in | discussion April 2012

April 17th, 2012

in|discussion
Public lecture series 2011-12

Professor Richard Kearney Narrative and Catharsis



6.30pm Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Lecture Room G6,

School of Art Design and PrintingDublin Institute of Technology,

41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1

Richard Kearney holds the Seelig Chair of Philosophy at Boston College and has served as a Visiting Professor at University College Dublin and the University of Paris. He is the author of over twenty books on European philosophy and literature (including two novels and a volume of poetry) and has edited or co-edited eighteen more. Recent publications include a trilogy entitled ‘Philosophy at the Limit’. The three volumes are On Stories (Routledge, 2002), The God Who May Be (Indiana UP, 2001) and Strangers, Gods, and Monsters (Routledge, 2003). Since then, Richard Kearney has published Debates in Continental Philosophy (Fordham, 2004), The Owl of Minerva (Ashgate, 2005), Navigations (Syracuse University Press, 2007) and Anatheism (Columbia, 2009).Richard Kearney is international director of the Guestbook Project–Hosting the Stranger: Between Hostility and Hospitality.   This talk will address the role of storytelling as a cathartic and therapeutic process. Beginning with Aristotle’s understanding of catharsis in the ‘Poetics’ it will then explore a number of examples from ancient myth and folktale to contemporary debates on the role of narrative in psychoanalysis, holocaust testimony and art.

All are welcome to this free event.To secure your place, please book by email: indiscussionadp@gmail.com
in|discussion a forum on contemporary issues and current research in typography, art, design, material culture, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, society and technology. Updates on the lecture series at: http://indiscussionadp.blogspot.com/

in|discusssion March 2012

March 1st, 2012


Niamh O’Sullivan

‘The Black Line Drawn Across History’: John Mulvany and Irish Political Imagery’

6.30pm Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Lecture Room G6, School of Art Design and Printing

Dublin Institute of Technology, 41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1

Niamh O’Sullivan is Professor Emeritus of Visual Culture (National College of Art and Design). She writes on nineteenth century Irish, Irish-American and French art and popular culture. She won the Irish-American Cultural Institute ‘Award for Pioneering Irish-American Scholarship’, in 1998 and 2003. Her book, Aloysius O’Kelly: Art, Nation, Empire was published by Field Day in 2010 . She curated the millenium exhibition Re:Orientations. Aloysius O’Kelly: Painting, Politics and Popular Culture at the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, 1999-2000.  She also has research interests in art and museum education. She is currently a Director of the Irish Museums Trust, and on the advisory committee of the Royal Irish Academy Irish Art and Architecture, vol. 5.

John Mulvany’s nineteenth-century Irish paintings place visual art at the centre an emergent cultural and political nationalism, traditionally perceived as the preserve of poets and playwrights, journalists and politicians. His historical paintings were no incidental exercise in nostalgia, but purposeful, positioning images, designed to press powerful memories into contemporary political use. If out of violence and trauma comes renewed resolve, Mulvany’s Battle of Aughrim may be seen as an exemplification of Ireland’s glorious past.  His Irish political portraits were conceived to summon the injustices of history to mind, and act as rallying calls in the present. Mulvany thus saw himself as creating images of hope, and incitement to action. His commitment to the cause was unwavering, and brought him into the line of fire of one of the most celebrated murders of the nineteenth century.

All are welcome to this free event.

To secure your place, please book by email: indiscussionadp@gmail.com

in|discussion a forum on contemporary issues and current research in typography, art, design, material culture, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, society and technology. Updates on the lecture series at: http://indiscussionadp.blogspot.com/

in|discussion Feb 2012/ The Memory of Forms: Image, History and Irish Art

January 17th, 2012

Luke Gibbons

The Memory of Forms: Image, History and Irish Art

6.30pm Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Lecture Room G6, School of Art Design and Printing

Dublin Institute of Technology, 41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1

Luke Gibbons is Professor of Irish Literary and Cultural Studies at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth. His publications include Gaelic Gothic: Race, Colonialism and Irish Culture (2004), Edmund Burke and Ireland: Aesthetics, Politics and the Colonial Sublime (2003), The Quiet Man (2002), Transformations in Irish Culture (1996), and (with Kevin Rockett and John Hill) Cinema and Ireland (1988). He is currently preparing Joyce’s Ghosts: Ireland, Memory and Colonial Modernity for publication.

This talk will discuss the Irishness of Irish art in terms of form rather than representation, contending that the most important aspects of a work’s relation to its culture lie in aesthetic qualities often considered as lying outside history, or beyond questions of power and politics.

All are welcome to this free event.

