Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Ricardo Basbaum's upcoming artist residency and exhibition at School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University

Art and  Education

October 01, 2014

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Ricardo Basbaum, collective-conversation, 2013. Text, voices, live reading, live recording (with Daniela Mattos, Faia Díaz, Jesus Lopez Vilar [Vili], María Asunción, Arufe Carredano, Pedro de Llano, Ricardo Basbaum, Rocío Figueroa Guisande). Exhibition view from diagrams, Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Photo: Mark Ritchie. Courtesy CGAC.
School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University

Ricardo Basbaum: The Production of the Artist as a Collective Conversation

October 16–December 13, 2014

Opening reception: Wednesday, October 15, 7pm

School for the Contemporary Arts 
Simon Fraser University
Audain Gallery
Goldcorp Centre for the Arts
149 W. Hastings Street 
Vancouver
Canada

www.sfu.ca
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The Audain Gallery and the Audain Visual Artist-in-Residence program of the School for Contemporary Arts is pleased to welcome Ricardo Basbaum as an artist-in-residence this fall. This coincides with an exhibition of Basbaum's work, The Production of the Artist as a Collective Conversation, in the Audain Gallery.

Since the early 1990s, Brazilian artist Ricardo Basbaum has incited artistic encounters by inviting people to engage with and respond to systems of symbols and rules embedded in objects, scripts, diagrams, maps and games. In his projects, Basbaum quotes artistic and graphic communication tactics that are both vernacular and abstract, thereby easy to learn, interpret and memorize. Through interaction with these fluid sets of visual and linguistic terms for the production of an artwork, Basbaum seeks to collectively consider the material, social and spatial membrane between artist, contemporary art system, art object and participant.

The Production of the Artist as a Collective Conversation is an emerging exhibition that frames the gallery as a critical site of pedagogical and artistic production. Over its eight-week installation, the project will accumulate conversations, experiences, and audio, visual and print documents initiated by Basbaum with students and invested publics.

Basbaum lives and works in Rio de Janeiro. His work has been exhibited at Logan Center Gallery, Chicago; Secession, Vienna; The Showroom, London; Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela; the 30th Bienal de São Paulo; 2012 Busan Biennale; and dOCUMENTA 12. Basbaum is the author of Manual do artista-etc (Azougue, 2013) and Além da pureza visual (Zouk, 2007). He is also a professor at the Instituto de Artes, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, and was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago (2013).


Artist talk

Wednesday, October 15, 6pm, free
Djavad Mowafaghian World Art Centre
Goldcorp Centre for the Arts World Art Studio
149 W. Hastings Street
Vancouver

collective-conversation
Wednesday, October 29, 6pm
Audain Gallery
Goldcorp Centre for the Arts
149 W. Hastings Street
Vancouver
As part of his residency, Ricardo Basbaum will teach a course within SFU's School for the Contemporary Arts with Sabine Bitter titled "The production of the artist as collective conversation." The course will provoke a conversation amongst students through reading, writing, editing and speaking, on how the role and image of the artist is constructed. The culmination of this collective conversation will be performed live in the Audain Gallery. A recording of the performance will then be installed in the gallery for the remainder of the exhibition.

Exhibition tour
with Amy Kazymerchyk and Sabine Bitter
Saturday November 22, 1pm, free
Audain Gallery
Goldcorp Centre for the Arts
149 W. Hastings Street
Vancouver
Join us for a tour of the exhibition led by curator Amy Kazymerchyk and SCA assistant professor Sabine Bitter. Afterward, walk with us to the Satellite Gallery for a 2pm tour of The Port, led by curator Cate Rimmer, then continue to Contemporary Art Gallery for a 3pm tour of Shimabuku, led by director Nigel Prince. 


Would you like to participate in an artistic experience?
Ongoing throughout the exhibition Audain Gallery
Would you like to participate in an artistic experience with Ricardo Basbaum's NBP (New Bases for Personality) object? You just have to accept to use the NBP, for up to one week, for performing a solitary or collective experience. The object can be signed out with the gallery sitter. If you document the experience through text, photography, video or audio, you can add your records to the NBP public archive, and submit them to the Audain Gallery at audaingallery@sfu.ca for inclusion in the exhibition's archive display.


The Production of the Artist as a Collective Conversation is presented by SFU Galleries and the School for the Contemporary Arts at SFU, as part of the Audain Visual Artist in Residence Program. 


