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Garoian, Charles R. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2008
This article explores "prosthesis" as a metaphor of embodiment in art-based research to challenge the utopian myth of wholeness and normality in art and the human body. Bearing in mind the correspondences between amputated bodies and the cultural dislocations of art, I propose "prosthetic epistemology" and "prosthetic ontology" as embodied knowing…
Descriptors: Art Education, Figurative Language, Human Body, Epistemology
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Bernstein, Bruce – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
In this article, the author addresses the burden of non-Native expectation on Native artists, highlighting issues of authenticity, creation, and public display. The author writes about the booth sitters hired by collectors to sit--sometimes all night--and wait for the official opening of the annual Indian Market in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He focuses…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Artists, Art Criticism, Art Activities
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Kamhi, Michelle Marder – Arts Education Policy Review, 2006
Numerous incidents have been reported in recent years wherein a work of art is mistaken as trash. The question is, how have people reached the point in the civilized world where a purported work of art cannot be distinguished from a pile of rubbish or a grid of condensation pipes? The answer to that question lies in the basic assumption of nearly…
Descriptors: Creativity, Art Education, Artists, Art Appreciation
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Gregory, Katie – Research in Dance Education, 2005
This critical analysis focuses on the movement vocabulary and interaction of dancers in selected sections of the filmed version of "White Man Sleeps" (1988) by Siobhan Davies. The choreography is divided into five distinct parts, in accordance with divisions in the musical accompaniment from which the piece takes its name, a suite of…
Descriptors: Movement Education, Foreign Countries, Art Criticism, Dance
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Gates, Eugene – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
Most people know George Bernard Shaw as a dramatist and social reformer, but they are often surprised to discover that he was also the most brilliant British music critic to emerge in the late-nineteenth century. His vision of the ideal critic was not a passive reporter of musical events, but rather a vital and initiating force within the music…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism