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Category: Academic Affairs Office
19.01.2023
The Art of Curriculum Planning: Introduction to the Curriculum Workshops
Academic Affairs Office
Dear curriculum leaders, lecturers, students and study specialists!
Teaching and study programs at EKA have received a very good evaluation from our graduates, but – keeping the curriculum at a very good level is a constant challenge. The curriculum in higher arts education is a comprehensive network of activities during which students shape their approach to creative practice. Designing learning paths and creating an inspiring learning environment in higher arts education is an art in itself. Questions like: what are the new approaches to the curriculum? How to create, find new and effective approaches to the formation of a creative practitioner? How to create a whole? Are waiting a response.
At EKA, we have conducted two curriculum analyses, from which we see the challenges at our curricula. Several curriculum teams have carried out systematic development in cooperation with the Department of Art Education, and based on this experience and in order to meet the challenges of curriculum quality, we have put together EKA curriculum development workshop program “The Art of Curriculum Planning”.
Therefore, we invite curriculum leaders, lecturers, students and curriculum support staff to participate in it.
The workshop will be supervised by Maria Jürimäe, lecturer in curriculum theory at the University of Tartu, and Anneli Porri, lecturer in art education at EKA.
The program will take place in two parts, it is important to join both of them:
1. introductory seminar – where we map the possibilities, educate the horizons;
2. practical curriculum workshops in faculties.
Participating in workshops provides practical help for curriculum management, curriculum development and analysis writing.
Let’s start with the introductory seminar “The Art of Designing a Curriculum” on Thursday, 19 January 2023 at 13.00-15.30, room A-501 (3 academic hours).
The aim of the seminar is to create a common understanding and find an agreement on the most important strategic learning goals of the ESA.
ENG will be provided if there is a need.
Please register to first seminar by January 10.
Posted by Kristiina Krabi — Permalink
The Art of Curriculum Planning: Introduction to the Curriculum Workshops
Thursday 19 January, 2023
Academic Affairs Office
Dear curriculum leaders, lecturers, students and study specialists!
Teaching and study programs at EKA have received a very good evaluation from our graduates, but – keeping the curriculum at a very good level is a constant challenge. The curriculum in higher arts education is a comprehensive network of activities during which students shape their approach to creative practice. Designing learning paths and creating an inspiring learning environment in higher arts education is an art in itself. Questions like: what are the new approaches to the curriculum? How to create, find new and effective approaches to the formation of a creative practitioner? How to create a whole? Are waiting a response.
At EKA, we have conducted two curriculum analyses, from which we see the challenges at our curricula. Several curriculum teams have carried out systematic development in cooperation with the Department of Art Education, and based on this experience and in order to meet the challenges of curriculum quality, we have put together EKA curriculum development workshop program “The Art of Curriculum Planning”.
Therefore, we invite curriculum leaders, lecturers, students and curriculum support staff to participate in it.
The workshop will be supervised by Maria Jürimäe, lecturer in curriculum theory at the University of Tartu, and Anneli Porri, lecturer in art education at EKA.
The program will take place in two parts, it is important to join both of them:
1. introductory seminar – where we map the possibilities, educate the horizons;
2. practical curriculum workshops in faculties.
Participating in workshops provides practical help for curriculum management, curriculum development and analysis writing.
Let’s start with the introductory seminar “The Art of Designing a Curriculum” on Thursday, 19 January 2023 at 13.00-15.30, room A-501 (3 academic hours).
The aim of the seminar is to create a common understanding and find an agreement on the most important strategic learning goals of the ESA.
ENG will be provided if there is a need.
Please register to first seminar by January 10.
Posted by Kristiina Krabi — Permalink
02.09.2022
Opening ceremony of the 2022/23 academic year
Academic Affairs Office
On Friday, September 2, starting at 12:00, the opening ceremony of the 2022/23 academic year will be held. The ceremony lasts approximately 1.5 hours.
Posted by Maarja Pabut — Permalink
Opening ceremony of the 2022/23 academic year
Friday 02 September, 2022
Academic Affairs Office
On Friday, September 2, starting at 12:00, the opening ceremony of the 2022/23 academic year will be held. The ceremony lasts approximately 1.5 hours.