About Audain Visual Artist-in-Residence
This program brings artists and practitioners to Vancouver who have contributed significantly to the field of contemporary art and whose work resonates with local and international visual art discourses. The visiting artists interact with the students and faculty of the School for the Contemporary Arts as well as the broader visual arts and cultural communities and the community at large. In keeping with the experimental nature of the School for the Contemporary Arts, the terms of engagement are open and change from artist to artist. The cornerstone of the residency is the sharing of artistic research. The program is generously funded by the Audain Foundation Endowment Fund.


About Audain Gallery
Audain Gallery opened in 2010 and is named after patron Michael Audain. The gallery is located in downtown Vancouver in the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, along with SFU's School for the Contemporary Arts. The gallery advances the aesthetic and discursive production and presentation of contemporary art through a responsive program of exhibitions that support engaged pedagogy. Focusing on the ways in which contemporary art is socially formed and formative, the gallery initiates local, national and international projects, including exhibitions by visiting international artists through the Audain Visual Artists-in-Residence Program.





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Review: Taro Nettleton on Sarah Conaway and Melanie Schiff at Taka Ishii Gallery Modern, Tokyo

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Melanie Schiff, Blood Bank, 2012. Inkjet on paper, 96.1 x 121.9 cm. Image courtesy of Taka Ishii Gallery Modern, Tokyo.

Sarah Conaway and Melanie Schiff at
Taka Ishii Gallery Modern, Tokyo

September 9–October 4, 2014

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To coincide with his first exhibition in Japan, "BC RIPS" at Tokyo's Taka Ishii Gallery, Sterling Ruby has curated a show of photographs by Los Angeles artists Sarah Conaway and Melanie Schiff. Held at the small Taka Ishii Gallery Modern space in Roppongi district and featuring just five images–one of a fallen tree and another of a plant from Schiff, and three photographs of fabrics variously folded and reposed from Conaway—it's a difficult show. 

Sarah Conaway's three works are displayed across two different walls of the gallery. Two color images, Red and Yellow Fold (2011) and White and Blue Fold (2014), hang on one wall, while the third work, the black-and-white Religious Experience (2008), hangs on another. Conaway shoots mundane subjects that lack immediately apparent content. In doing so, and like those artists associated with the "Pictures" exhibition of 1977, organized by Douglas Crimp and credited with identifying a then new postmodernist approach to image-making, she explores the instability of meaning in any representation, even a photograph, which, as Roland Barthes famously pointed out, is assumed to be without code.(1)

Simultaneously deploying the tropes of painting, photography, and sculpture, Conaway's folded fabrics resist easy categorization. They are, however, consistent with Conaway's studio-based photographic practice, which primarily consists of still lives of existing and constructed objects that explore the boundaries between photography and sculpture. With their short depths of field and resulting softness, warm tones, and abstract forms set against contrastingly colored backgrounds, Red and Yellow Fold and White and Blue Fold mimic painting. In contrast, Religious Experience situates a similarly folded fabric upon a fabric-covered pedestal in reference to sculpture, closely resembling the early abstract photographic works of James Welling, particularly those from the series "Drapes" (1981–1989), which bears strong similarities to Conaway's photographic work. Conaway's images, like Welling's, catch the viewer in the act of looking and making meaning.

In contrast, the recognizable subjects of Schiff's images challenge the viewer to identify and extract meaning.Neither the earlier references to partying, music, and youth culture of her work, nor her characteristic use of dramatically warm Californian light are present in these pieces. Natives I (2013) is a black-and-white image showing a ragged plant in a grassy field posed, as in a portrait, against a textured and wrinkled backdrop. The image functions as an allegory for the way the photographer identifies and captures something remarkable in what would otherwise have been overlooked. What that remarkable something is, however, remains unclear. The other photograph on display, Blood Bank (2012), is an attractively cool-colored landscape image that shows a bloodstained, fallen tree on a rocky shore. A bloodstain is, of course, intriguing in a whodunit kind of way, giving the image a narrative quality and connoting, as in a noir film, that something is awry. 

Sterling Ruby's own exhibition at Taka Ishii features large paintings from his "BC" series (2012–), where bleached, Rorschach-like forms evoke Andy Warhol's Rorschach paintings (1984) and glued-on, striped fabrics, placed centrally and vertically, reference Barnett Newman's "zips," first painted in Onement I (1948). Whereas the obscure nature of Conaway's and Schiff's work comes off as stingy, the referential nature of Ruby's exhibition more generously provides a framework by which to understand the works and his own curatorial intentions.  

