ARTHIST 725 : Concepts in Contemporary Art

Arts

2024 Semester One (1243) (30 POINTS)

Course Prescription

Examines the cross-fertilisation of theory and praxis, philosophy and art, materialism and idealism in the arts. It will be taught in four thematic units – Body/Mind; Representation/Experience; Self/Other and Materialism/Conceptualism – testing how visual theory bridges the gap between these dual terms. Students will learn to apply a number of important critical theories to their understanding of art, and importantly, to fine-tune those theories through visual experience.

Course Overview

Concepts are not just things in our heads they are things we can explore immersed in the world around us. When we make art or interpret it we explore concepts with our eyes and bodies, and with materials, techniques and rhythms. Art does not merely represent thought it helps to expand its definition.

Artworks can produce cognitive dissonance; this suggests art isn’t just there to make us feel happy and content. It also presents us with cognitive and perceptual problems (or "problem spaces") that help us to become aware of implicit attitudes and values acquired through childhood, cultural and institutional learning and through the daily consumption of images in mass media and digital culture.

In our seminars we try to unpick some of the dualisms by which we acquire implicit assumptions about the world. Some of the main traditional dualisms are:

 Body/Mind; Representation/Experience; Self/Other and Materialism/Conceptualism

Art’s problem spaces help us to think about how these dualisms might be challenged, destabilised or questioned. It is important that these problem spaces can be shared between viewers and gallery visitors, artists, critics and students in this seminar. Problem spaces are good things. Viewers of art often feel they need to solve the "puzzle" of art, to find meaning; this may be pleasurable and provides motivation and purpose. But there are also opportunities to be open minded about different possible answers. This exercises our creative thought. While art presents problem spaces it does not impose an answer or solution to a problem.

Art also has a close relationship with non-rational thought, subconscious complexities, imagination, emotions, affects and sensations — all of which influence our concepts and how we might combine them. These ‘felt’ and very much embodied aspects to the art experience are addressed and often structured by artistic practice. This may also have political and ethical dimensions, both in terms of freedom of movement and freedom of thought.

It could be said that art is a vision of life as it might be. It may present us with some interesting challenges and counterfactuals concerning this vision. It often helps to produce aspects of spontaneity or improvisation rather than premeditated rules.

As the French artist Jean Dubuffet said:

"[…] the only flowers I like are wild flowers. Orderly gardens make me nervous…I feel a sharp curiosity for everything that does not emanate from man, in which man has not intervened…wild places, wild animals…and for my interest in worlds very different from that of man…As for human beings, it is also their wildness that I am fond of…I am not a great believer in the laws concerning the nature of art. As soon as such a law is proclaimed I immediately experience an intense desire to infringe it."

Artworks can help to produce feelings of being "in the moment", providing immersive qualities that work against the formulae of visual culture and the dogmas of cultural institutions. Sometimes it emerges at its highest reaches when rational procedures and measurements have been exhausted.

Key theorists

Henri Bergson, Sigmund Freud, Georges Bataille, Martin Heidegger, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Michel Foucault, Roland Barthes, Henri Lefebvre, Judith Butler, Rosalind Krauss, Anton Ehrenzweig, Michael Fried, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Jacques Rancière, Jane Bennett.

Artists

Robert Smithson, Robert Morris, Hans Haacke, Marina Abramovic, Matthew Barney, Mona Hatoum, Rachel Whiteread, Tracy Emin, Andre Serrano, Thomas Hirschhorn Damien Hirst, Cindy Sherman, Catherine Opie, Jeff Wall, Thomas Struth, Wangechi Mutu, Olafur Eliasson, Lisa Reihana, Dane Mitchell, Simon Denny, Luke Willis Thompson, Francis Uprichard, Billy Apple, Hito Steyerl, Bernadette Corporation, Amalia Ulman, Frances Stark and many more.




Course Requirements

Restriction: ARTHIST 724, 729 To complete this course students must enrol in ARTHIST 725 A and B, or ARTHIST 725

Capabilities Developed in this Course

Capability 3: Knowledge and Practice
Capability 5: Solution Seeking
Capability 6: Communication
Capability 7: Collaboration
Capability 8: Ethics and Professionalism
Graduate Profile: Master of Arts

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students will be able to:
  1. Acquire in-depth knowledge of contemporary art in a global context (Capability 3)
  2. Gain high-level research skills involved in image analysis and literature reviews (Capability 8)
  3. Gain a deeper understanding of concepts and technical terms current in curatorial practice, art writing, journalism and art criticism; students will learn how to apply these concepts to their own writing and visual analysis (Capability 6)
  4. Explain and communicate novel solutions through negotiation and teambuilding: key aspects of leadership and intellectual development. (Capability 7)
  5. Teach students to situate artistic practice and images in social, cultural, political and psychological contexts. (Capability 5)

Assessments

Assessment Type Percentage Classification
Essay 30% Individual Coursework
Presentation 30% Individual Coursework
Coursework 40% Individual Coursework

Workload Expectations

This course is a standard [30] point course and students are expected to spend 10 hours per week

For this course, you can expect [36] hours of lectures

Delivery Mode

Campus Experience

 Attendance is expected at scheduled activities including tutorials to complete components of the course.
Lectures will be available as recordings. Other learning activities including tutorials will not be available as recordings.
The course will not include live online events including group discussions/tutorials.
Attendance on campus is required for the test/exam.
The activities for the course are scheduled as a standard weekly timetable.

Learning Resources

Course materials are made available in a learning and collaboration tool called Canvas which also includes reading lists and lecture recordings (where available).

Please remember that the recording of any class on a personal device requires the permission of the instructor.