Posted by Maarja Pabut — Permalink
19.08.2020
Pre-reviewing of Ulvi Haagensen’s exhibition
Academic Affairs Office
On Wednesday, August 19th at 15:00, pre-reviewing of Art and Design programme PhD student Ulvi Haagensen’s exhibition „From the Archive: a Collection of Funny Things” will take place at Tartu Art House Small gallery. Exhibition is part of the artistic (practice-based) doctoral thesis of Ulvi Haagensen.
Supervisors: Dr Liina Unt, Jan Guy (The University of Sidney).
Pre-reviewers of the exhibition: Villu Plink and Ester Bardone
The exhibition is open from 30 July to 23 August 2020.
This exhibition is by imaginary artist, Olive Puuvill, who creates work in the manner of a bricoleuse, cobbling, tinkering and using whatever is close at hand. In her latest work she combines patterns, lines, textures and light to create an installation where objects, situations, materials and ideas are juxtaposed in a slightly chaotic arrangement, but one that nonetheless has a logic of its own. All this bears the traces of her intentions, aims and ideas as physical evidence of the working processes where Olive’s everyday life clashes, meets and melds with her art practice.
Ulvi Haagensen’s doctoral research is about the line between art and everyday life. By merging a multi-disciplinary art practice that combines installation, sculpture, drawing, performance and video with everyday experiences – mainly cleaning, one of the more mundane aspects of everyday life – she works across and along the lines between everyday life and art to discover the lines, overlaps and boundaries between art and the everyday.
Together with three imaginary characters and using an autoethnographic approach that includes the methods, tools and attitudes of an artist who uses ‘what is at hand’ and ‘makes do’she uses the everyday, not only for inspiration, but also materials, tools and techniques.
As her characters move between their roles and various places of work and everyday life, they explore notions of the everyday and the specialness of art, especially from the viewpoint of an artist for whom art and art making are very much a part of the everyday and therefore quite un-special.
Posted by Irene Hütsi — Permalink
Pre-reviewing of Ulvi Haagensen’s exhibition
Wednesday 19 August, 2020
Academic Affairs Office
On Wednesday, August 19th at 15:00, pre-reviewing of Art and Design programme PhD student Ulvi Haagensen’s exhibition „From the Archive: a Collection of Funny Things” will take place at Tartu Art House Small gallery. Exhibition is part of the artistic (practice-based) doctoral thesis of Ulvi Haagensen.
Supervisors: Dr Liina Unt, Jan Guy (The University of Sidney).
Pre-reviewers of the exhibition: Villu Plink and Ester Bardone
The exhibition is open from 30 July to 23 August 2020.
This exhibition is by imaginary artist, Olive Puuvill, who creates work in the manner of a bricoleuse, cobbling, tinkering and using whatever is close at hand. In her latest work she combines patterns, lines, textures and light to create an installation where objects, situations, materials and ideas are juxtaposed in a slightly chaotic arrangement, but one that nonetheless has a logic of its own. All this bears the traces of her intentions, aims and ideas as physical evidence of the working processes where Olive’s everyday life clashes, meets and melds with her art practice.
Ulvi Haagensen’s doctoral research is about the line between art and everyday life. By merging a multi-disciplinary art practice that combines installation, sculpture, drawing, performance and video with everyday experiences – mainly cleaning, one of the more mundane aspects of everyday life – she works across and along the lines between everyday life and art to discover the lines, overlaps and boundaries between art and the everyday.
Together with three imaginary characters and using an autoethnographic approach that includes the methods, tools and attitudes of an artist who uses ‘what is at hand’ and ‘makes do’she uses the everyday, not only for inspiration, but also materials, tools and techniques.
As her characters move between their roles and various places of work and everyday life, they explore notions of the everyday and the specialness of art, especially from the viewpoint of an artist for whom art and art making are very much a part of the everyday and therefore quite un-special.
Posted by Irene Hütsi — Permalink
10.06.2020
Conference of the Doctoral School
Academic Affairs Office
The annual conference of EKA Doctoral School takes place on June 10 at the Estonian Academy of Arts (Põhja pst. 7) room A101 and via Zoom.
To participate in the conference registration must be completed by June 8 the latest.