Driven by the erosion of the clear boundaries between the various media they engage, the ambiguousness of Conaway's images turns the folds she photographs into targets for viewers' projections, not unlike Rorschach tests. In Schiff's images, however, we know immediately that we're looking at a plant or a bloody piece of wood, even if we don't really know why. Photographic genres, such as portraiture, landscape, and narrative, are evoked in slightly charged, but not, ultimately, productively confounding ways. Schiff's work straddles multiple histories of photography, but it doesn't challenge them. In the 1980s the stakes of articulating an anti-modernist position seemed clear. This sort of anti-modernist criticality—what is sometimes pejoratively called "academic theory"—has since fallen out of favor. Regardless, Conaway shares many of the same concerns embraced by that particular moment of art making and criticism. In juxtaposition, Schiff's work evinces the unfashionable state of academic theory, and—in an unfortunate example of throwing out the babe with the bathwater—of politically urgent criticality in the current gallery world.   


(1) Roland Barthes, "The Photographic Message," in Image Music Text, trans. Stephen Heath. (New York: Hill and Wang, 1977) 17.


Taro Nettleton is a visual culture critic based in Tokyo. He is Adjunct Professor at Temple University Japan. 


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SMU Meadows School of the Arts 2015 Pollock Curatorial Fellowship: call for applications

Art and  Education

October 01, 2014

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Photo: Kate Jarboe.
Southern Methodist University

2015 Pollock Curatorial Fellowship: call for applications

Application deadline: November 1, 2014 

Meadows School of the Arts
Southern Methodist University
Owen Arts Center
6101 Bishop Blvd.
Dallas, TX 75205

www.smu.edu/meadows
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Southern Methodist University's Meadows School of the Arts invites applications to the 2015 Pollock Curatorial Fellowship. This paid, 12-month curatorial fellowship begins January 1, 2015, and includes a stipend of 30,000 USD. 

The Curatorial Fellowship provides recent graduates in the field with important professional experience. Fellows will manage all elements of exhibitions in the Pollock Gallery including installation, marketing and public relations, managing budgets and student workers. The Pollock Gallery's annual season includes two student shows and three to four exhibitions programmed by the fellow in consultation with the Division of Art chair.

Candidates for this position must have a Master's degree in Curatorial Studies, Art History or related field with an emphasis on contemporary art. 

The Pollock Gallery plays a significant role in an active academic ecology, extending the experiences of the studio classroom with thoughtful and creative considerations of present and past art forms. It is a vehicle to study a wide array of art practices, providing the Division of Art with an arena for experimental considerations of the space where curatorial and studio practice meet.


Submit applications materials by November 1 to:
Rosa Reifsnyder, Coordinator, Departments of Art & Art History, rreifsnyde@smu.edu.

Application materials:
Cover letter: 1,000–1,500-word statement of purpose that outlines past curatorial and publishing experience. Please include interest and/or experience in marketing, development, and public programming (PDF file).
– CV (PDF file).
– One sample of published writing (PDF file).
– Documentation of past exhibitions and research (catalogs, reviews, features, interviews, etc.) (PDF file).
– Three reference letters sent by recommenders to rreifsnyde@smu.edu.


For further information, please contact Noah Simblist, Chair and Associate Professor of Art, at nsimblis@smu.edu.


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Pepe Mar at DiverseWorks

October 01, 2014

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DiverseWorks

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Pepe Mar, The Cabinet of Dr. Mar (detail), 2014. Mixed media, 72 x 72 x 7 inches. Courtesy the artist, David Castillo Gallery, and DiverseWorks. Photo: Lynn Lane.

Pepe Mar
Parco dei Mostri (Park of the Monsters)

September 6–October 25, 2014

DiverseWorks
4102 Fannin Street, #200
Houston, TX  77004
Hours: Wednesday–Saturday noon–6pm

www.diverseworks.org
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Miami-based artist Pepe Mar creates brightly colored and fantastical sculptures that capture his flamboyant spirit and reflect an eclectic fusion of cultures. Mar, who was born in Mexico and raised in border towns, draws on disparate spheres of influence by combining references to ethnographic objects with crafting, fashion, and nightclub life. Frequently taking the form of elaborate shadow boxes, or wunderkabinetts, Mar's works display handmade figurines and small sculptures cobbled together from thrift store finds, craft materials, and glossy fashion magazine pages. These constellations of hybrid creatures—parts icon, symbol, fantasy, and truth—inhabit a magical space where multiple cultures harmoniously coexist, and are an apt metaphor for the artist himself.

