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Call for Papers Critical Creative Practice

CfP Beyond disciplinary boundaries: articulating knowledge/value in creative practice research

This is a Call for Papers for a panel session that is being proposed by the MeCCSA Practice Network to the organisers of the MeCCSA 2023 conference Glasgow Caledonian University on 4-6th September 2023. If your paper is selected to be part of the panel by the Practice Network committee, it will then be included in a combined panel proposal that the committee will subsequently submit to the MeCCSA conference organisers.

The MeCCSA Practice Network invites contributions on practice-based research, research for creative practice, practice as research or any other manifestation of practice as a research methodology.

In the light of the 2021 REF exercise this panel asks if there is now an opportunity to reappraise the nature, scope, and range of practice-based research. The Research Excellence Framework (REF) is the UK’s system for assessing the quality of research in UK higher education institutions. A process of peer review, the results of the assessment exercise not only determine intuitional funding. It also imposes an instrumental framework for reporting and evidencing research quality. Cursory examination of the range of practices submitted to the REF 2021 reveals that the notion of practice as a research methodology is not constrained by subject disciplinary categories, that there is spread, overlap and messiness around the notion of practice as a research methodology. Research value is no longer defined by disciplinary practice and is increasing multi-modal in form and practice.  What might have been thought of as an expected set of practices for MeCCSA; journalism, photography, radio, film, video, and television. Now sits alongside and are entangled with; poetry, music, song-writing, fine art, voice coaching, immersive theatre, augmented reality, and other digital methods.

Consequently, this panel invites scholars to propose papers that aim to re-examine, redefine, recontextualise practice-based research for the 2020’s. To ask questions about the way in which we record, document, or communicate multi-modal forms of practice as research, and what is the value of practice as research to the wider community beyond academia.

We are particularly keen to see submissions that address any of the following or related topics listed below though this is merely indicative and is non-exclusive:

  • Redefining & broadening the boundaries of creative practice research
  • Finding the research in the practice
  • Political and social responses to practice based research
  • Legitimising creative freedom (and chaos) within academic research
  • Defining (and broadening) dissemination practices for wider impact
  • Cultural value and creative evaluation approaches
  • Resisting the translation of practice into text.
  • Finding authenticity in the process of practice as research.

We invite you to submit proposals in the form of a 250 word abstract, contact details, affiliation and short 150 word biography.

Please email your submission to roy.hanney@solent.ac.uk by by 20th January 2023.

The MeCCSA 2023 annual conference will take place at Glasgow Caledonian University on 4-6th September 2023.

https://www.meccsa.org.uk/events/conference/

Photo by Sandro Schuh on Unsplash

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Call for Papers Pedagogy

CfP Conditions of possibility: practice pedagogy as critical pedagogy

This is a Call for Papers for a panel session that is being proposed by the MeCCSA Practice Network to the organisers of the MeCCSA 2023 conference Glasgow Caledonian University on 4-6th September 2023. If your paper is selected to be part of the panel by the Practice Network committee, it will then be included in a combined panel proposal that the committee will subsequently submit to the MeCCSA conference organisers.

The MeCCSA Practice Network invites contributions on practice pedagogy that seek to ignite debate around the notion of a critical pedagogy, to celebrate innovative pedagogic practice, and to explore emerging challenges for practice educators in this age of connectivity. We welcome submissions aligned either with the conference theme or any area covered by MeCCSA and its networks.

“There is something happening here, but we don’t know what it is” (Bob Dylan)

As practice educators we will likely be familiar with the struggle to pedagogically define our field within institutions of higher education that are more often recognised for what might be thought of as traditional modes of academic practice. There are even misunderstandings around practice pedagogy within our own community. In this age of connectivity, when the distinctions between consumers and producers is increasingly blurred. Do our ways of thinking about pedagogy reflect the conditions of possibility for a practice education that is research informed and which reflects the new technological landscape.

We are particularly keen to see submissions that address any of the following or related topics listed below though this is merely indicative and is non-exclusive:

  • The shifting sands of what constitutes a practice discipline
  • Managing expectations against realities in the context of NSS
  • Methods of production vs methods of research
  • New pedagogies for new practices
  • Independent production vs industrial production
  • Live, as live and simulated practices
  • Qualities vs practicalities of practice in creativity education
  • Articulating the skills of practice in a learning context
  • Co-creating the practice curriculum with students

We invite you to submit proposals in the form of a 250 word abstract, contact details, affiliation and short 150 word biography.

