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Duncum, Paul – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2018
The article raises questions about the use in art education classrooms of social networking sites like Facebook and image sharing sites like YouTube that rely upon the ability of Big Data to aggregate large amounts of data, including data on students. The article also offers suggestions for the responsible use of these sites. Many youth are using…
Descriptors: Art Education, Social Media, Data, Affordances
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Duncum, Paul – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2014
Employing the concept of a rhetoric of emotions, European Premodern fine art is revisioned as popular culture. From ancient times, the rhetoric of emotion was one of the principle concepts informing the theory and practice of all forms of European cultural production, including the visual arts, until it was gradually displaced during the 1700s and…
Descriptors: Fine Arts, Popular Culture, Rhetoric, Psychological Patterns
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Duncum, Paul – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2012
While visual art appeals to the sense of sight, both recent art and popular visual culture appeal to the whole sensorium, the sum total of the ways we experience the world. Common assumptions about the senses regarding their number, their relative importance, and their relation to one another are problematized in light of recent psychological and…
Descriptors: Art Education, Perception, Vision, Visual Arts
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Duncum, Paul – Art Education, 2013
This article describes how Paul Duncum teaches elements of realististic-style imagery. The elements he teaches are framing, angles of view, lighting, depth of field, and body language. He stresses how each of these elements contributes to meaning, and shows how they apply equally to old master paintings and today's digital photography.
Descriptors: Art Education, Visual Aids, Realism, Preservice Teacher Education
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Duncum, Paul – Art Education, 2010
The formal elements and principles of art are well known to art educators. Sometimes there are said to be seven of each (Gude, 2004). They were devised as pedagogic tools at the beginning of the 20th century and were used to help understand the modernist, abstract, and non-representational painting of that time. They continue to inform art…
Descriptors: Art Education, Standards, Art, Power Structure
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Duncum, Paul – Art Education, 2014
Viewing YouTube culture as a creative, collaborative process similar to animal swarms can help art educators understand and embrace youth's digital practices. School-age youth are among the most prolific contributors to YouTube, not just as viewers, but also as producers. Even preschoolers now produce videos (McClure, 2010). So pervasive,…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Art Education, Figurative Language, Social Networks
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Duncum, Paul – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2011
Considering social justice to be founded on human rights, which, in turn, are grounded in freedom of thought, expression, and assembly, this essay reviews efforts by art educators to engage with public space as a form of social justice pedagogy. Public space, whether actual or virtual, is understood to be inherently devoted to contestation in the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Intellectual Freedom, Art Education, Urban Environment
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Duncum, Paul – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2009
In defining popular culture as inherently pleasurable, including the pleasures of transgression, the author argues that while art teachers now critique popular visual culture for its often-dubious ideologies, they are yet to come to terms with its transgressive pleasures. Teachers fail to engage with its carnivalesque, subversive qualities because…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Antisocial Behavior, Art Education, Teaching Methods
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Duncum, Paul – Art Education, 2007
Kevin Tavin has boldly gone where few would dare--to challenge the usefulness of one of the most cherished ideas in art education, that of aesthetics. The author believes that three of Tavin's arguments are completely sound: What is often offered as an entirely unproblematic idea is deeply implicated in historical repression, art education's…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art Education, Persuasive Discourse, Art Expression
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Duncum, Paul – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2007
While rejecting modernist philosophical aesthetics, the author argues for the use in art education of a current, ordinary-language definition of aesthetics as visual appearance and effect, and its widespread use in many diverse cultural sites is demonstrated. Employing such a site-specific use of aesthetics enables art education to more clearly…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Design, Aesthetics, Art Education
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Duncum, Paul – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2006
The effects of violent media fare upon young people are of great concern for educators and parents alike. Recently, some visual art educators have attempted to deal with the issue under the rubric of visual culture. Adopting a critical position toward media violence, they have developed programs that attempt to encourage in their students a view…
Descriptors: Violence, Mass Media Effects, Popular Culture, Sociocultural Patterns
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Duncum, Paul – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2008
Studying imagery, irrespective of the kind, must focus equally upon its aesthetic attractiveness, its sensory lures, and its oftentimes dubious social ideology. The terms "aesthetic" and "ideology" are addressed as problematic and are defined in current, ordinary language terms: aesthetics as visual appearances and their effects and ideology as a…
Descriptors: Social Control, Art Education, Ideology, Aesthetics