TIMETABLE
10:00 – 10:15 Welcoming words
Vice Rector for Research Epp Lankots, head of programmes
Architecture and Urban Design
10:15 – 10:55
Sille Pihlak. “Prototyping Protocols: Protocolling Prototypes* Identifying and systematising design methodology for contemporary modular timber architecture”. Discussant Markus Vihma
Art History and Visual Culture Studies
10:55 – 11:35
Merily Salura. “Flow and time: the temporality of a creative process in Gadamer’s aesthetics”. Discussant Maria Hansar
11:35 – 12:15
Hanna-Liis Kont. “From relational aesthetics to Arte Útil. Selected theoretical frameworks for analysing current curatorial practices related to community engagement and social wellbeing”. Discussant Darja Popolitova
12:15 – 12:45 coffee break
Art and Design
12:45 – 13:25
Ulvi Haagensen. “The art of cleaning: crossing the line between art and everyday life”. Discussant Merily Salura
13:25 – 14:05
Darja Popolitova. “Haptic Visuality of Jewellery”. Discussant Ulvi Haagensen
14:05 – 14:45
Markus Vihma. “Eco Design competencies”. Discussant Sille Pihlak
14:45 – 15:15 coffee break
Cultural Heritage and conservation
15:15 – 15:55
Maria Hansar. “Media Archeological Approach to the Archeological Monument – Narva Case Study”. Discussant Nele Rent
15:55 – 16:35
Nele Rent. “Changes in the use of terms and language over time on the example of the Heritage Protection Act”. Discussant Hanna-Liis Kont
16:35 – 17:00 concluding discussion
Posted by Irene Hütsi — Permalink
Conference of the Doctoral School
Wednesday 10 June, 2020
Academic Affairs Office
The annual conference of EKA Doctoral School takes place on June 10 at the Estonian Academy of Arts (Põhja pst. 7) room A101 and via Zoom.
To participate in the conference registration must be completed by June 8 the latest.
TIMETABLE
10:00 – 10:15 Welcoming words
Vice Rector for Research Epp Lankots, head of programmes
Architecture and Urban Design
10:15 – 10:55
Sille Pihlak. “Prototyping Protocols: Protocolling Prototypes* Identifying and systematising design methodology for contemporary modular timber architecture”. Discussant Markus Vihma
Art History and Visual Culture Studies
10:55 – 11:35
Merily Salura. “Flow and time: the temporality of a creative process in Gadamer’s aesthetics”. Discussant Maria Hansar
11:35 – 12:15
Hanna-Liis Kont. “From relational aesthetics to Arte Útil. Selected theoretical frameworks for analysing current curatorial practices related to community engagement and social wellbeing”. Discussant Darja Popolitova
12:15 – 12:45 coffee break
Art and Design
12:45 – 13:25
Ulvi Haagensen. “The art of cleaning: crossing the line between art and everyday life”. Discussant Merily Salura
13:25 – 14:05
Darja Popolitova. “Haptic Visuality of Jewellery”. Discussant Ulvi Haagensen
14:05 – 14:45
Markus Vihma. “Eco Design competencies”. Discussant Sille Pihlak
14:45 – 15:15 coffee break
Cultural Heritage and conservation
15:15 – 15:55
Maria Hansar. “Media Archeological Approach to the Archeological Monument – Narva Case Study”. Discussant Nele Rent
15:55 – 16:35
Nele Rent. “Changes in the use of terms and language over time on the example of the Heritage Protection Act”. Discussant Hanna-Liis Kont
16:35 – 17:00 concluding discussion
Posted by Irene Hütsi — Permalink
27.08.2019 — 30.08.2019
Introductory week
Academic Affairs Office
Welcome to the Estonian Academy of Arts!
The 2019/2020 academic year begins on August 27 with an introductory week, the schedule of which can be found HERE. The translation of the lecture by Mart Kalm is supported from European Regional Development Fund.
The timetable is available in the study information system (ÕIS) on artun.ois.ee/en/ from August 27. Initially, the student will not have a personal timetable and you will need to look at your group timetable.