Please email your submission to roy.hanney@solent.ac.uk by by 20th January 2023.

The MeCCSA 2023 annual conference will take place at Glasgow Caledonian University on 4-6th September 2023.

https://www.meccsa.org.uk/events/conference/

Photo by Mona Eendra on Unsplash

Categories
Research Impact

Ethics, Impact and Creative Practice

OPEN SPACE INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION SUMMARY

Participants: hosted by Sharon Hooper and recorded by Samantha Broadhead (Leeds Arts), Ronan Kelly (Winchester), Roy Hanney (Solent) , Darren Kerr (Solent), Ivan Magrin-Chagnolleau – (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France), Julian Lawrence (Teeside University), Ben Harbisher (De Montfort University), Paul Stevens (Solent).

Sharon opened up the discussion asking if others had ethical considerations or dilemmas  within their creative practice. This line of questioning was catalysed by Hooper, Tobias-Green and Broadhead’s film essay, ‘A conversation about ethics’ that was shown at the MPE/MECCAS 2021 conference.

Ronan was the first to respond by describing a dilemma in his PhD which involved drawing upon Chinese literature that had been translated into English. He discussed the ethics of his practice around authenticity. He argued that meanings and approaches could be lost in translation. He also aimed to avoid the orientalist ‘gaze’ and recognised that he needed to be aware of the geo-political dimension of the work.  He wanted to make it explicit that his own interpretation may not not be based on the original meanings of the Chinese texts.  Sharon reflected on Ronan’s points agreeing that she as a practitioner needed to be sensitive to cultural appropriation.

Roy offered a concrete example about the tensions between working for and with people from different cultures on an arts project through public consultation. He recounted a project where PhD students acted as producers working with hard to reach communities. One student claimed that such projects represented the middle-class colonisation of communities. Often after the arts project had been completed, the creative practitioners left. It seemed like a cynical appropriation of a community  to do an arts project. Roy reflected that he recognised the ethical issue but also that often this reflected the nature of the funding.

Darren commented on the semantic difficulties in talking about communities labelled as ‘hard to reach’. It was a geographical perspective where some areas were left out of classed, gendered and white spaces. No spaces for black faces. There is a responsibility to co-create. What were people being left out of? They were  left out of white, middle-class culture.  Questions need to be asked about what cultures are valued.

Roy, Sharon and Ronan all responded to Darren’s critical perspective, adding that practitioners had their own artistic aims or standards.  Maybe they sought to impose their creative vision and will when working with groups of people who may have different skills and experiences with creative practice and media. When consulting with a community group, a practitioner may require a textile worker and therefore, end up writing themselves out of the project. Roy posed that extra activities could be required to ensure that projects are run in an ethical way. Or there is a danger that the work reproduces the dominant male and white modes of production that are prevalent in the media? But again, this requires more funding.

Sharon moved the debate on asking if ethics is a good way of framing one’s intention, does ethics give a practitioner a critical framework?

Ivan  offered a story about his interaction with  a film school in Marseilles that provided a free opportunity for minorities to learn about  film. Ivan asked the school’s organisers what funding there was – there was none. The work was undertaken by  volunteers. He was amazed that such a school could exist. He ran a master class in colour correcting. During the session he asked the students about their dreams and they said they wanted to get a job. This encounter revealed a gap or fundamental difference  Ivan’s and his students’ thinking about film. It was not about theory or creative vision  but to a chance get a job and to improve lives. Ivan reflected that we  would  need to travel a long way in our thinking before we could hear their voices.

Sharon agreed that we cannot make assumptions about communities. We must accept that there are differences in the reasons they want to make work.

Ivan continued that at the end of the session he gave them his email so he could give them any help or put them in contact with relevant people. His students told him that he was the first person who had given them give their email. Ivan was really surprised by this, “ I wanted to help, it’s not just tick a box exercise.  Practitioners need to arrive with ideas but they also need to pay attention and be prepared to change be flexible. To make an impact you need to know about the people you are working with.

Samantha did not speak but thought that Ivan was expanding his students’ social capital and this was a generous and ethical thing to do.  Underrepresented students needed skills and knowledge but they also needed connections to be successful.  

Sharon summed up the discussion so far that practitioners could provide genuine, authentic interactions but needed to give an emotional investment, and consider the ethics of relationships when  emerge oneself in a community. Roy asked, what is the point in a two month’s project? Ronan continued taking about personal investment. In a two months project  where was the infrastructure? He pointed out that it was difficult but you need to talk truth  to power because people will hear your voice. Two months is not enough time to understand the power dynamics at a local level.

