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The Hope of Something Different. Eco-centricity in Art and Education

Authors :
Chris Fremantle
Source :
The Journal of Public Space. :67-86
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
City Space Architecture, 2020.

Abstract

Educational theorist Gert Biesta proposes that we need to be “in the world without occupying the centre of the world.” (Biesta, 2017, p. 3). This injunction provides a frame with which to interrogate the hybrid practice of ecoart. This practice can be characterised by a concern for the relations of living things to each other, and to their environments. Learning in order to be able to act is critical. One aspect is collaboration with experts (whether those are scientists and environmental managers or inhabitants, including more-than-human). Another is building ‘commons’ and shared understanding being more important than novelty. Grant Kester has argued that there is an underlying paradigm shift in ‘aesthetic autonomy’, underpinned by a ‘trans-disciplinary interest in collective knowledge production’. (2013, np). This goes beyond questions of interdisciplinarity and its variations to raise more fundamental questions of agency. Drawing on the work of key practitioner/researchers (Jackie Brookner (1945-2015); Collins and Goto Studio, Helen Mayer Harrison (1927-2018) and Newton Harrison (b 1932)) and theorists (Bishop, Kester, Kagan) the meaning and implications of not ‘occupying the centre of the world’ will be explored as a motif for an art which can act in public space.

Details

ISSN :
22069658
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Public Space
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........61c7c42a310aaf96eb4ae1cc39704980
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.32891/jps.v5i4.1385