Group code:
- Media Graphics BA (in Russian) – BMGV19
- Contemporary Art MA – MACA19
- Design and Crafts MA – MDC19
- Animation MA – MAN19
- Interaction Design MA – MIxD19
- Urban Studies MA – MUR19
- Design and Technology Futures MSc (joint programme with Tallinn University of Technology) – MADM19
- Literature, Visual Culture and Film Studies MA (joint programme with Tallinn University) – HIKVM19
- Architecture and Urban Design PhD – DAU19
- Art and Design PhD – DKD19
ÕIS user account and your @artun.ee e-mail account (a mandatory academy communication channel) will be created for each student. Email addresses are created by firstname.lastname@artun.ee.
ISIC = Door card
The ISIC card proves your student status and acts as a door card in the EKA building. You can apply for the card at the 1st floor information desk at the main entrance.
Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink
Introductory week
Tuesday 27 August, 2019 — Friday 30 August, 2019
Academic Affairs Office
Welcome to the Estonian Academy of Arts!
The 2019/2020 academic year begins on August 27 with an introductory week, the schedule of which can be found HERE. The translation of the lecture by Mart Kalm is supported from European Regional Development Fund.
The timetable is available in the study information system (ÕIS) on artun.ois.ee/en/ from August 27. Initially, the student will not have a personal timetable and you will need to look at your group timetable.
Group code:
- Media Graphics BA (in Russian) – BMGV19
- Contemporary Art MA – MACA19
- Design and Crafts MA – MDC19
- Animation MA – MAN19
- Interaction Design MA – MIxD19
- Urban Studies MA – MUR19
- Design and Technology Futures MSc (joint programme with Tallinn University of Technology) – MADM19
- Literature, Visual Culture and Film Studies MA (joint programme with Tallinn University) – HIKVM19
- Architecture and Urban Design PhD – DAU19
- Art and Design PhD – DKD19
ÕIS user account and your @artun.ee e-mail account (a mandatory academy communication channel) will be created for each student. Email addresses are created by firstname.lastname@artun.ee.
ISIC = Door card
The ISIC card proves your student status and acts as a door card in the EKA building. You can apply for the card at the 1st floor information desk at the main entrance.
Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink
20.06.2019
2019 Graduation Ceremonies
Academic Affairs Office
his year’s Graduation Ceremonies will be held on June 20th in the EKA hall (room A101, Põhja puiestee 7, Tallinn).
12.00 o’clock – graduates of Faculties of Design and Art Culture
3 o’clock pm – graduates of Doctoral School and the faculties of Architecture and Fine Art
NB! Dear graduate, please come to the EKA gallery 15 minutes earlier, so we can lead you to your place.
Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink
2019 Graduation Ceremonies
Thursday 20 June, 2019
Academic Affairs Office
his year’s Graduation Ceremonies will be held on June 20th in the EKA hall (room A101, Põhja puiestee 7, Tallinn).
12.00 o’clock – graduates of Faculties of Design and Art Culture
3 o’clock pm – graduates of Doctoral School and the faculties of Architecture and Fine Art
NB! Dear graduate, please come to the EKA gallery 15 minutes earlier, so we can lead you to your place.
Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink
04.06.2019
Exhibition „iTouch Store” Darja Popolitova
Academic Affairs Office
Exhibition „iTouch Store” Darja Popolitova
Vault Room of A-Gallery, Hobusepea 2, Tallinn
The exhibition can be visited from 31 Mayto 1 July 2019.
The opening will take place on 7 June at 6 p.m.
Darja Popolitova’s exhibition examines touch as a part of digital culture: the tactility of digitally transmitted jewellery images, given the excessive focus on the phone and the screen.
The audience can also see the works in their representations —in the form of a video ad where the author attempts to find answers to the following questions: can the digital representation of the jewellery have tactile features?, how does the digital representation of jewellery affect real jewellery on a tactile level? and, how does the use of digital media change the relationship between jewellery and tactility?.
The jewellery and objects at the exhibition are meant to solve the potential problems of the digital age. The titles of the work speak for themselves: “Hot Not Only Online Phone Case”, “Silicon Nail for Touching Screen”, “Digital Detox Brush”, etc.
