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Art education: a social good or corporate thorn?

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 20:42 authored by Keely MacarowKeely Macarow, Dominic RedfernDominic Redfern
Education is a social good, a necessity for the betterment of peoples and societies. There is simply no refuting that by any other logic than the most sexist, classist or racist social conservatism. However the corporate model of universities is failing us: the market does not know best. The neo-liberal accounting that has infected universities-as it has all other sectors of society-supports ongoing financial reductions and reductionist thinking about art and education. These are political choices and they are neither inevitable nor particularly logical-despite the rhetoric to the contrary. This merely leads us to the financial value and dividends of art and the measurement of impact in creative research. However, the impact of creative work on society and culture is not merely quantifiable. As our institutions swing further to the market fundamentalist orthodoxy of our moment artists-as usual-are responding creatively. Free schools have sprung up across the world in response to these conditions and their negative impacts upon the study and evolution of arts practice. In the spirit of the artist's polemic, this paper will examine emergent models for real world and virtual solutions that offer potential for art and education: post capitalism.

History

Related Materials

Start page

1

End page

13

Total pages

13

Outlet

Proceedings of the ACUADS 2016 Conference: Adaptation

Name of conference

ACUADS 2016: Adaptation

Publisher

ACUADS + QUT Creative Industries

Place published

Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Start date

2016-09-29

End date

2016-09-30

Language

English

Copyright

© The Australian Council of University Art and Design Schools 2017

Former Identifier

2006072156

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-04-05

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