 The artist's body
Tracey Warr; Amelia Jones, 2000
Note for students Read pp. 49-70 and 193-200.
 
The body in contemporary art
Sally O'Reilly, 2009
Note for students Read pp. 78-111.
 
The psychology of contemporary art
Gregory Minissale, 2013
Note for students Available in library as ebook. Read pp, 182-193
 
Alberto Burri: the trauma of painting
Emily Braun; Megan M. Fontanella; Carol Stringari, 2015
An excellent case study of how phenomenological approaches yield insightful analyses of artworks
 
Week 4 Sexuality and Gender Essentialism
 Seeing differently: a history and theory identification and the visual arts
 Amelia Jones, 2012

The Invisible Within in Angelaki
Gregory Minissale 2015
 
The disabled body in contemporary art 
Ann Millett-Gallant, 2010
 
Imagining transgender: an ethnography of a category
David Valentine, 2007

Week 5 Questioning Race
 
A companion to contemporary art since 1945
Amelia Jones, 2006

The migrant's time: rethinking art history and diaspora
 Saloni Mathur; Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute
2011
 
Decolonizing methodologies: research and indigenous peoples
Linda Tuhiwai Smith, 2012
 Read Introduction

Week 6 Pain and Performance
 
Art and sex  
Gray Watson,  2008
 
Contract with the skin: masochism, performance art, and the 1970s
Kathy O'Dell; ebrary, Inc., 1998


Week 7 Reading week

Week 8 Immersion
3 articles will be supplied by lecturer:
Touching Light
The aesthetic of immersion
Limits of Control

Week 9 New Materialism
 
Destroy the picture: painting the void, 1949-1962
Paul Schimmel; Nicholas Cullinan; Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles, Calif.); Museum of Contemporary Art (Chicago, Ill.) 2012
Note for students Please read the chapter by Robert Storr pp. 240-258.
 
Materiality

'Materiality' Petra Lange-Berndt 2015
Note for students Read pp. 14-23

Week 10 Time
 'Time',  Amelia Groom 2013
Note for students Please read 12-25
 
Art & today
Eleanor Heartney,  2013
Note for students Please read 144-165

Week 11 and 12 Presentations

Student Feedback

At the end of every semester students will be invited to give feedback on the course and teaching through a tool called SET or Qualtrics. The lecturers and course co-ordinators will consider all feedback and respond with summaries and actions.

Your feedback helps teachers to improve the course and its delivery for future students.

Class Representatives in each class can take feedback to the department and faculty staff-student consultative committees.

All feedback is considered and taken on board

Academic Integrity

The University of Auckland will not tolerate cheating, or assisting others to cheat, and views cheating in coursework as a serious academic offence. The work that a student submits for grading must be the student's own work, reflecting their learning. Where work from other sources is used, it must be properly acknowledged and referenced. This requirement also applies to sources on the internet. A student's assessed work may be reviewed for potential plagiarism or other forms of academic misconduct, using computerised detection mechanisms.

Class Representatives

Class representatives are students tasked with representing student issues to departments, faculties, and the wider university. If you have a complaint about this course, please contact your class rep who will know how to raise it in the right channels. See your departmental noticeboard for contact details for your class reps.

Inclusive Learning

All students are asked to discuss any impairment related requirements privately, face to face and/or in written form with the course coordinator, lecturer or tutor.

Student Disability Services also provides support for students with a wide range of impairments, both visible and invisible, to succeed and excel at the University. For more information and contact details, please visit the Student Disability Services’ website http://disability.auckland.ac.nz

Well-being always comes first
We all go through tough times during the semester, or see our friends struggling. There is lots of help out there - for more information, look at this Canvas page https://canvas.auckland.ac.nz/courses/33894, which has links to various support services in the University and the wider community.

Special Circumstances

If your ability to complete assessed coursework is affected by illness or other personal circumstances outside of your control, contact a member of teaching staff as soon as possible before the assessment is due.

If your personal circumstances significantly affect your performance, or preparation, for an exam or eligible written test, refer to the University’s aegrotat or compassionate consideration page https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/students/academic-information/exams-and-final-results/during-exams/aegrotat-and-compassionate-consideration.html.

This should be done as soon as possible and no later than seven days after the affected test or exam date.

Learning Continuity

In the event of an unexpected disruption, we undertake to maintain the continuity and standard of teaching and learning in all your courses throughout the year. If there are unexpected disruptions the University has contingency plans to ensure that access to your course continues and course assessment continues to meet the principles of the University’s assessment policy. Some adjustments may need to be made in emergencies. You will be kept fully informed by your course co-ordinator/director, and if disruption occurs you should refer to the university website for information about how to proceed.

Student Charter and Responsibilities

The Student Charter assumes and acknowledges that students are active participants in the learning process and that they have responsibilities to the institution and the international community of scholars. The University expects that students will act at all times in a way that demonstrates respect for the rights of other students and staff so that the learning environment is both safe and productive. For further information visit Student Charter https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/students/forms-policies-and-guidelines/student-policies-and-guidelines/student-charter.html.

Disclaimer

Elements of this outline may be subject to change. The latest information about the course will be available for enrolled students in Canvas.

In this course students may be asked to submit coursework assessments digitally. The University reserves the right to conduct scheduled tests and examinations for this course online or through the use of computers or other electronic devices. Where tests or examinations are conducted online remote invigilation arrangements may be used. In exceptional circumstances changes to elements of this course may be necessary at short notice. Students enrolled in this course will be informed of any such changes and the reasons for them, as soon as possible, through Canvas.

Published on 11/10/2023 09:17 a.m.