Art-Care Practices for Restoring the Communal

Art-Care Practices for Restoring the Communal
Author: Barbara A. Bickel
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2022-12-28
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1000814688

This book contributes to a larger global call to radically re-create ourselves—to transform our fear and alienation from art, Nature, and ourselves. With compassion and grace, the co-authors outline how everyone may access the gift of Spontaneous Creation-Making and change dominant narratives of individualism. Discovering interconnectivity through art-care we can dream courageously together into the unknown possibilities of a precarious future. Art-care, as coined by the co-authors, is a matrixial form of communicaring through art and reverence. This theoretically informed and practice-based book bridges the individual with the communal in Creation-centred ways that interweave the many parts with the whole. It provides examples of teachings, practices and spontaneous creations of makers that will benefit those who want to integrate art-care into individual practices or group facilitation. This book benefits socially engaged artists, arts-based researchers, artist-philosophers, activists, students, teachers, organizers, therapists, caregivers, and more.

Care Practices, Art, and Social Change

Care Practices, Art, and Social Change
Author: Lara Oppenheimer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 21
Release: 2019
Genre: Art and social action
ISBN:

The cultural turn in art therapy reflects global calls for mental health care that is rights-based, community-centered, and actively engaged in redressing inequality. Several questions emerge: What is the relationship of art, activism, and art therapy to these aims for health care practices? What are the relationships between care practices (of self, of community) and health justice? How might an emerging art therapist/artist/citizen in Chicago co-create opportunities to practice with these aims at the forefront? Inspired by Black feminism, disability justice, and their critical valuing of interdependent care practices as resistance, I undertook a series of art-based interviews with three local artists/activists. These interviews serve as the pilot project for an upcoming audio podcast series about practices of art, care, and social justice in Chicago. My aim is threefold: 1) illuminate local connections between art, social change, and practices of self and community care; 2) build community around these topics for mutual support and collaboration; and 3) offer these conversations in podcast form as an informational resource and an opportunity to engage virtually with a local and global audience.

The Routledge Handbook of Research Methods in Spirituality and Contemplative Studies

The Routledge Handbook of Research Methods in Spirituality and Contemplative Studies
Author: Bernadette Flanagan
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 420
Release: 2024-09-03
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 104011346X

The Routledge Handbook of Research Methods in Spirituality and Contemplative Studies provides the first authoritative overview of methodology in this growing field. Against the background of the pandemic and other global challenges, spirituality is expanding as an agreed term with which to discuss the efforts people make to be fully present to deeper, invisible dimensions of their personal identity and external reality, but until now there have been few resources exploring the different methodological approaches researchers take. This book explores the primary methodologies emerging: First Person, Second Person, and Third Person, and provides a systematisation of spirituality research in applied contexts for the first time. Comprising 33 chapters by a team of international contributors, the book is divided into seven parts: Foundations Approaches to Contemplative Research Contemplative Research in Education Contemplative Research in Work and Leadership Contemplative Research in Science, Health, and Healing Contemplative Research in Social Sciences Contemplative Research and the Way Forward The Handbook provides readers, practitioners, and policymakers with methods and approaches which can facilitate a spiritual and contemplative stance in research activities. It is an essential resource for researchers and students of Religion, Spirituality, and Research Methods.

Arts-Based Educational Research Trajectories

Arts-Based Educational Research Trajectories
Author: Barbara Bickel
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2023-03-17
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9811985472

This book offers reflections from Arts-Based Educational Research (ABER) scholars who, since 2005, were awarded the American Educational Research Association ABER Special Interest Group's Outstanding Dissertation Award. The book includes essays from ten awardees who, across diverse artistic disciplines, share how their ABER careers evolve and succeed—inspiring insights into the possibilities of ABER. It also examines the essential role of mentorship in the academy that supports and expands ABER scholarship. Drawing from dissertation exemplars in the field, this book allows readers to look at how ABER scholars learn with the world while creatively researching and teaching in innovative ways

Community Art Therapy

Community Art Therapy
Author: Emily Goldstein Nolan
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2023-08-22
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1000925226

This book provides a narrative exploration of community art therapy woven from its rich practice roots, theory, the multiple ways that it can be applied in practice, and through practitioner reflections. The applications of community art therapy are numerous, and this book provides knowledge to practitioners, guiding them in their own work and grounding their theoretical approaches. The community approaches presented in the text have been developed through careful research, strategy, and implementation. Community Art Therapy is for the benefit of art therapists, community artists and psychologists, and anyone interested in learning more about the stories of community art therapy.

