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[Commlist] Call for Contributions 'Transitory Parerga: Access and Inclusion in Contemporary Art' (The Garage Journal: Studies in Art, Museums & Culture)
Tue Jan 07 09:59:30 GMT 2020
The newly founded independent interdisciplinary /The Garage Journal:
Studies in Art, Museums & Culture /invites contributions to its Issue 2
(autumn 2020) titled 'Transitory Parerga: Access and Inclusion in
Contemporary Art' and guest-edited by Dr Martine Rouleau (University
College London). We welcome contributions from media and communication
scholars, APCs are not required. Please send your abstracts by January
20, 2020.
*Transitory Parerga: Access and Inclusion in Contemporary Art*
/
/
/The Garage Journal: Studies in Art, Museums & Culture
/Issue 02 (autumn 2020)
guest-edited by Dr Martine Rouleau (University College London)
The discussion of access and inclusion in contemporary art is both
topical and integral to Garage Museum of Contemporary Art (Moscow,
Russia) which is one of the backers of /The Garage Journal: Studies in
Art, Museums & Culture /(/The Garage Journal/, hereafter). Founded in
2019, /The Garage Journal /is an independent interdisciplinary platform
advancing critical discussions about contemporary art, culture and
museum practice in the Russian and global contexts. It publishes
empirical, theoretical and speculative research in a variety of genres,
celebrating innovative ways to present research. Fully peer-reviewed, it
provides a source book of ideas for an international audience. The
journal website will be launched in spring 2020 and the first issue
entitled ‘The New Museum’ will be published in May 2020.
Finding an approach to the problem of access and inclusion that would
bypass an inside/outside, included/excluded dichotomy is the challenge
we raise with this special issue of /The Garage Journal/. Art in itself
does not include or exclude. Contemporary art is often characterized by
a lack of uniformity, an eclecticism that is reflective and responsive
to changing ideologies, cultural diversity, and technological
advancement. Defining it as an entity is only as transitory as
identifying what influences it from what might seemingly be perceived as
an outside.
As a productive framework to reconsider access and inclusion in the
arts, we suggest a rethinking of Derrida’s concept of parergon, first
introduced in /The Truth in Painting/ (1978). Derrida discusses the
parergon as coming ‘against, beside, and in addition to the ergon, the
work done [fait], the fact [le fait], the work, but it does not fall to
one side, it touches and cooperates within the operation, from a certain
outside. Neither simply outside nor simply inside’. The function of the
parergon is thus to create a framework that recontextualizes what is
being framed.
Institutions (museums, art colleges), ideologies (value systems, canon),
architecture (buildings, urban planning), curatorial paraphernalia
(interpretation, frames, plinths) frame contemporary art. They include
and exclude, give and withhold access by centralizing contemporary art
in Euro-centric urban areas, by creating unpaid or poorly paid
employment opportunities, and by catering mostly to non-diverse
audiences. By looking at these entities that frame contemporary art,
point to its significance, signal its value and move in and out of the
transitory focus of art itself, we have a framework that allows us to
discuss art and its boundaries without limiting our investigation of
access and inclusion to intrinsic qualities of art.
There is of course some value to the identification of variables that
might alienate and welcome various individuals or communities. Some of
the most cited issues are often lumped under cultural, economic,
intellectual and/or physical barriers, perceived or actual. Unless this
exercise is used to remove obstacles to engagement and participation, it
can quickly become a mere snapshot of a time and place in the history of
art. More conducive to an analysis of access and inclusion that is not
as limited in time and reach is a conception of the art world as a
moveable, permeable locus of attention and production, the centre of
which moves with external and internal factors that give shape to its
periphery.
We invite contributions that include but are not limited to:
·Access requirements in art institutions
·Diversity of labour (or lack thereof) in the art sector
·Limiting/enabling function of art education
·Gender and representation in contemporary art
·Race and representation in contemporary art
·Nationality and/or ethnicity in contemporary art
·Health and representation in contemporary art
·Socio-economic variables and representation in contemporary art
·Interpretation, language and the semantics of access
·Critical discussion of the function of interpretation in art institutions
·Political implications of access to culture/art agenda
·Disability and access to contemporary art
·User-design and accessibility in exhibition design
·Outsider art
We invite contributions in English, Russian or German in the form of
articles, visual essays, data essays, interviews, and archival
materials. Contributions from media and communication scholars are
welcome. Article processing charges are not required.
*Timeline / Deadlines*
20 January 2020: deadline for submitting proposals for contributions;
selected authors are invited to submit full versions of the contributions
15 April 2020: deadline for submissions of contributions
May and June: peer reviews
19 June 2020: workshop in Moscow with selected participants presenting
their papers
July and August 2020: revisions of the contributions
1 September: deadline for submitting final versions of the contributions
November 2020: publication of the issue
*To submit a proposal*, please provide the following information in English:
·Contribution type (e.g., article, visual essay, data essay, interview,
etc.)
·Language of contribution (English, German or Russian)
·Title of contribution
·Abstract (300 words)
·Key words that indicate the focus of the contribution (e.g., Access,
Diversity, Education, Museums, Market, Labour, Curating, Architecture,
Urban Planning, User Design, Audiences, Disability, Gender, etc.)
·Biographical information: including a short biographical statement of
maximum 100 words stating research interests and relevant professional
experience, and a list of no more than 10 publications relevant to the
themes of the special issue
·Send all the information requested above – as a single PDF document –
to the editor: (m.rouleau /at/ garagemca.org) <mailto:(m.rouleau /at/ garagemca.org)>
For more information about /The Garage Journal/, please contact the
editors on (gj /at/ garagemca.org) <mailto:(gj /at/ garagemca.org)>
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