Sharon said and Samantha thought that sustainability and legacy needed to be planned so projects could have a life after they end.

Julian shared his video project with a national homeless charity creating a collaborative comic from a libretto from After Winter, inspired by Schubert’s song cycle Winterreise (Winter Journey). It was intended that homeless people could be the performers. Due to the pandemic Julian’s students’ comic ended up being the legacy of a production that never was.

The opera project  entailed being flexible and listening to the voices of other people. There was a positive impact when participants saw that their voices were valued and were listened to. Everyone including students were emotionally engaged. Recognition, validation lead to self-worth.

Julian also pointed out that paper versions of the comic were more sustainable then digital ones.  Ivan added that the chain of production in the media is poisoning the planet.  The text News from Nowhere by William Morris was recommended as being relevant for the current times.

Sharon and Roy argued that critical practice was key to understanding the ethics of a situation. However, the group reflected that the risk averse cultures, driven by some neoliberal higher education policies, decreased  the opportunities for critical thinking.

Ben reflected on the strategies devised to counter extremism also de-politicised schools leading to socio-political undercurrents being unexamined. Diminished opportunities to study media in schools decreased the possibility of an education that nurtured critical voices. It was posed that academia interrogates, challenges and critiques and without this approach to learning courses could become primarily training courses.

Paul observed that the recent constraints placed on academia could be seen as anti-democratic. He remarked that a popular notion was that universities were ivory towers where blue-sky-thinking took place, and not the real world. However, he argued that they comprised real people with real jobs who facilitated others to develop their own careers and citizenship.  At this point a publication by Mark Fisher (2009) Capitalist Realism: Is there no alternative? was recommended.

The group had at the point been talking for ninety minutes and needed a break so the discussion was ended. Sharon thanked everyone for their insights and sharing their stories of ethical practice in an open and generous manner.

Samantha Broadhead

Head of Research (Leeds Arts)

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Research Impact

Measuring Impact of Practice-based Research

OPEN SPACE INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION SUMMARY

Present: Roy Hanney (Southampton Solent University; Media production), Pune Pasafar (Middlesex University; Practice based research), Vesna Lukic (Middlesex University; film production), Djamila Boulil (independent researcher; social impact in arts and culture). 

This open space discussion centred around the topic of how to measure impact in the arts. This is something that is increasingly demanded by funders and governments in UK and Europe and a hot topic in the university sector. Following Djamila’s video paper on the topic of impact in the symposium, we discussed several options for measuring the impact of creative projects. The focus was on two main challenges. The first was on how to measure impact (a long-term effect), when the only time available is during what are mostly short-term projects. The issue here is that once the funding is finished there is no additional support for longitudinal follow up evaluation.

Second, a preference for either qualitative or quantitative methodologies was discussed. The tension here being around the need for quantitative results from funding bodies, organisations, governments and so on. While creative practitioners feel that qualitative research is more informative, appropriate and of greater value. Importantly qualitative impact evaluation gives voice to the communities with whom creative practitioners are engaged which provides an opportunity for dialogue and potentially for empowerment.   

Given the mismatch between project time and research time, we discussed the possibility that evaluation might focus on the intent for impact or for change by (co)creators. It was felt that this might go some way towards laying down a sense of a pathway for impact even if in fact, if there is no time available to really measure impact some way down the line.

Naturally, the distinction between creators, participants and audience was touched upon, all with different possibilities and approaches when it comes to impact. When talking about audiences, the conversation moved to the need for a focus on the social return on investment, rather than the need to measure only the economic return by counting the number of audience members. A way to do this is initiate creative projects with a Theory of Change (ToC) workshop that engages stakeholders in a discussion that sets out their intent for the project. thereby setting out exactly what the expected or desired effect of the project would be as a consequence of the project. When these objectives are clear, it was felt that behavioural science offers several options to quantify the qualitative nature of cultural projects. 

We got side-tracked a little in the end. As all participants shared a love for film as artistic medium, the of a social action documentary became an example that was used to question some fundamental aspects of the balance between the social and the cultural. A documentary for instance can, possibly, communicate a certain ideal or goal. This makes that the political nature of art is unescapable; even when one tries to avoid it, doing nothing is also a statement. The discussion ended with the question, well a plea, to support pluralism, so that a range of voices might be heard. 

