ABSTRACT

Visual Participatory Arts Based Research in the Cities maps ontological, aesthetic and ethic differences between humanist and posthumanist arts-based research, while providing insight on methodological orientations to develop arts-based research with frameworks based on process-philosophies.

It is the first book on arts-based research which focuses on the city, adopting a posthumanist approach to the assembled nature of urban environments, where agency is distributed across infrastructures, technologies, spaces, things, and bodies. Chapters one to seven feature a series of studies, situated in different cities in Europe and the Americas, which outline experiences of movement, inhabitancy, interdependence, collaboration, infrastructuring and sensorial re-calibration informed by art practices in film, photography, digital projection, installation, performance and art as social practice. At the core of this book is the idea that aesthetic ecologies of cities do not depend solely on human activity, relying instead on non-logocentric modalities of collective life.

The book is an indispensable tool to researchers, instructors and graduate students in education, the social sciences and the arts aiming to conceive, design and develop projects in arts-based research.

chapter 1|19 pages

Visual participatory arts-based research in the city

Outlining posthumanist approaches

part II|34 pages

Aesthetic Practices

part III|47 pages

Ethics of Participation

chapter 7|19 pages

The Lynden Sculpture Garden's Call and Response Program

To wonder, encounter and emplace through the radical Black imagination

chapter 8|17 pages

A poetics of opacity

Towards a new ethics of participation in gallery-based art projects with young people

chapter |9 pages

Epilogue

The remaking of collective life in (post)pandemic times