Parco dei Mostri, commissioned by DiverseWorks, is Mar's first large-scale three-dimensional installation and combines collage, sculpture, photography, and sound. The exhibition's title refers to the secluded sixteenth-century sculpture garden, Parco dei Mostri (Park of the Monsters), located in Bomarzo, Italy. A labyrinthine Mannerist complex strewn with huge monstrous stone creatures, the park has inspired writers and artists alike for more than 400 years. Intended to shock and surprise, its grotesque figures peer through lush vegetation along a disjointed route that is in marked contrast to the balanced, symmetrical gardens of the Renaissance. Mar's Parco dei Mostri employs similar strategies for inciting discovery, compelling visitors to meander around the intersecting structure and experience one "room" at a time—akin to visiting the passages and grottos of the actual park. 

Personal collections—including fashion, art, and trinkets—and issues related to identity, mass media influence, and excess consumption form the core of Mar's investigation in this new body of work. Mixing fantasy and reality, with Parco dei Mostri Mar has assembled a visual puzzle wherein each component generates a remixed version of the whole. Mar, the multicultural immigrant, the ethnographer-archivist, the collector, and the party monster all inhabit an enchanted space where the beautiful and the monstrous symphonically coexist.

Performances
As part of his residency at DiverseWorks, Mar collaborated with participants in the after-school arts programs at Houston's Multicultural Education and Counseling through the Arts (MECA). Together they conceived a series of live events, to be produced and performed by the students, which fuse Mexican folk traditions with contemporary urban life in an exploration of personal narrative and collective immigrant identity.

Performance dates
Saturday, October 11, 2pm at DiverseWorks
Wednesday, October 15, 6pm at MECA (1900 Kane Street, Houston, TX 77007)


About Pepe Mar
Pepe Mar was born in Reynosa, Mexico and received his BFA from the California College of the Arts, San Francisco and his MFA from Florida International University, Miami. He has attended numerous residency programs including the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and the Bronx Museum International Residency Program. Mar's work has been included in numerous gallery and museum shows, with solo exhibitions at Locust Projects and White Flag Projects, among others. His work is in the collections of the Pérez Art Museum Miami, Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach, California, and Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami.


About DiverseWorks
DiverseWorks is a non-profit art center in Houston, Texas dedicated to commissioning and presenting new visual, performing, and literary art. DiverseWorks values the artistic process and encourages artists to test new ideas in the public arena. By investigating the social, cultural, and artistic issues of our time, DiverseWorks builds, educates, and sustains audiences for contemporary art.


Support: 
Leslie and Brad Bucher, Jereann and Holland Chaney, Karl Adolf and Hendrina Krawinkel

This project is made possible in part through grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, The Texas Commission on the Arts, and the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance. DiverseWorks is a VAN Partner of the Visual Arts Network (VAN). This project is made possible in part through support from the Visual Artists Network Exhibition Residency, which is a program of the National Performance Network. More information at www.npnweb.org.

DiverseWorks Season Sponsors:  The Brown Foundation, Inc., The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts, and The Houston Endowment


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ArtReview October issue out now

October 01, 2014

art-agenda

ArtReview

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ArtReview October issue out now

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In Art Previewed

Ten exhibitions on through October you don't want to miss, in Berlin, Paris, New York, Rome, London and Basel. By Martin Herbert

Points of View: Our writers on what's happening in the art world and beyond: J.J. Charlesworth, Maria Lind, Jonathan T.D. Neil, Andrew Berardini, Mike Watson, Mark Sladen, Jonathan Grossmalerman, Louise D'arblay 

Great Critics and Their Ideas 
Philosopher G.W.F. Hegel on sploshing in painting, deconstructing mass desire and the posturing of art culture. Interview by Matthew Collings

Other People and Their Ideas
Artist Eric Fischl discusses his relationship to painting. Interview by Tom Eccles

Relations Without Relations: A response to Graham Harman
Critic Michael Newman makes a case for why human subjectivity still matters.

In Art Featured

Latifa Echakhch
The Morocco-born artist and Prix Marcel Duchamp winner talks to Violaine Boutet de Monvel.

Richard Tuttle
'Known knowns, known unknowns and unknown unknowns," the fleeting permanence in the work of the artist and poet. Profiled by Sherman Sam.

