Händelser på ytan – shibori som kunskapande rörelse
Abstract
In present times, shibori, though originally a Japanese word, is an international umbrella term for craft techniques related to the dyeing of textiles. In an artistic context, shibori signifies the act of (e)laborating by way of compressions – in order to create patterning and/or three dimensionality.
In and through a practice-based artistic research project, the question: What is shibori, and what does shibori do? acts as my guide, where the initial focus is on the introduction and development of shibori as an artistic practice in a Swedish context. Here, Japan takes on a main role, albeit in the form of a backdrop – subtly but noticeably influencing the events being staged.
Shibori comes to take the shape of a vehicle, and I, the researcher, have set the vehicle and myself in a knowledge-forming motion, where interviews are conducted with artists in Sweden, courses in shibori are observed and taken part in, group shows are performed in Japan and Sweden, as well as addressed through the written work that comes into being. Curatorial experiences are also reflected upon in a number of closely-connected essays. A space, in the format of an essay, is created as part of the final stage – where shibori meets concepts such as wonder, affect and sensation, and where questions on the role and impact of discursive language in art-making and art experience are raised.
Answers to the research question “What is shibori, and what does shibori do?” gradually surface and highlight an abundance of aspects and insights. These include: discovering that artists approach shibori in independent ways, whilst still safeguarding Japanese material and immaterial cultural heritage; shibori becoming a space of possibles, characterised by the presence of strong intention and the appreciation of chance, side-by-side, in mutual interaction; and curatorial experience acting to highlight shibori in its role to enhance the experience of plenitude. Shibori thus comes to signify the forming, as well as the experiencing, of knowledge – in motion between theory and practice – where broader issues, such as the construction of identity, the creation of acting spaces through performative negotiations, as well as curating as both an artistic research method and an artistic act of making, are also revealed.
Beholding and reflecting, I perceive that the envisioning and staging of Events on the Surface have enabled, and continue to enable me, in my quest to find a way into the conceptual, bodily and material constituents of shibori-making, in particular, and artistic practice, in general.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
HDK - School of Design and Crafts ; HDK - Högskolan för design och konsthantverk
Disputation
Torsdagen den 2 juni 2016, kl. 13.00, Aulan/Konstbiblioteket, HDK - Högskolan för design och konsthantverk, Kristinelundsgatan 6-8
Date of defence
2016-06-02
thomas.laurien@hdk.gu.se
Other description
I avhandlingen ingår curatering av två grupputställningar. Dessa finns även dokumenterade och arkiverade i GUPEA: 1) "Plenitude", https://gupea.ub.se/handle/2077/34687. 2) "Upperud Cabinet of Curiosity", https://gupea.ub.se/handle/2077/3622. Avhandlingens kapitel 1 finns översatt till engelska och ingår i antologin Crafting Cultural Heritage. Se: Laurien, Thomas (2016). Pleasure/Unpleasure. Performing Cultural Heritage: Voices from the Artistic Practice of Shibori in Sweden. I Crafting Cultural Heritage, (red.) A. Palmsköld, J. Rosenqvist & G. Almevik. Göteborg: University of Gothenburg.
Date
2016-05-11Author
Laurien, Thomas
Keywords
shibori
surface
form event
knowledge-forming motion
artistic research
artistic practice
art-making
textile craftscape
curating
cultural heritage
performativity
cabinet of curiosity
wonder
affect
sensation
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-982422-9-4
978-91-982422-8-7
Series/Report no.
ArtMonitor
56
Language
swe