We will be launching our book Drawing Analogies: Diagrams in Art, Theory and Practice at The Gallery, Slade School of Fine Art, UCL, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT on Thursday May 1st at 18.00.
The launch will be accompanied by invited academics presenting on their research and discussing diagrams with the Diagram Research Group.
The invited academics are:
Dr. Winnie Soon, artist & Director of UG Art & Technology (Slade School of Fine Art UCL
Duncan Greig, Professor of Genetics (Centre of Life’s Origins and Evolution/CLOE)
Martin Holbraad, Professor of Anthropology (UCL Anthropology)
Drawing Analogies is published by Bloomsbury Press as part of the ‘Drawing In’ series as a hardback book and open access publication that can be downloaded here.
There will be refreshments. For information and attendance e-mail David Burrows: d.burrows@ucl.ac.uk
The NAFAE Annual Conference Culture Co-operative: Moments, Spaces, and Alternatives for Art and Cultures of Learning will be taking place in Hull on Friday 25th of April 9:30am-5:00pm at 1-2 Pier Street Kingston upon Hull HU1 1TU.
I’m genuinely honoured to be giving my paper ‘This Is Not a Diagram: Applying General Semantics to Contemporary Arts Pedagogy’ at the forthcoming online symposium of the Institute of General Semantics – Communication, Consciousness, and Culture II – on Saturday 19th April. The event is free and open to all but registration is required.
For those not familiar with the discipline of General Semantics, this is the perfect opportunity to learn about it. There is an incredible line up of speakers and it promises to be a very special event.
My panel – ‘Map and Territory’ – will run from 12.30 – 13.45 pm GMT.
This year’s National Association of Fine Art Education conference – Culture Co-operative: Moments, Spaces, and Alternatives for Art and Cultures of Learning – will be hosted by the Feral Art School in Hull on Friday April 25th.
The deadline for proposals is March 3rd and confirmation on the 17th. More details about the conference themes and the submission process can be found here.
Fyodor Bronnikov Pythagoreans Celebrate the Sunrise 1869
Below is PDF of my presentation ‘Reimagining Arts Education: From the Education of the Senses to Creative Health ‘ which I gave at the Have Some Imagination: Towards a Manifesto for Arts Education conference at theBaltic Centre for Contemporary Art in Newcastle in February.
My new book Drawing Analogies: Diagrams in Art, Theory and Practice, co-authored with David Burrows, Dean Kenning and Mary Yacoob, is available as Open Access here. The print edition will be available to buy here from 6th Feb 2025.
Informed by Charles Sanders Peirce’s understanding of a diagram as an analogy of relations, Drawing Analogies draws on its authors’ creative use of diagrams as artists, educators and arts researchers, and on fields of inquiry that bring the arts into alignment with other disciplines, most notably anthropology, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, psychology, semiotics and the physical and life sciences.
By taking an artistic approach to diagrams and diagramming, by incorporating diagramming as a method of enquiry within chapters, and by exploring their interdisciplinary and multi-perspectival potentials, Drawing Analogies proposes giving new life to the art of diagramming and widening the arena of artistic practice and creative research.
This year’s National Association For Fine Art Education Conference – The Art of Resistance – will take place at UCA Canterbury on Wednesday September 4th from 10.00 – 16.00. Tickets are free but places are limited. You can reserve your place here.
NAFAE has put aside a small amount of reserve to assist with travel costs for those colleagues who may have concerns about the expenses associated with the conference. To enable this first book your place via the link above and then submit a request for assistance to admin@nafae.org.uk before Wednesday August 14th. NAFAE will pay agreed reimbursements at the conference in September.
David Burrows, Dean Kenning and Mary Yacoob will be discussing our forthcoming book Drawing Analogies: Diagrams in Art, Theory and Practice at The Photographers’ Gallery on Tuesday June 25th between 6.30 and 8 pm. The event is free but limited. Places can be booked here.
Here is the presentation and talk I gave at the Homo ex MachinAI conference in Athens on April 12th.
Thanks to Aspasia and Theo for all their hard work organising the conference and for inviting me to speak. Thanks also to the Benaki Museum for hosting such a timely and important debate. I will be speaking as an artist, writer and arts educator who has taught fine art studio practice and contextual studies for many years. I currently run the BA Fine Art and BA Fine Art with Psychology at the University of Worcester where I also lead the Arts and Health Research Group. I won’t be speaking about the latter today, but it informs my perspective on the impacts of generative AI tools on arts education and creativity more generally, particularly in relation to the mental and physical health effects of ubiquitous computing and on-line media environments within which generative AI developed and operates.
This is a list of the kinds of courses taught at a contemporary art school or university. It’s not comprehensive. It could include architecture, game art, interior and spatial design, printmaking, textiles and many others. The point is to show that ‘creativity’ is not a homogenous concept that can be generalised for all the arts. Every art has its own unique history, set of practices, understandings and outcomes. Because of this diversity, generative AI tools will not effect all teaching programs in the same way or to the same extent. Much depends on how teaching is tied to changes within the existing creative and professional fields it leads to.
Broadly speaking, teaching for professional fields already impacted by generative AI tools will be shaped most significantly. These include animation, commercial photography, film, game art, graphic design, journalism and marketing. This does not mean that learning traditional studio skills in these areas will become redundant. On the contrary, the successful artistic application of AI tools will depend on the technical experience, cultural knowledge and aesthetic discernment of its users. On the other hand, those arts more closely aligned with manual craft skills, individual authorship and the production of unique, physical artefacts made to be experienced in person, in real time and with all the senses, are less likely to be impacted as rapidly or significantly in the longer term. These include ceramics, dance, fashion, fine art, literature, performance, textiles and theatre.
The use of generative AI tools in an increasingly hybrid teaching environments, a trend amplified by the Covid lockdowns, will however be significant for all our programs. With students now regularly using AI-enhanced learning, research and writing tools, and universities moving towards AI-assisted grading and feedback systems, AI tools will play a transformative role in how teaching, administration and management in Higher Education is conducted, understood and regulated in the near future, regardless of what is being taught. I will be focussing here on my own field: Fine Art. Colleagues teaching in other areas will have their own particular stories to tell.
On Friday April 12th I will be speaking at the Homo ex MachinAI conference at the Benaki Museum in Athens about my use of generative AI tools within Contemporary Arts teaching. The event is free but registration is required as spaces are limited. You can register here.