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Output details

34 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory

Falmouth University

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Output 75 of 95 in the submission
Output title

Should ecological thinking localise education for the visual arts?

Type
E - Conference contribution
DOI
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Name of conference/published proceedings
Association of Independent Art Schools
Volume number
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Issue number
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First page of article
1
ISSN of proceedings
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Year of publication
2009
URL
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Number of additional authors
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Additional information

"This paper offers analyses of the theoretical and logistical outcomes of greater emphasis on localisation in the higher education visual arts infrastructure. Design, even in the networked information economy of a sustainable ecology, remains dependent on personal networking and social capital which have rendered ‘success’ a national, rather than transnational, paradigm. This industrial model carries an associated networking cost – the physical movement of individuals. Much current thought on value and market worth remains ideologically subscribed to the industrial network economy and suffers similar network-based costs.

For smaller institutions, often geographically isolated, this ‘industrial hangover’ disrupts engagement with design practices within national economies where creative industries are focused on the larger conurbations. A distributed design intelligence in the networked information economy encourages activity’s localisation. Commitment to distributed design makes institutional change the principal dynamic for HE’s sustainability. Visual arts and ecological thought must have a symbiotic relationship to prosper. Recent government calls for HE to reduce its carbon footprint 50% by 2020 represent an increased awareness that cultural and infrastructural innovation must emerge from the universities not as 'subject' or tacit knowledge but as a transformative arts engagement at the core of educational practice - questioning the way we live!

Interdisciplinary
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Cross-referral requested
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Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
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Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
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