dc.date.accessioned | 2012-01-28T15:55:51Z | |
dc.date.available | 2012-01-28T15:55:51Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2011-05-20 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/2077/28435 | |
dc.description | Exhibition: Fissure
Artist: Louise Ann Wilson
Consultant curator: Jason Bowman | |
dc.language.iso | eng | sv |
dc.subject | Performance | sv |
dc.subject | Fine Art | sv |
dc.subject | Site-Specificity | sv |
dc.subject | Collaboration | sv |
dc.subject | Art and Science | sv |
dc.subject | Poetry | sv |
dc.subject | Geology | sv |
dc.subject | Neuroscience | sv |
dc.subject | Collaboration | sv |
dc.title | Fissure | sv |
dc.type.svep | artistic work | |
dc.contributor.creator | Bowman, Jason E. | |
art.typeOfWork | Curated exhibition, performance | sv |
art.relation.publishedIn | Yorkshire Dales, UK, 20 – 22 May 2011 | sv |
art.description.project | I was creative consultant for this project developing the intellectual framework for the overall programme within which it was commissioned, The Re-Enchantment, which addresses the relationships between art and place and place-making. To produce the commissioning framework I undertook research into the history of art and place-making - in terms of art and cultural regeneration, public sculpture, site-specificity and performance, art and ruralism, contemporary poetics and place – and its current representation within cultural and urban strategy. The framework was ‘delphic’ and applied in a variety of contexts such as creating national partnerships, for fundraising purposes, as a curatorial strategy for the commissioning of artworks and to inform a series of events and seminars and the publication Towards Re-Enchantment – Place and its Meanings- | sv |
art.description.summary | Fissure was a unique and unrepeatable durational performance event, a strikingly creative and affecting participatory pilgrimage through a breathtaking and ancient landscape.
To create Fissure Wilson collaborated with internationally renowned composer Jocelyn Pook, award winning poet Elizabeth Burns and choreographer Nigel Stewart, along with neuro-scientists, geologists, dancers, choirs, and cavers.
A creative encounter between artists, scientists, audiences and landscape, Fissure interrogated life, death, grief, resilience and renewal. | sv |
art.description.supportedBy | Paul Hamlyn Foundation, UK
Arts Council England, UK
PRSF Foundation, UK | sv |
art.relation.uri | http://www.louiseannwilson.com/#/f-i-s-s-u-r-e/4527058557 | sv |