The exhibition is laid out as a shop and this is not accidental. Media critic Erkki Huhtamo brings a parallel between a museum and a shop, the tradition of which is related to “tactiloclasms” — tactile rules and prohibitions in public places. Similarly to the old days where you could have access to the product in a shop only with the help of a shop assistant, in the exhibition room touching the jewellery is not permitted due to security requirements. Namita Gupta Wiggers, the jewellery historian, spoke of the fact that jewellery perception in the museum is limited to the vision, while the potential destination of the jewellery is the body.
Replacing the sense of touch with the vision continues in the Internet age. Darja Popolitova notes that she has been inspired by AliExpress e-shop ads. “Reviewing products —even without buying them —offers me certain pleasure,” commented the artist. “As I read a book by the media theorist Laura U. Marks, I went deeper into the meaning of the term “tactile visuality offered by Laura U. Marks. At one moment everything came together in my head: I treat the images of the products with a certain plasticity — my eyes do not see, but “touch” these images.That is why I decided to explore the tactile properties of the images of jewellery with my exhibition.”
Darja Popolitova was born in 1989 in Sillamäe and lives and works in Tallinn. She is currently doing a PhD at Estonian Academy of Arts. Darja designs jewellery using innovative technologies and mixed media. Recently, Darja Popolitova has participated in exhibitions at the Art and Design Museum in New York (2019), the Kunstnerforbundet gallery in Oslo (2018) and the fourth biennial of contemporary jewellery, METALLOphone in Vilnius (2018). Darja Popolitova is represented by the following galleries: Marzee in Nijmegen, Beyond in Antwerp, and Door in Mariaheide. Her work is included in the collection of the Estonian Museum of Applied Art and Design and also in private collections. The work of Darja Popolitova was awarded the scholarships of the Ministry of Culture and Adamson-Eric in 2018. She also received the scholarship of Young Jewellery in 2015.
__
Video: Ando Naulainen
Sound Design: Andres Nõlvak
Graphic Design: Johanna Ruukholm
Artist’s gratitude goes to 3DKoda OÜ, A-Gallery, Adamson-Eric Museum,
Anastassia Dratšova, Benjamin Lignel, Daniil Popov, Doctoral School of Estonian Academy of Arts, Estonian Ministry of Culture, Kadri Mälk, Keiu Krikmann,
MakerLab Tallinn, Martina Gofman, Olesja Kulikova, Orbital Vox Stuudiod, Pire Sova,
Raivo Kelomees, Sarah Elizabeth Johnston, Shapeways Inc., Varvara Guljajeva, Vladimir Ljadov
The exhibition is supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia.
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
Exhibition „iTouch Store” Darja Popolitova
Tuesday 04 June, 2019
Academic Affairs Office
Exhibition „iTouch Store” Darja Popolitova
Vault Room of A-Gallery, Hobusepea 2, Tallinn
The exhibition can be visited from 31 Mayto 1 July 2019.
The opening will take place on 7 June at 6 p.m.
Darja Popolitova’s exhibition examines touch as a part of digital culture: the tactility of digitally transmitted jewellery images, given the excessive focus on the phone and the screen.
The audience can also see the works in their representations —in the form of a video ad where the author attempts to find answers to the following questions: can the digital representation of the jewellery have tactile features?, how does the digital representation of jewellery affect real jewellery on a tactile level? and, how does the use of digital media change the relationship between jewellery and tactility?.
The jewellery and objects at the exhibition are meant to solve the potential problems of the digital age. The titles of the work speak for themselves: “Hot Not Only Online Phone Case”, “Silicon Nail for Touching Screen”, “Digital Detox Brush”, etc.
The exhibition is laid out as a shop and this is not accidental. Media critic Erkki Huhtamo brings a parallel between a museum and a shop, the tradition of which is related to “tactiloclasms” — tactile rules and prohibitions in public places. Similarly to the old days where you could have access to the product in a shop only with the help of a shop assistant, in the exhibition room touching the jewellery is not permitted due to security requirements. Namita Gupta Wiggers, the jewellery historian, spoke of the fact that jewellery perception in the museum is limited to the vision, while the potential destination of the jewellery is the body.