To secure your place, please book by email: indiscussionadp@gmail.com

in|discussion a forum on contemporary issues and current research in typography, art, design, material culture, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, society and technology. Updates on the lecture series at: http://indiscussionadp.blogspot.com/

in|discussion Oct 2011/ Imaging Madness – Facing It

November 2nd, 2011

Mieke Bal

Imaging Madness

6.30pm Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Room 4027, Aungier Street Campus

Dublin Institute of Technology, Dublin 2

Mieke Bal, a cultural theorist and critic, is based at the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA), University of Amsterdam. Her interests range from biblical and classical antiquity to 17th century and contemporary art and modern literature, feminism and migratory culture, and madness. Her many books include Of What One Cannot Speak: Doris Salcedo’s Political Art (2010), Loving Yusuf (2008), A Mieke Bal Reader (2006), Travelling Concepts in the Humanities(2002) and Narratology (3d edition 2009). She is also a video-artist, making experimental documentaries on migration. Occasionally she acts as an independent curator.

Mostly with the collective Cinema Suitcase, Mieke makes films that seek to facilitate the self-narration of their subjects, encountered on the basis of intimacy, rather than constructing their stories for them. This approach enhances the performative quality of filmmaking as a collective process. The films refrain from deploying narrative voice-over and only contain set sound. Stories are not chronological but emerge from associative links, constituting a kind of ‘free indirect style.’ These include Separations 83 min. (2009); State of Suspension 82 min. (2008); Becoming Vera 53 min. 2008; Un Trabajo Limpio 21 min. (looped) 2007; Colony 30 min. 2007; Access Denied, 31 min. 2005; Mille et un jours, 45 min. 2004. She also made Nothing is Missing, a multiple-screen video installation, 25-35 minutes (5-15 channels) 2006-present.

Her first fiction feature, A Long History of Madness, with Michelle Williams Gamaker, about psychoanalysis and madness in cultural history, is currently being presented internationally. Also with Michelle, she made a video installationAnachronisms, commissioned by the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao (Sp.). www.miekebal.org;www.crazymothermovie.com

- I am interested in how images help articulate and embody thought, in the case at hand, thought about forms of “otherness” that cut through ethnic, sexual, religious, age- and other groups, namely, “madness”. I contend that images can perform an equivalent of speech acts; that they can respond (“speak back”) to the look cast onto them, and that they can entice viewers to theorize. They are performative. They do something; they act. I call such “speaking images”, which speak back, resist (parts of) my interpretation of them, and make me think, “theoretical objects.”

- As an inter-disciplinary, international scholar, I have taken this view one step further when, in an inter-ship for which I have not yet a name, I began to supplement my research into contemporary (migratory) culture with filmmaking, as another, more complex, closer, synaesthetic and intimate form of (audio-visual) analysis. At the heart of the film I will present lies the question if it is possible to “image” madness. Is there an iconography of madness, and if so, how can it avoid stereotyping; and if not, how else can one create a convincing image of madness? And what socio-cultural purpose can such images serve? The lecture is both an autonomous experiment in thought, and an introduction to the film A Long History of Madness. (Bal & Williams Gamaker 2011)

- Mieke Bal

The lecture, Imaging Madness, (40mins) will be followed by a screening of the film, A Long History of Madness(120mins).

All are welcome to this free event.

To secure your place, please book by email: indiscussionadp@gmail.com

in|discussion a forum to discuss contemporary issues and current research in typography, art, design, material culture, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, society and technology.

Updates on the lecture series at: http://indiscussionadp.blogspot.com/

An exhibition in conjunction

with in|discussion 2011-12:

Facing It – Imaging Madness

18 November-10 December 2011

Installations by Mieke Bal and Michelle Williams Gamaker

Opening 6.00pm Thursday, 17 November 2011

Broadcast Gallery, School of Art Design and Printing

Portland Row, Dublin Institute of Technology, Dublin 1

Facing It – Imaging Madness is part of the Mère Folle Project by Mieke Bal and Michelle Williams Gamaker. The project constitutes an attempt to offer museum and gallery visitors experiences they don’t ordinarily have. In a combination of shock, pleasure, strangeness and beauty, they will make a journey through ‘madness’, rather than sitting in front of the screen, as in the cinema. It is aimed at people interested in video art, unusual narratives, and uncommon audio-visual sensations ‘ and mental illness.

This is a project of multiple video installations through which the idea of ‘madness’ is given a variety of interpretations. It is an experiment in audio-visual story-telling. Distinct from cinema, in the installation the ‘second-person’, the visitor, is in charge of making the stories through their own itinerary and combination of stories, portraits, and scenes on view. At Broadcast the Space In-Between, Watching the News, Sissi Outside, Landscapes of Madness, Office Hours, Sissi’s Treatment will be shown.

