Participatory Practices in Art and Cultural Heritage: Learning Through and from Collaboration

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

This edited volume analyzes participatory practices in art and cultural heritage in order to determine what can be learned through and from collaboration across disciplinary borders. Following recent developments in museology, museum policies and practices have tended to prioritize community engagement over a traditional focus on collecting and preserving museal objects. At many museal institutions, a shift from a focus on objects to a focus on audiences has taken place. Artistic practices in the visual arts, music, and theater are also increasingly taking on participatory forms. The world of cultural heritage has seen an upsurge in participatory governance models favoring the expertise of local communities over that of trained professionals. While museal institutions, artists, and policy makers consider participation as a tool for implementing diversity policy, a solution to social disjunction, and a form of cultural activism, such participation has also sparked a debate on definitions, and on issues concerning the distribution of authority, power, expertise, agency, and representation. While new forms of audience and community engagement and corresponding models for “co-creation” are flourishing, fundamental but paralyzing critique abounds and the formulation of ethical frameworks and practical guidelines, not to mention theoretical reflection and critical assessment of practices, are lagging.

This book offers a space for critically reflecting on participatory practices with the aim of asking and answering the question: How can we learn to better participate? To do so, it focuses on the emergence of new norms and forms of collaboration as participation, and on actual lessons learned from participatory practices. If collaboration is the interdependent formulation of problems and entails the common definition of a shared problem space, how can we best learn to collaborate across disciplinary borders and what exactly can be learned from such collaboration?

Author(s): Christoph Rausch, Ruth Benschop, Emilie Sitzia, Vivian van Saaze
Series: Studies in Art, Heritage, Law and the Market, 5
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 180
City: Cham

Contents
Part I: Introduction
Introduction to the Volume
References
Documenting the Participants´ Points of View: Re-Thinking the Epistemology of Participation
References
Part II: The Practice of Collaboration: Negotiating the Politics of Participation
Displaying Co-Creation: An Enquiry into Participatory Engagement at the University Museum
1 Introduction: Situating Co-Creation in Participation/Co-Production
2 The University Museum in Context
3 Towards Participatory Co-Creation
4 Reflections on the Rationale of the University Museum
5 Conclusions
References
Crowdsourcing Cultural Heritage As Democratic Practice
1 Introduction
2 Three Dimensions of Democracy
3 Crowdsourcing As Democratic Practice
4 Participatory Paradata
References
The People´s Salon: A Pragmatist Approach to Audience Participation in Symphonic Music
1 Introduction
2 Beyond Autonomy? Aesthetics and the Everyday in the Participatory Turn
3 The People´s Salon: A Participatory Experiment in a Symphony Orchestra
4 Having an Aesthetic Experience
5 Conclusion
References
Part III: Forms of Practice: Appropriating Collaborative Technologies and Methodologies
The Social Potential of Interactive Walking
1 Introduction
2 Interactive Walking
3 Social Potential
4 Conclusions
References
Online Participatory Design of Heritage Projects
1 Introduction
2 Participatory Design
3 Participatory Design Workshops of Terra Mosana Project
3.1 Original Plan of Terra Mosana PD Workshops
3.2 Online Scenario of Terra Mosana PD Workshops
3.3 Results of Terra Mosana Online PD workshops
3.3.1 Outputs of Activities
3.3.2 Recruitment of Participants
3.3.3 Online Tools
4 Discussion
5 Conclusion
References
Re: Place: Participatory and Discursive Place Making in Augmented Reality (AR) Public Art
1 Introduction: (Re)framing AR
2 Locational Expansion: The Discursive AR Site
3 Reinforcing Places: Integrationary AR
4 Reconsidering Places: Interventionary AR
5 Conclusion
References
Effecting Social Change Through Participative Mediation
1 Introduction
2 Participatory Art/Museums: Literature Review
3 Art Project ``How People Live: A Report on Passivity´´
4 Aspects of Participative Experience: Empirical Research
5 Participation or Social Action
6 Conclusion
References
Part IV: Norms of Practice: Contesting the Ethics of Collaboration
Affirming Change in Participatory Practices of Cultural Conservation
1 Introduction
2 Decision-Making and Collaboration in Context
3 Issues in Challenging the Canon or Why Participation Is So Hard to Implement
3.1 Definition of Community and Modes of Engagement
3.2 Contingencies of the Institutional Process
3.3 Institutional Structures, Commitment, and Politics
4 Conclusion: Committing to Relationships, Slowing Down Conservation Processes
References
Getting Out of the Groove: On Calibrating Roles in Collaboratory Artistic Research
1 Introduction
2 Collaboration and Becoming with Each Other
3 Bagage-Ontmoeten-Grooves
3.1 Bagage
3.2 Ontmoeten
3.3 Grooves
4 Getting Out of the Groove?
References
Beethoven as Open Dialogue: Doing Participation Differently in Symphonic Music?
1 Introduction
2 Participation and Pynarello´s Symphonic Concerts
3 The Practical Work of Undoing Routines
4 Rehearsing Openness
5 Balancing Beethoven and Pynarello
6 Conclusions
References
The Lecture Performance Is Dead, Hurray for the Lecture! (Or) Do Not Look to the Artist for Innovation, and Neither to the Sci...
1 Characters
2 Setting/Time
3 Scene 1: Introduction
4 Scene 2: The Performance Lecture
5 Scene 3: The Academic Lecture
6 Scene 4: The Audience
References
Further Reading