Replacing the sense of touch with the vision continues in the Internet age. Darja Popolitova notes that she has been inspired by AliExpress e-shop ads. “Reviewing products —even without buying them —offers me certain pleasure,” commented the artist. “As I read a book by the media theorist Laura U. Marks, I went deeper into the meaning of the term “tactile visuality offered by Laura U. Marks. At one moment everything came together in my head: I treat the images of the products with a certain plasticity — my eyes do not see, but “touch” these images.That is why I decided to explore the tactile properties of the images of jewellery with my exhibition.”
Darja Popolitova was born in 1989 in Sillamäe and lives and works in Tallinn. She is currently doing a PhD at Estonian Academy of Arts. Darja designs jewellery using innovative technologies and mixed media. Recently, Darja Popolitova has participated in exhibitions at the Art and Design Museum in New York (2019), the Kunstnerforbundet gallery in Oslo (2018) and the fourth biennial of contemporary jewellery, METALLOphone in Vilnius (2018). Darja Popolitova is represented by the following galleries: Marzee in Nijmegen, Beyond in Antwerp, and Door in Mariaheide. Her work is included in the collection of the Estonian Museum of Applied Art and Design and also in private collections. The work of Darja Popolitova was awarded the scholarships of the Ministry of Culture and Adamson-Eric in 2018. She also received the scholarship of Young Jewellery in 2015.
__
Video: Ando Naulainen
Sound Design: Andres Nõlvak
Graphic Design: Johanna Ruukholm
Artist’s gratitude goes to 3DKoda OÜ, A-Gallery, Adamson-Eric Museum,
Anastassia Dratšova, Benjamin Lignel, Daniil Popov, Doctoral School of Estonian Academy of Arts, Estonian Ministry of Culture, Kadri Mälk, Keiu Krikmann,
MakerLab Tallinn, Martina Gofman, Olesja Kulikova, Orbital Vox Stuudiod, Pire Sova,
Raivo Kelomees, Sarah Elizabeth Johnston, Shapeways Inc., Varvara Guljajeva, Vladimir Ljadov
The exhibition is supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia.
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
04.06.2019 — 07.06.2019
Seminar: Unpacking “show and tell”
Academic Affairs Office
Date: June 4, 6, 7 at 10.00 to 17.00
Venue: Estonian Academy of Arts, Põhja pst 7, room A202
Lecturer: Benjamin Lignel
Artist, writer and curator Benjamin Lignel will conduct a 3-day seminar in June, focusing on the challenges and opportunities inherent to artistic research. We will be thinking through the temporalities of making, documenting, and argumenting, and the different sort of “proof” they invoke; we will attempt a 21st century autopsy of the author-function and look at subject-positions with the help of Italo Calvino, Joan Scott and Audre Lord; we will play at presenting an object (textual or physical) for public scrutiny with a view to understanding what “stewardship of ideas” might imply.
Students who sign up for the seminar will be required to read 3 texts in advance:
Audre Lord, the Use of Anger, Women responding to Racism (1981)
Joan Scott, The Evidence of Experience (1991)
Ulrike Müller, Herstory Inventory (2011)
You will also be required to write, in conversational/diaristic mode, how you first met an idea that subequently guided your current research (max. 500 words).
Registration
The seminar is open to PhD and MA students.
Registration is open until 28.05.2019.
This event is organised by the Graduate School of Culture Studies and Arts, supported by the ASTRA project of the Estonian Academy of Arts – EKA LOOVKÄRG (European Union, European Regional Development Fund).
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
Seminar: Unpacking “show and tell”
Tuesday 04 June, 2019 — Friday 07 June, 2019
Academic Affairs Office
Date: June 4, 6, 7 at 10.00 to 17.00
Venue: Estonian Academy of Arts, Põhja pst 7, room A202
Lecturer: Benjamin Lignel
Artist, writer and curator Benjamin Lignel will conduct a 3-day seminar in June, focusing on the challenges and opportunities inherent to artistic research. We will be thinking through the temporalities of making, documenting, and argumenting, and the different sort of “proof” they invoke; we will attempt a 21st century autopsy of the author-function and look at subject-positions with the help of Italo Calvino, Joan Scott and Audre Lord; we will play at presenting an object (textual or physical) for public scrutiny with a view to understanding what “stewardship of ideas” might imply.
