, you don’t). Another option is to wait and check the titles and prices of the books at the online university bookstore and see if you can find them for better prices elsewhere. I have seen students make ridiculous savings buying textbooks on AmazonChapters or Abebooks.

4. Check on-line course material: Almost all courses these days have an online component through tools like WebCT or Moodle where professors post links, images, class material and provide discussion boards etc... Make sure to check either on your syllabus or through a quick preview of your personal university homepage to see if your course also has an online component. Most institutions have a personalized portal which links you directly to any online connection to a class. Make sure to check the online material frequently and take note of any additional information related to assignments and/or exams that are often posted there.

5. Note important dates and deadlines: Along with the syllabus, it is important to bookmark or make a copy of your university’s dates and deadlines so that you are clear when add/drop dates, holidays, tuition deadlines, registration deadlines, graduation deadlines, final exams, etc.. etc.. occur. I usually just cut and paste these deadlines directly into my day planner or check them periodically to make certain I do not show up to teach a class during reading week J

6. Double check your registration: The saddest thing is when a student finds an “F” on their transcript at the end of the term because they erroneously remained registered for a class that they “meant” to drop. Be warned, not all universities will listen to your tale of woe, so do yourself a favour and double/triple/quadruple check your registration before the final add/drop deadline to make sure you are not registered for classes other than those you are actually planning to attend.

7. Purchase school supplies: I admit that this is my favourite thing to do each term. And yes, I was that geek in grade school who was happy in August when the school supplies showed up in the stores! Remember too that you can charge a killing if you are that one student with a mini stapler on the day assignments are due in class.

8. Look into taping your lectures: I encourage students who find it difficult to keep up with note-taking or enjoy having another listen to ideas raised in classroom lectures and discussions to consider taping lectures. Some things to keep in mind—first, make sure to check and see if it is OK with your professor before taping the first time (you need their permission); and second, see if your professor is already having the service done by another source. Some universities provide a lecture taping service and playback for large lecture courses. You can also check my blog post on this topic for tips and different approaches to the task.

9. Make a transportation plan: You might be surprised how easily and affordably you can create a carpool or learn about better ways to get yourself to classes by talking to fellow students and/or checking with your university’s website for resources (many schools help arrange car pooling). Also check your transit provider's website for routing plans-- many of them give alternative (and shorter!) suggestions getting from Point A to B.

10. Pay your tuition: Don’t forget—it is crazy how many students do.

On Summer Vacation....See you in August!

Summer afternoon - summer afternoon; to me those have always been
the two most beautiful words in the English language.
-- Henry James

Ah summer... it is calling to me. 
I will be taking a much needed break from blogging over the next several weeks to complete personal research and writing projects and plan for the following academic year. For students who are interested in more information about the new courses I will be teaching in the fall, please click here. Please feel free as well to continue posting and sharing links on my blog's Facebook page and/or connect with me on Twitter. I will check and contribute to both regularly. I know many of you will also be traveling to some great art cities over the summer, so I invite you to let us all live vicariously through you and upload pictures of any fabulous places you visit to the Facebook page. It is always a treat to see first hand accounts of places and art works we have studied in class. In turn, I will do the same and resume blogging in August when I make my way over to Europe for the month.
Wishing you all a wonderful summer!

Roy Lichtenstein, Girl with Ball (1961)
(courtesy MOMA)