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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
Komleksiz, Ferda Ozturk – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2018
The purpose of the study is to explore the views of students enrolled at pre-school teaching department regarding kitsch phenomenon handled within scope of "Creativity and Its Development" and "Drama" courses in the context of creativity, mimesis and devolution. This study was designed as a qualitative study and conducted with…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Aesthetics, Consciousness Raising, Student Attitudes
Selig, Lauren – Art Education, 2009
Numerous forms of visual culture have not been addressed as valid content in traditional high school curricula until recently, resulting in missed opportunities for engagement in meaningful learning. To understand better the aesthetic responses of urban adolescents, the author conducted a qualitative case study with the high school students in her…
Descriptors: Art Education, Aesthetics, High Schools, Urban Schools
Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah; Westwood, Sean J.; Pena-Guzman, David M. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2010
Curiously, while the efficacy of the arts for the development of multicultural understandings has long been theorized, empirical studies of this effect have been lacking. This essay recounts our combined empirical and philosophical study of this issue. We explicate the philosophical considerations that shaped the development of the arts course we…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Democracy, Cultural Pluralism, Public Education
Szekely, Ilona – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2008
Currently there is a scarcity of information in the art education literature about purchasing art. This article examines how art acquires economic and social value, as well as how consumers make decisions when purchasing a piece of art. Where does an art student, or the general public learn about buying art? How much, if any, of this process is…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Art Education, Purchasing, Social Values
Kelin, Dan A., II – Teaching Artist Journal, 2008
A teaching artist reflects on his travels and work across the South Pacific and India. He concludes that American culture views art as a commodity appreciated mostly for its personal entertainment value, and therefore judges the outcome of artistic endeavors rather than appreciate the purpose of such endeavors. His teaching experiences have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Artists, Cultural Influences, Aesthetics
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
Peppler, Kylie A. – Teachers College Record, 2010
Background/Context: New technologies have been largely absent in arts education curriculum even though they offer opportunities to address arts integration, equity, and the technological prerequisites of an increasingly digital age. This paper draws upon the emerging professional field of "media arts" and the ways in which youth use new…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Active Learning, Educational Technology, Disadvantaged Youth
Papastephanou, Marianna – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2006
The author contends that by reclaiming their own valuable connection to reflective artistic experience and reception, aesthetic theory and art education can contribute to a reconceptualization of autonomy and critique and, perhaps more importantly, to a reorientation of educational practice. Adorno's aesthetics is exceptionally relevant to this…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art Education, Personal Autonomy, Criticism
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
Eckhoff, Angela; Guberman, Steven – Art Education, 2006
In contemporary society, what, why, and how students come to gain knowledge and understandings of art defies traditional boundaries. In part, this is because of the prevalence of many forms of popular visual culture. In this article, the authors present three vignettes that demonstrate the ways in which three young children created connections…
Descriptors: Fine Arts, Interaction, Young Children, Popular Culture
Tavin, Kevin – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2005
Hauntology refers to spectral traces, phantom voices, and palimpsestic discourses that help construct a way of understanding ourselves and acting in the world. This essay explores the hauntological shifts within art education's struggle over popular (visual) culture through a review of positions that view popular culture as an embodiment of…
Descriptors: Fear, Popular Culture, Art Education, Aesthetics
Chung, Sheng Kuan – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2007
Popular media such as films, television programmes/commercials and magazines have become the dominant source through which children learn about others and their world, develop attitudes and beliefs as manifested in media expressions, and formulate their sense of identity. Popular media have enormous influence on children who are constantly…
Descriptors: Art Education, Homosexuality, Media Literacy, Art Teachers
Boughton, Doug – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2004
In this paper, the author describes popular visual culture as seductive, engaging the interest of children and adults because it is both complex and highly sophisticated in aesthetic terms. The author states his agreement with the proponents of a visual culture approach designed to broaden the content of art teaching beyond fine arts to include…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Aesthetics, Art Education, Fine Arts
Aguirre, Imanol – International Journal of Art and Design Education, 2004
In the recent decades art education has tried to move away from the trends based on practical skills and techniques towards a greater stress on interpreting and understanding visual culture, created by the mass media. This approach implies a revision of the field of study and a redefinition of goals, replacing the study of art with a study of…
Descriptors: Social Change, Cultural Awareness, Popular Culture, Mass Media
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