Students who sign up for the seminar will be required to read 3 texts in advance:
Audre Lord, the Use of Anger, Women responding to Racism (1981)
Joan Scott, The Evidence of Experience (1991)
Ulrike Müller, Herstory Inventory (2011)
You will also be required to write, in conversational/diaristic mode, how you first met an idea that subequently guided your current research (max. 500 words).
Registration
The seminar is open to PhD and MA students.
Registration is open until 28.05.2019.
This event is organised by the Graduate School of Culture Studies and Arts, supported by the ASTRA project of the Estonian Academy of Arts – EKA LOOVKÄRG (European Union, European Regional Development Fund).
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
21.12.2018
PhD Thesis defence of Varvara Guljajeva
Academic Affairs Office
The Estonian Academy of Arts, Curriculum of Art and Design’s PhD student Varvara Guljajeva will defend her thesis “From interaction to post-participation: the disappearing role of the active participant”(“Interaktsioonist osalusjärgsuseni: aktiivse osaleja kaduv roll”) on the 21st of December 2018 at 12.00 at Põhja pst 7 building, room A101.
Supervisors:dr Raivo Kelomees (Estonian Academy of Arts) and dr Pau Waelder (The Open University of Catalonia)
Pre-reviewers:prof dr Christa Sommerer (Interface Cultures, The University of Art and Design Linz) and prof dr Moises Mañas Carbonell (Faculty of Fine Arts, Polytechnic University of Valencia)
Opponent: prof dr Christa Sommerer (Interface Cultures, The University of Art and Design Linz)
The practice-based dissertation analyses and contextualises passive audience interaction through the lens of post-participation. Research explores the shift from active to passive participation in interactive art. By exploring interactive art history and the discourse of identity within the field, this dissertation investigates how artworks that demonstrate no audience involvement, but still incorporate an internal system interaction with a data source, are addressed. In other words, the research tracks down the interest shift from human-machine to system-to-system interaction, and explores the reasons behind this.
In this thesis, a differentiation is made between direct and indirect post-participation. Hence, the selected artworks are analysed from the perspective of concept, direct or indirect post-participation components, and realisation. In addition, related artworks by other artists are introduced and discussed under each subcategory of post-participation.
In the end, the dissertation contributes to the evolution of interactive art, by analysing and contextualising passive audience participation in the form of post-participation. Author argues that the concept of post-participation helps to address the shift from an active to a passive spectator in the complex age of dataveillance, an age in which humans are continuously tracked, traced, monitored and surveilled without our consent.
Please find the PhD thesis here.
The defense will be in English.
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
PhD Thesis defence of Varvara Guljajeva
Friday 21 December, 2018
Academic Affairs Office
The Estonian Academy of Arts, Curriculum of Art and Design’s PhD student Varvara Guljajeva will defend her thesis “From interaction to post-participation: the disappearing role of the active participant”(“Interaktsioonist osalusjärgsuseni: aktiivse osaleja kaduv roll”) on the 21st of December 2018 at 12.00 at Põhja pst 7 building, room A101.
Supervisors:dr Raivo Kelomees (Estonian Academy of Arts) and dr Pau Waelder (The Open University of Catalonia)
Pre-reviewers:prof dr Christa Sommerer (Interface Cultures, The University of Art and Design Linz) and prof dr Moises Mañas Carbonell (Faculty of Fine Arts, Polytechnic University of Valencia)
Opponent: prof dr Christa Sommerer (Interface Cultures, The University of Art and Design Linz)
The practice-based dissertation analyses and contextualises passive audience interaction through the lens of post-participation. Research explores the shift from active to passive participation in interactive art. By exploring interactive art history and the discourse of identity within the field, this dissertation investigates how artworks that demonstrate no audience involvement, but still incorporate an internal system interaction with a data source, are addressed. In other words, the research tracks down the interest shift from human-machine to system-to-system interaction, and explores the reasons behind this.
In this thesis, a differentiation is made between direct and indirect post-participation. Hence, the selected artworks are analysed from the perspective of concept, direct or indirect post-participation components, and realisation. In addition, related artworks by other artists are introduced and discussed under each subcategory of post-participation.