Trisha Donnelly
Portentous, charged and enigmatic— the work of the San Francisco-born artist. By Martin Herbert

Jacob Hashimoto
The aerial, environmental installations of the Japanese-American artist. By Erik Morse

Art in Context—the first installment in our yearlong survey in which artists, curators and cultural commentators explore the question of what African art (of the contemporary flavour) does or can do within various local contexts across the continent

I. Gabi Ngcobo on Sabelo Mlangeni's No Problem, and a visit to the site of Michelle Monareng's Removal to Radium.

II. Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung on the tenses in Theo Eshetu's The Return of the Axum Obelisk.

III. Cristina De Middel
Artist project: This is what hatred did, 2014.

In Art Reviewed
Reviews from the UK, USA, Europe and the rest of the world

UK
Including Beverly Pepper: Small Sculptures at Marlborough Fine Art, London; Inventory: More Pre-War Art From Inventory! at Rob Tufnell, London; Maid in Heaven/En Plein Air in Hell (My Beautiful Dark and Twisted Cheeto Problem) at White Cube Mason's Yard, London; Eustachy Kossakowski and Goshka Macuga: Report from the Exhibition at Kate McGarry, London; Hayley Tompkins: Digital Light Pools at The Common Guild, Glasgow; Douglas Gordon: Pretty much every film and video work from about 1992 until now, at Glasgow Museum of Modern Art.

USA
Including Another, Once Again, Many Times More at Martos Gallery, East Marion, New York; Carl Andre: Sculpture as Place, 1958–2010 at Dia: Beacon, New York; Fixed Unknowns at Taymour Grahne, New York; Morag Keil: Would You Eat Your Friends? at Real Fine Arts, New York; Andrew Cameron and Emilie Halpern: Standard Candles at Samuel Freeman, Los Angeles; Allora & Calzadilla at REDCAT, Los Angeles.

Europe
Including João Maria Gusmão and Pedro Paiva: Papagaio at Hangar Biocca, Milan; Wilfredo Prieto: Speaking Badly About Stones at S.M.A.K., Ghent; Carsten Höller at TBA21–Augarten, Vienna; Le Mouvement at various venues, Biel; Paul Chan: Selected Works at Schaulager, Basel; Bunny Rogers: Columbine Library at Société, Berlin; Roni Horn: Everything Was Sleeping as If the Universe Were a Mistake at Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona; Damage Control: Art and Destruction Since 1950 at MUDAM, Luxembourg.

Rest of the world
IncludingYokahama Triennale 2014/ART Fahrenheit 451: Sailing into the Sea of Oblivion at Yokohama Museum of Art, Shinko Pier Exhibition Hall and various and other venues; Defying Stability: Artistic Process in Mexico 1952–1967 at MUAC, Mexico City; Os Gêmeos: A Ópera da Lua at Galpão Fortes Vilaça, São Paulo.

Books
33 Artists in 3 Acts, by Sarah Thornton; A man in a room spray-painting a fly… (or a least trying to…), by Francesco Pedraglio; Lives of the Orange Men: A Biographical History of the Polish Orange Alternative Movement, by Major Waldemar Fydrych; Shooting Space; Architecture in Contemporary Photography, by Elias Redstone.

The Strip: A new work from Maciej Sienczyk, introduced by Paul Gravett

Off the Record: Gallery Girl—in London

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Graduate programmes available at LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore

Art and  Education

October 01, 2014

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Image courtesy of LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore.
LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore

Graduate programmes in Asian Art Histories, Fine Arts, Arts & Cultural Management, Artist Educator, and Art Therapy

Application deadlines:
MA Fine Arts, MA Asian Art Histories, MA Arts & Cultural Management:
October 15, 2014 (spring 2015)
MA Artist Educator: April 10, 2015 (summer 2015) 
MA Art Therapy: April 30, 2015 (summer 2015) 
Electronic submissions only

LASALLE College of the Arts 
1 McNally Street
Singapore, Singapore 187940

T +65 6496 5111
admissions@lasalle.edu.sg

www.lasalle.edu.sg
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Why study at LASALLE? 
– Scholarships available 
– Strong emphasis on research, cutting-edge practice, and excellence in teaching and learning
– Engaging dialogue among the programmes, students, and faculty
– Be mentored by some of the best international art practitioners and taught by practicing artists from the creative industries 
– Be in an accredited institution (Goldsmiths, University of London) with degree programmes that are original and developed by LASALLE
– Disciplinary environment with opportunities to engage across five diverse faculties' students and staff 
– Collaborations with Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore 
– Individual attention, small class sizes 
– Award-winning and iconic city campus in the heart of Singapore's Art & Cultural District