Care and Maintenance

Care and Maintenance
Author: Fine Arts Program (United States. Public Buildings Service)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2005
Genre: Art
ISBN:

RE-ENCHANTING ART THERAPY

RE-ENCHANTING ART THERAPY
Author: Lynn Kapitan
Publisher: Charles C Thomas Publisher
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2003-01-01
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 039808436X

Re-Enchanting Art Therapy is written for art therapists, supervisors, students, and colleagues in related fields who seek to approach their work as a living, artistic practice but struggle to do so in the often toxic work environments where art therapy is most needed. Asking “What kills creative vitality?” research uncovered core images that art therapists associate with toxic work and the elements of re-enchantment. Author Lynn Kapitan relates, in stories and images of art therapists, how re-enchantment is a cycling process that requires an unambivalent relationship with creative power. Chapter One uses the myth of the dragon to tell stories of art therapists awakening creative energy in a constantly changing, postmodern world. Chapter Two explores transformation in the symbol of the begging bowl held out to accept whatever is placed within as the materials for creative renewal. Using the research method of “collaborative witness,” Chapter Three offers transformative stories of several disenchanted art therapists who discover their disconnection from the primordial source of their creativity in the imagery of water. A community intervention in Chapter Four, the “Reflective Circle of Peers,” presents issues and methods that art therapists use to transform their practices. In Chapter Five, Lynn Kapitan addresses fears and yearning in the toxic work environment, where such practices as playing with wolves and painting in the crossroads teach her the values of the threshold space and the fierce hearted embrace of her creativity. Re-Enchanting Art Therapy challenges art therapists to transform the practice of art therapy with creative vitality.

The Public Work of Care

The Public Work of Care
Author: Aletheia Jane Wittman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 90
Release: 2012
Genre: Art
ISBN:

Public programming, community outreach, visitor studies and education departments have been central to discussions in the art museum field about strategies for community engagement. However, little documentation is available of the ways in which art curators today see their practice as actively participating in and even generating creative strategies to propel museums toward new levels of inclusion. The goal of this research has been to identify and describe emerging trends in practice among art curators who work to expand community access to art museums. Curators were selected for this study based on their employment at art institutions with commitment to 1) community engagement and/or 2) social justice as demonstrated through their online identity. At selected institutions, the BMW Guggenheim Lab, The Bronx Museum of Arts, The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and the Oakland Museum of California, curators were asked to participate in on-site semi-structured interviews. Key words and concepts were cross-referenced between all interviews to find similar themes in order to describe the range of emerging practices that can be found in a diverse set of exemplary art institutions. Findings indicate that curators interviewed for this study have not abandoned more traditional curatorial roles of organizing art exhibitions and interpreting collections through specialized skill and expertise, but instead added to them. Additional roles correspond with expanding the scope of exhibitions and programs in order to engage communities considered non-traditional art museum audiences. Curator participants respond to issues that shape communities and consider how art museum spaces can be programmed and changed in order to promote comfort, familiarity and elevate community expertise and creativity. All curators in this study are shifting the paradigm of curator/intellectual instructing public conversation to diverse communities guiding curatorial work. Art curator participant responses suggest that traditional curatorial roles can be perceived and practiced as complimentary to community engagement rather than contradictory. This research provides art curators with an introduction to exemplary and diverse cases of emerging curatorial community engagement and the ways in which these practices can be more sustainable in the field. It also recommends strategies with which art institutions can better support curators to be integrated into community engagement goals within their institutions and the field.

Handbook of Research on the Facilitation of Civic Engagement through Community Art

Handbook of Research on the Facilitation of Civic Engagement through Community Art
Author: Hersey, Leigh Nanney
Publisher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 672
Release: 2016-12-05
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1522517286

Outreach and engagement initiatives are crucial in promoting community development. This can be achieved through a number of methods, including avenues in the fine arts. The Handbook of Research on the Facilitation of Civic Engagement through Community Art is a comprehensive reference source for emerging perspectives on the incorporation of artistic works to facilitate improved civic engagement and social justice. Featuring innovative coverage across relevant topics, such as art education, service learning, and student engagement, this handbook is ideally designed for practitioners, artists, professionals, academics, and students interested in active citizen participation via artistic channels.