In conclusion Roy, Pune, Vesna & Djamila would like to advocate to creatives to give some attention to your intent in the early stages of a project. In concurrence with the ToC: Make clear to yourself and your stakeholders what kind of effect you want to have on your environment (if your art project is one that has a social component). This also helps you identify what “math tricks” to use to quantify your social return and have that number to give back to some more market-oriented funders. Key is to always match your methods to your wanted impact, whether they are qualitative or quantitative (or something in between those or outside them). 

Djamila Boulil

Categories
Research Impact

Commercial vs Artistic Tensions in practice-based Research

OPEN SPACE INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION SUMMARY

This was a broad, yet engaging debate about the Commercial vs Artistic in which the participants discussed tensions in creative practice between academic constraints/requirements, those within creative and artistic endeavours, and those of a commercial nature. 

In part, the session aimed to consider how academic, artistic, or commercial practitioners frame their research, and how this is measured or quantified per se. The group discussed shifts and undercurrents in the university sector over the last ten years or thereabouts, that have matched institutional or government agendas (post-incorporation changes particularly) to focus on consumer-driven models within education and research. 

In this respect the group discussed metrics such as REF, KEF, the current employability agenda, and how the criteria of these regimes dictate what research, and practice-based research especially, should look like. 

We discussed the need for differentiated models that define research within the creative arts, from the perspective that practice-based research is not particularly well matched towards sectorial drives for income. In other words, the group articulated concerns that research has become increasingly framed in commercial terms as opposed to exploration, expression, or in the pursuit of knowledge. 

The group shared specific examples of creative practice and their experiences of industry and academia, towards a conclusion that current external or institutional influences that drive commercial research (STEM) or business and enterprise are not always pertinent to creative practice/research. 

Ben Harbisher
MeCCSA Practice Network Chair
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News

MPE/MeCCSA Practice Network ONLINE Symposium – Panel 1 Announced: Publishing Screen Media Practice Research

Panel 1: Publishing Screen Media Practice Research: Editorial Approaches

This round table discussion with the editorial board of Screenworks, an online peer-reviewed publication of screen media practice research, will focus on the journal’s evolving editorial approaches. Using Screenworks as a case study, we will explore the dialogic relationship between written statement and practice, critically examine the peer review process (from both sides of the experience) and outline the journal’s journey to becoming more accessible and inclusive. We will also explore Screenworks’ role in academic publication of the emerging field of videographic film criticism. The discussion will take as its jumping off point an MPE article by Editors Charlotte Crofts and Alex Nevill and explore how the journal has since developed, with the recent expansion of the editorial board.

“Provoking Practice: new forms of reach, impact and significance” the MPE/MeCCSA Practice Network ONLINE Symposium on Friday 25th June, 2021.

Our CfP is still open and you submit via our website until the EXTENDED deadline of 14th May 2021.

For further details visit our website: https://practice21.net/call-for-papers/

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News

CfP Extended to 14th May: new forms of reach, impact and significance

CfP extended for “Provoking Practice: new forms of reach, impact and significance” the MPE/MeCCSA Practice Network ONLINE Symposium happening on Friday 25th June, 2021.

Our CfP is still open and you submit via our website until the EXTENDED deadline of 14th May 2021.

For further details visit our website: https://practice21.net/call-for-papers/

The Practice Network Symposium aims to frame practice-led, practice-based, practice as research and research for creative practice through the lens of research impact as we run up to 2021 REF. We especially invite responses from practitioners engaged in any research related activities across the range of media represented by MeCCSA, whose practice presentations can respond to questions, themes and ideas that include, but are not limited to:

  • Progressing a decolonising agenda for media practice research examining the commitment to anti-racism and methods to support under-represented and under-resourced communities;
  • Sharing approaches to narrativising impact claims for creative practice;
  • Measuring meaningful impact in creative practice research;
  • Case studies of creative practice as participatory method;
  • Evaluations of cultural value and return on social investment;
  • Responses to the challenge of demonstrating impact in a metrics-driven H.E. environment;
  • Provocations and proposals that address the cultural value of creative practice research;
  • Strategies for addressing issues of diversity and inclusion, and articulating the impact of such strategies, in creative practice research.

Proposals may take the form of:

  1. Scholarly papers to be presented in the form of a 10-minute pre-recorded video for asynchronous delivery to delegates.
  2. Online media such as video essays, screenings and other forms of creative or critical content for asynchronous delivery to delegates.
  3. Interactive and/or participatory experiences for either synchronous or asynchronous delivery to delegates.  
  4. Provocations or proposals for online participatory panel discussions and/or open space breakout discussion topics.