All are welcome to the exhibition and opening, where Mieke Bal will introduce the work. Further information on:www.broadcastgallery.ie/

in|discussion Oct 2011

October 6th, 2011

in|discussion
Public lecture series 2011-12

Jane Pavitt
Exhibitionist Tendencies: Curating Postmodernism

4pm Friday, 21 October 2011
Lecture Room G6, School of Art Design and Printing
Dublin Institute of Technology, 41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1

Jane Pavitt is head of the postgraduate History of Design Department at the Royal College of Art, London. Prior to this, she was the University of Brighton Principal Research Fellow at the V&A from 1997-2010, where she curated a series of exhibitions on recent and contemporary design. In 2008, she was curator of Cold War Modern: Design 1945-70 (with consultant curator David Crowley). In this talk, she will discuss the thinking behind the V&A’s major exhibition for autumn 2011, Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970-90, which she has co-curated with the V&A’s head of graduate studies, Glenn Adamson.
The exhibition is the first of its kind to examine the international development of Postmodernism in design and the applied arts, incorporating architecture, art, fashion, graphics, music and performance, film and video. The talk will address the problematics of approaching postmodernism from a curatorial perspective; exploring strategies for interpretation and display.

All are welcome to this free event.
To secure your place, please book by email: indiscussionadp@gmail.com

in|discussion
This public lecture series is a forum to discuss contemporary issues and current research in typography, art, design, material culture, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, society and technology.

Updates on the lecture series at: http://indiscussionadp.blogspot.com/

In|Discussion September 2011

August 31st, 2011

Professor Jean Fisher 30 September 2011.

Tricksters, Troubadours – and Bartleby:  On Art from a State of Emergency

Debates on the relationship of artistic practice to the sociopolitical sphere are familiar enough in the history of Western modernism, although the global state of emergency in which we all seem to find ourselves gives them a new frisson of urgency. My interest in this issue stems from a long engagement with artists emerging from a political history of colonial violence and cultural dispossession, whose work may be described as responses to betrayal by the languages of dominance. A constellation of questions presents itself, among them: Can art be a means of reclaiming a sense of political agency for both producer and receiver? How might one characterise the tropes employed by these practices and how do they differ from ‘social activism’?  The tropes offered for consideration are those associated with the Hermetic, or hermeneutic play of the ‘trickster’ and the ‘troubadour’: encountering, trespassing, vectoring and opportunism.

Jean Fisher studied Zoology and Fine Art, later becoming a freelance writer on contemporary art and the post/colonial. She is the former editor of Third Text, and editor of the anthologies, Global Visions: Towards a New Internationalism in the Visual Arts (1994), Re-verberations: Tactics of Resistance, Forms of Agency (2000) and with Gerardo Mosquera, Over Here: International Perspectives on Art and Culture (2004). A selection of her essays, Vampire in the Text, was published in 2003. She is a Visiting Professor at the Royal College of Art, London, and Professor of Fine Art and Transcultural Studies at Middlesex University.

The Irish Phenomenological Circle

June 22nd, 2011

There are a number of researchers in Ireland interested in  phenomenology both as a philosophical project as well as a methodology of research within the social sciences. The high concentration of a research active cluster around phenomenology has led naturally to the development of a specific research group across the universities in Ireland. This group has now been formalised under the heading of The Irish Phenomenological Circle. During their inaugural conference on Maurice Merleau Ponty there was much debate about the status of  ‘painting’, understood as pictorial representations, and their relationship to language, the relationship between the metaphorical expressive pictorial symbols and denotative pictorial representations. See Taylor Carman What painting can (NOT) say. The IPC will be bringing together publications and organising an annual conference around areas of interest in phenomenology.

in|discussion 2011-2012

January 31st, 2011

Professor Jean Fischer – September 2011, 30th

Professor Jane Pavitt- October 2011, 21st.

Professor Mieke Bal- November 2011, 16th.

For 2012

Professor Niamh O’Sullivan

Professor Luke Gibbons

Professor Richard Kearney

4pm Friday
Lecture Room G6, School of Art Design and Printing
Dublin Institute of Technology, 41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1

Organised by: Dr. Niamh Ann Kelly and Dr. Noel Fitzpatrick

For more information go here….

Research in Art, Design and Interdisciplinary Culture

January 31st, 2011

This site will profile research and professional activity of people based in, and associated with, the School of Art, Design and Printing at DIT. (www.dit.ie/artdesignprinting/)

It has been developed in conjunction with GradCAM. (www.gradcam.ie)

Enquiries to: Dr. Noel Fitzpatrick, Director ‘Radicul’, noel.fitzpatrick(at)dit.ie