Creative Higher Education & Covid-19
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Affirming Creativity in a changing economic field: An Art School Perspective

4/16/2020

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Invitation:  The Glasgow School of Arts invites you to attend a research webminar on Thursday 23rd April (4.00-5.00pm) with Prof. Vicky Gunn (also part of the advisory board of our #creativeHEcovid project) talking about Affirming Creativity in a changing economic field: An Art School Perspective.  
Please register via Eventbrite, which will send Zoom details to join the event. 

Abstract

 The COVID-19 Great Lockdown means an economic field which many assumed would grow, has in one sense shrunk. Economic growth is disrupted and seems amidst a terrible downward spiral. This does not mean the expansion of the economic field via AI has decreased, however. Indeed, data-driven decision making about the resourcing of higher education is likely to accelerate in this context. What this means for Art Schools (both in universities and independent) remains to be seen but, whilst we are waiting for this sight to play out, it is time to address the issue of the value of the creativity we support, inspire, aspire to, hope for as the through-put and outcome of the education we provide. In doing this, we need to interrogate the immediate contextual position we find ourselves through understanding the one that existed before lockdown; define the core conditions for making creativity and creative practitioners; and identify the role that the paradoxes of creativity play in the generation of artistic and designerly innovation powerful enough to generate much needed social, economic, and environmental change. This seminar looks to continue critical conversations happening before the coronavirus pandemic arrived but which have, perhaps, taken on some urgency.
Biography
Professor Vicky Gunn has been the Head of Learning and Teaching since November 2014 at The Glasgow School of Art. Prior to that she was Director of the Learning and Teaching Centre at the University of Glasgow. She has a research and teaching profile in tertiary learning and teaching in the Arts and Humanities and an eclectic publications list as a result. She has been the research lead on several national-level teaching enhancement projects with both QAA Scotland and the Higher Education Academy and has a penchant for policy development in higher education at institutional and national levels.
All of her work is woven together through the theme of the applied humanities which sometimes sits easily as a humanities practice but increasingly falls into being a humanities oriented sub-specialism of Design. Her work pulls together threads of a background in higher education practices, history, and practical theology. Her research areas include: the relationship between broad personhood development and research-intensive disciplinary learning in a creative practices environment; the application of cultural theories to learning in higher education in general and Art School in particular; embracing equality and diversity through disciplinary development in Art and Design; (and for fun) developing the queer historical imaginary to explore contemporary social conflicts as a creative Arts practice.
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*We define Creative HE (short version for creative subjects taught at HE level) all teaching connected with the following disciplinary fields:  ARCHITECTURE (incl. landscape design); ADVERTISING (incl. public relations and publicity studies); CRAFTS (incl. ceramics, glass, metal, wood and fibre crafts); DESIGN (incl. graphic and multimedia design; visual communication; illustration; clothing/textile/fashion design;  industrial/product design) ; FILM & TV (incl. film and media studies; television and radio studies; media/tv/radio and film production); CINEMATICS AND PHOTOGRAPHY (incl. directing, producing  motion pictures; film & sound recording; visual and audio effects; cinematography; photography);  FINE ARTS (incl. curatorial studies; museum studies; drawing; painting; sculpture; printmaking; fine art conservation); MUSIC (incl. musicianship/performance studies; history of music; musicology);  TECHNOLOGY (incl. interactive and multi-media publishing; interactive and electronic design; animation techniques; software engineering; music recording);  DRAMA (incl. acting; directing and producing for theatre; theatre studies; stage management; theatrical design and make-up;  stage design);  DANCE (incl. choreography; history of dance; types of dance) ; JOURNALISM (incl. factual reporting;  mass communications and documentation); WRITING (incl. script writing; poetry and prose writing; imaginative writing) AND PUBLISHING  (incl. electronic publishing and paper-based media studies).​ We also include courses in ARTS & CULTURAL MANAGEMENT and CREATIVE & CULTURAL INDUSTRIES.

The project is led by King's College London but benefits from support and collaborations with the H2020 funded European project DISCE (Developing inclusive and sustainable creative economies) for more information visit www.disce.eu 

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If you would like to reference this website and its content please use the following academic citation format
Comunian Roberta,  Dent Tamsyn and England Lauren  (2020) Creative Higher Education and Covid-19.  Available at:  www.creativeHEcovid.org