ABSTRACT

Focusing on a unique arena, Thinking Through Art takes an innovative look at artists’ experiences of undertaking doctorates and asks: If the making of art is not simply the formulation of an object but is also the formation of complex ideas then what effect does academic enquiry have on art practice?

Using twenty-eight pictures, never before seen outside the artists’ universities, Thinking Through Art focuses on art produced in higher educational environments and considers how the material product comes about through a process of conceiving and giving form to abstract thought. It further examines how this form, which is research art sits uneasily within academic circles, and yet is uniquely situated outside the gallery system.

The journal articles, from eminent scholars, artists, philosophers, art historians and cultural theorists, demonstrate the complexity of interpreting art as research, and provide students and scholars with an invaluable resource for their art and cultural studies courses.

 

part |72 pages

Introduction to Part 1

chapter |20 pages

Art and theoria

chapter |11 pages

Interrupting the artist

Theory, practice and topology in Sartre's aesthetics

chapter |9 pages

Concrete abstractions and intersemiotic translations

The legacy of Della Volpe

chapter |13 pages

Repeat: entity and ground

Visual arts practice as critical differentiation

chapter |14 pages

The virtually new

Art, consciousness and form

part |5 pages

Introduction to Part 2

chapter |11 pages

Sidekick

chapter |10 pages

Painting

Poignancy and ethics

chapter |13 pages

Poesis

chapter |16 pages

Decolonising methods

Reflecting upon a practice-based doctorate

part |63 pages

Introduction to Part 3

chapter |11 pages

Hybrid texts and academic authority

The wager in creative practice research

chapter |13 pages

Derrida's ‘two paintings in painting'

A note on art, discourse and the trace

chapter |15 pages

A method of search for reality

Research and research degrees in art and design

chapter |7 pages

Afterword

On beyond research and new knowledge