The symposium organisers will consider all online presentations of practice-based research, practice-led research, practice as research or research for creative practice work, from all manifestations of creative and media activity across the full range of interests represented by MeCCSA.

Non-traditional forms of presentation (for example, lecture-performances, videos, photo essays, installations, media artworks, short films, interactive websites, roundtable discussions etc.) are encouraged.

Papers presented at the symposium will be considered for a special issue of Media Practice and Education in 2021.

Please submit abstracts/proposals (300 words) for all presentations, papers, artworks or screenings, outlining their aim and form, along with a short biography (150 word) via the online submission form: https://practice21.net/subsmissions/

The symposium convenors are:

Roy Hanney, Senior Lecturer Media Production

Darren Kerr, Head of Film and Digital Arts

Abstracts/proposals should be received by Friday 14th May 2021.

Hosted by the Faculty of Business Law and Digital Technologies, Solent University, on the 24th/25th June 2021, the event will take place online and full details will be posted on our website in advance. You can register on the website for our mailing list for direct updates to your inbox

The MPE/MeCCSA Practice 2021 symposium is supported by MeCCSA Practice Network

https://www.meccsa.org.uk/networks/practice-network/

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News

Keynotes announced for Provoking Practice: new forms of reach, impact and significance

The symposium organisers are pleased to announce our Keynotes for “Provoking Practice: new forms of reach, impact and significance” the MPE/MeCCSA Practice Network ONLINE Symposium happening on Friday 25th June, 2021.

Creative Practice Research in the Age of Post Pandemic Confusion: Professor Agnieszka Piotrowska, PhD, is the Head of School for Film, Media and performing Arts at the University for the Creative Arts.

Valuing the research that artists and media makers actually do: Professor Desmond Bell is a Research Fellow at the National College of Art and Design Dublin, where he was previously Head of Academic Affairs and Research.

Full details of the keynotes can be seen on the Keynotes page of the website.

Although the keynotes will be delivered asynchronously via our website there will be an opportunity to engage in discussion and debate around the themes raised in the keynotes in a live panel session. More details of how and when this will happen will be released shortly.

Meanwhile our CfP is still open and you submit via our website until the deadline of 30th April 2021.

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News

MPE/MeCCSSA Practice Network Symposium Pivots Online

We waited and waited, till the suspense was too much and then we had to make a decision. To online or not online that is the question. And as much as we wanted for the symposium to be face to face in the real world. You remember, when we used to meet people and get to know them in the flesh. Well, we just had to move the thing online.

However, especially since everyone, their dog, their cow and their uncle has already moved there event online. We wanted to do something a little different so we have decided to adopt the principle that if it involves being talked at via a screen then it should be delivered asynchronously. While if it is interactive and participatory we will make a space for people to gather online and talk.

This means that all the papers, the keynotes and much of the media we hope to include will be uploaded to the website and you can consume it at your own leisure. For the event itself we plan to host two 90 minute panel sessions with lots of interaction and questions from the floor. A kind of hyper-Question Time if you like. Alongside this, we are exploring ways of running an online unconference or open space event.

If you have not been to an open space event before I am sure you have heard of them. It’s like a democratic experiment in conference administration which puts the delegates in the driving seat. It is not something you can do in teams or Zoom so we are evaluating possible platforms that will enable us to deliver what we hope will be an exciting, interactive and participatory event.

The call for papers is open until 30th April and you all about the symposium themes and sign up to submit here: https://practice21.net/call-for-papers/

So, save the date (24th & 25th June) and let’s dare to be different.

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News

MPE and MeCCSA practice network annual symposium 2021 at Solent University

We are very pleased to be able to announce that Solent University, Southampton will be hosting this year’s MPE/MeCCSA Practice Network Symposium. We are going to be working on a CFP over the coming weeks and hope to have more information shortly.

The symposium will take place on 24th & 25th June 2021 in our iconic Spark Building in the heart of Southampton.

We expect to be organising some events and activities on the preceding Wednesday evening for everyone who will be travelling to the symposium. If you have ideas for anything you would like to do that evening do get in touch we would love to hear from you.

The symposium this year will take a look at research impact but will also be inviting papers, presentations, screenings and other manifestations of practice from all areas and fields of media practice.

Watch this space!