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Representing the everyday: situational practice and ethnographic conceptualism

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:55 authored by James Oliver, Marnie BadhamMarnie Badham
Using as a starting point a community-based art project that the authors collaborated on as artists-researchers, this article is a methodological discussion on the development of "situational practice." This is an art practice-as-research approach, positioned as conceptual, ethnographic, and reflexive, therefore resonating with this special issue's theme of ethnographic conceptualism. Our aim is to foster and develop a methodological debate that encourages cross-disciplinary work enhancing practice-as-research development in art-with our particular interest being the creative convergence between everyday life and forms of social practice in the arts: art practices broadly defined as socially engaged, participatory, and activating. The article draws on a use of theory-such as Nikolai Ssorin-Chaikov's reference to Paul Rabinow's concept of "remediation," David MacDougall's idea of "transcending culture," and Henri Lefebvre's use of "sublation"-to position situational practice as a form of ethnographic conceptualism. In doing so this article is a proposition on methodology and for experimentation across art and anthropology and for innovation in approaches to practice-as-research in the arts.

History

Journal

Laboratorium

Volume

5

Issue

2

Start page

149

End page

165

Total pages

17

Publisher

Centre for Independent Social Research

Place published

Saint Petersburg, Russia

Language

English

Copyright

© Laboratorium 2013

Former Identifier

2006070057

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-04-30

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