The MA Asian Art Histories program seeks to educate and train students who have interest in contributing original scholarship to the discourse of an emerging field. At the same time, the program equips students with the appropriate expertise and rigour to undertake a higher level of independent research work such as a PhD. The program has a particular focus on Southeast Asia, for which writing and research have only recently begun to emerge. While the program covers conventional art historical research and methodologies, the diverse histories, cultures, and practices of the Asian region present a unique opportunity for you to critically engage with questions and issues relating to notions of identity, tradition, ethnicity, self-reflexivity, community, and aesthetics that are specific to an Asian context. You will also learn how artists negotiate, dissolve and problematise the East/West, modern/traditional, and craft/art dichotomies. The programme will discuss critical terms such as modernism and contemporaneity that reflects the diversity of historical contexts, cultural specificities, post-colonial experiences, and artistic practices of the region.

The MA Arts and Cultural Management program will equip you to enhance your skills, reflect on areas such as management and policy, and to be advocates of the arts. Singapore has greatly expanded its commitment and engagement with the arts and cultural institutions in the 21st century, while elsewhere in Asia, the arts, creative and cultural sectors are also developing rapidly and gaining global attention. This program builds upon the exciting innovations in this field both here and abroad. It is intended for arts managers, cultural entrepreneurs, and those with professional backgrounds and a desire to learn more about the arts to come together, reflect upon, debate and inquire about the nature of arts organisations in society.

The MA Fine Arts program cultivates a teaching and learning methodology that values artistic practice. It strives for a balance between contemporary art practice within your own sociocultural milieu and the theoretical discourses around it. The programme also underscores the beliefs that through studio experimentation and innovation, it is the role of the artist in research that generates and produces individual self-discipline, knowledge, and discoveries that are pertinent to the realisation of artistic language/vocabulary. You will acquire knowledge of the comprehensive critical, theoretical, and historical discourses that inform contemporary artistic practice.

The MA Artist Educator program is designed for artists who work in formal and informal educational contexts and are critically conscious of their pedagogical approach to teaching in the arts. It will provide you with an opportunity to develop as professional practitioners in arts education. You will reflect on your own practice and observe the arts practices and pedagogies of others, both locally and globally. You will have the opportunity to transform your practice for your own benefit as well as that of fellow students, the community and industry, and to contribute to the growing field of research in arts education. Artist educators are drawn from, and engage with, the full range of the arts from the creative and performing arts, to visual, design and curatorial practice. Emphasis will be given to practice-led research and the teaching of the creative arts. As a fledging artist educator, you will learn to integrate your own arts practice with your teaching, so that the two processes inform and enhance each other. The programme is designed to develop the artist/practitioner/educator/researcher.

The MA Art Therapy program offers an internationally informed, two-year, full-time art therapy training in a contemporary psychodynamic framework. Inter-subjective approaches, attachment, and trauma theory with the ability to connect these concepts through the process of creativity and expression in treatment in the Southeast Asian context are integrated into the curriculum. Paramount to this is the understanding of the development of the therapeutic alliance. The program works collaboratively in research, across cultures internationally, and across school faculties. Singapore is at the epicenter of diversity in Asia, and the cultural landscape is rich and interwoven. Traditionally the East has emphasised the "we" in the relationship and the West has represented the "I." The intersubjective theorists integrate both concepts—self and community and include in their thinking the importance of equality, reciprocity, and response in relationship. Through understanding the dynamics and importance of attachment in development and the many manifestations of trauma in mental health, the intersubjective philosophy is taught through process-oriented art therapy.

The Graduate programs at LASALLE College of the Arts offer distinguished choices for candidates interested in pursuing careers in the arts. We offer an international curriculum that's infused with a global consciousness. Our faculty is led by a community of award-winning artists, designers, educators, and researchers, and their practice-led research sets LASALLE apart as an international centre of excellence. Critically acclaimed alumni form the core of the cultural and creative sectors in Singapore and their presence is increasingly felt internationally. Our degree programmes are validated by Goldsmiths, University of London.

Questions  
Graduate faculty members are available via email at admissions@lasalle.edu.sg, by phone, or by visiting our campus.


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