In the end, the dissertation contributes to the evolution of interactive art, by analysing and contextualising passive audience participation in the form of post-participation. Author argues that the concept of post-participation helps to address the shift from an active to a passive spectator in the complex age of dataveillance, an age in which humans are continuously tracked, traced, monitored and surveilled without our consent.
Please find the PhD thesis here.
The defense will be in English.
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
16.11.2018
Exhibition “Tangibility Matters” Sofia Hallik
Academic Affairs Office
Exhibition dates:
15.11.2018 12-18
16.11.2018 12-20
Sofia Hallik’s “Tangibility Matters” exhibition finissage takes place on Friday, November 16th, in the ARS Project Room at 18.00.
Peer-review event takes place in Nov 16th, at 14.00 in ARS Project Room (Pärnu mnt 154, Tallinn)
Supervisors: prof Kadri Mälk and dr Jaak Tomberg
Peer – reviewers: dr Kärt Ojavee and dr Raivo Kelomees
Works on display are made as a part of a PhD thesis, and consist of wearable objects that are a hybrid of hand work and digital production. While working on a jewellery, the author is in need of touch and tactility, while an object that is made using 3D printing appears as an empty form, which demands substance. In the world of tech, because the process of work using CAD or 3D printing excludes tangibility, the author is lacking physical contact with a work of art. That is exactly why in these series of works the artist razes in a way the digital tarnish from the surface of the printed object by implementing hand work and traditional jewellery techniques. In this way a 3D printed object gains emotional expressiveness.
The works presented during the exhibition originate from two contradictory principles: digital production and hand work, and embody the mutual closeness of human and the machine. In other words, while people approach the digital world, technology becomes more and more humane.
Sofia Hallik (1991) is a jewellery artist, designer and PhD student at the Estonian Academy of Arts. In her doctoral thesis “Hand vs. Machine: Three Methods of Jewellery Making” (supervisors prof. Kadri Mälk and Dr. Jaak Tomberg) Sofia focuses on innovative materials and digital technologies. What interests her the most is the way digital technology influences jewellery.
Special thanks to: Kadri Mälk, Jaak Tomberg, Oskar Narusberk, EAA Jewellery and Blacksmithing department, 3D Koda OÜ.
The exhibition was made possible with the support of the Cultural Endowment of Estonia.
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink
Exhibition “Tangibility Matters” Sofia Hallik
Friday 16 November, 2018
Academic Affairs Office
Exhibition dates:
15.11.2018 12-18
16.11.2018 12-20
Sofia Hallik’s “Tangibility Matters” exhibition finissage takes place on Friday, November 16th, in the ARS Project Room at 18.00.
Peer-review event takes place in Nov 16th, at 14.00 in ARS Project Room (Pärnu mnt 154, Tallinn)
Supervisors: prof Kadri Mälk and dr Jaak Tomberg
Peer – reviewers: dr Kärt Ojavee and dr Raivo Kelomees
Works on display are made as a part of a PhD thesis, and consist of wearable objects that are a hybrid of hand work and digital production. While working on a jewellery, the author is in need of touch and tactility, while an object that is made using 3D printing appears as an empty form, which demands substance. In the world of tech, because the process of work using CAD or 3D printing excludes tangibility, the author is lacking physical contact with a work of art. That is exactly why in these series of works the artist razes in a way the digital tarnish from the surface of the printed object by implementing hand work and traditional jewellery techniques. In this way a 3D printed object gains emotional expressiveness.
The works presented during the exhibition originate from two contradictory principles: digital production and hand work, and embody the mutual closeness of human and the machine. In other words, while people approach the digital world, technology becomes more and more humane.
Sofia Hallik (1991) is a jewellery artist, designer and PhD student at the Estonian Academy of Arts. In her doctoral thesis “Hand vs. Machine: Three Methods of Jewellery Making” (supervisors prof. Kadri Mälk and Dr. Jaak Tomberg) Sofia focuses on innovative materials and digital technologies. What interests her the most is the way digital technology influences jewellery.
Special thanks to: Kadri Mälk, Jaak Tomberg, Oskar Narusberk, EAA Jewellery and Blacksmithing department, 3D Koda OÜ.
The exhibition was made possible with the support of the Cultural Endowment of Estonia.
Posted by Elika Kiilo — Permalink