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Hobart, Launceston

Introduction

A manifesto is a public declaration of principles, intentions, motives or views. It is written by an individual or a group to reflect their views. A manifesto can express an opinion on a particular issue, a whole worldview or set of principles. Artists often perform these principles through acts of making as well as through their pronouncements. The purpose of the unit is to introduce you to the manifesto as a form of artistic declaration. It asks you to consider the value of art within society and then provides you with a suite of skills that enable you to express principles, intentions, motives or views through written pronouncement as well as creative acts. In doing this the unit places value on your contribution to the course as well as the wider field of artistic discourse by asking you to situate your work within key historical and contemporary forms of artistic manifesto. You will learn the core skills of close reading and summarising and the relationship of image to text within creative practice. This unit introduces students to the creative arts emphasis on praxis, where theory is tested and embodied in making and writing.

Set projects will engage you in collaborative and cross-media practice as well as concentrated individual focus. Practical demonstrations and making/writing workshops will introduce you to a range of the facilities available on campus and initiate an explorative, critical and reflective approach to practice. The unit will also emphasise temporality as a formal aspect to consider when making art. This means exploring how time is used across a wide variety of modes of production, from static to moving images and from monumental to ephemeral art. This will be a broad introduction to this fundamental formal consideration.

Summary 2021

Unit name Critical Practices in Art: Manifestos
Unit code FSA123
Credit points 12.5
Faculty/School College of Arts, Law and Education
School of Creative Arts and Media
Discipline Arts
Coordinator

Brigita Ozolins

Available as student elective? Yes
Breadth Unit? No

Availability

Note

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* The Final WW Date is the final date from which you can withdraw from the unit without academic penalty, however you will still incur a financial liability (see withdrawal dates explained for more information).

About Census Dates

Learning Outcomes

  1. Use a variety of forms of oral, written and visual forms to express principles, intentions, motives or views within the context of a manifesto.
  2. Summarise and reflect on the key ideas and arguments contained within a range of provided texts and other artefacts.
  3. Apply the process of experimentation and problem solving to make artwork that responds to unit theme.

Fees

Requisites

Mutual Exclusions

You cannot enrol in this unit as well as the following:

FSA121 Critical Practices 1A

Teaching

Teaching Pattern

Weekly lecture (1 hour)
Weekly workshop (2 hours)

Assessment

Task 1: Summary of a Manifesto, 300 words (10%)

Task 2: Your Manifesto, 300 words, 3 minutes maximum (20%)

Task 3: The Art of the Manifesto (25%)

Task 4: Journal, 36 pages minimum (20%)

Task 5: Essay, 1000 words (25%)

TimetableView the lecture timetable | View the full unit timetable

Textbooks

RequiredNone

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