Here, I AM

Date

2008-12-01

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

1753-5190

Volume Title

Publisher

Intellect

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

In this paper I will discuss three communicative acts: an ephemeral artwork InMemory; a narrative The art of being lost; and a paper Ephemeral Art: Mourning and Loss. These were presented, respectively, at the Salina Art Centre, Kansas; Emotional Geography Conference, Queens University, Kingston, Ontario; and (Im)permanence: Cultures In/Out of Time at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh. These pieces deal with the same subject, but are presented in different modes reflecting the requirements of different sites a gallery, a conference, and a book. All three aspired to creativity as well as rigour, to articulate intuitive as well as empirical knowledge. I will discuss these works in terms of site specificity and integrated practice, rather than opposite poles of a creative spectrum, which places text at one end and image at the other. I will demonstrate how each mode has informed the other and how each has benefited from the particular requirement imposed by the site. The site here is not just the physical location but includes the anticipated audience, the environment, and the atmosphere. The works are interactive and are akin to the concept in communication analysis of recipient design. I hope this case study may be useful in providing an alternative to viewing writing in art and design as inherently problematic. Instead, I offer an analysis of a multifaceted practice in which the I is always present, implicitly or explicitly.

Description

Keywords

writing in artistic practice, Situated knowledge, recipient design in creative practice, auto ethnography, InMemory, Salina Art Centre, Kansas, Cultures In/Out of Time at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Emotional Geography Conference, Queens University, Kingston, Ontario, multifaceted practice

Citation

O'Neill, M. (2008) 'Here, I Am'. Journal of Writing in Creative Practice. 1 (3), pp. 293-300

Rights

Research Institute