12 research outputs found

    Ceci n’est pas une ville

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    Treballs Finals de Grau de Belles Arts. Facultat de Belles Arts. Universitat de Barcelona, Curs: 2015-16, Tutor: Bibiana Crespo[cat] El títol de l’obra d’aquest Treball Final de Grau, Ceci n’est pas une ville, fa al·lusió a la paradoxa proposada per René Magritte al quadre La Trahison des images (La traïció de les imatges), atès que la incapacitat de distingir realitat i ficció ha sobrepassat el territori de la mera representació, convertint-se en un dels dilemes més presents a la nostra contemporaneïtat, fent-se evident tant en les imatges i la informació que ens envolta com en els paisatges que habitem.La peça és un dibuix en el que es representa un paisatge de gran format, introduint l’espectador dins la vivència d’un lloc fictici, simulat. En el dibuix es presenta el carrer principal de La Roca Village, un centre comercial construït imitant l’arquitectura catalana del segle XIX i dedicat a la venda de grans marques de roba i altres complements. Amb més de 4 milions de visitants a l’any aquest “no-poble” ja és el més visitat de Catalunya. Mitjançant el suport d’un material transparent, pintura blanca i una il·luminació dirigida, es crea una projecció d’ombra del grafisme del dibuix a la paret que domina la visió, fet que suscita una confusió a l’espectador, ja que no sap si està veient el dibuix mateix o l’ombra que genera aquest. L’ obra constitueix una crítica al capitalisme cultural i convida a l’espectador a reflexionar sobre el paisatge que habita, tot considerant que els carrers de La Roca Village, habitats per marques i transitats per consumidors, podrien ser un model per una societat en potència, que amaga les seves diferències sota un espectacle dedicat exclusivament a vendre productes lluents i experiències fictícies.[eng] The work’s title of this Final Degree Dissertation project, Ceci n’est pas une ville, refers to René Magritte’s paradox proposed in his painting La Trahison des images (The image betrayal), since the inability to distinguish reality and fiction has exceeded the territory of the mere representation, becoming one of our most noticeable contemporary dilemmas, making itself evident both in images and information that surround us, as in the landscapes that we inhabit. This piece is a drawing representing a large landscape, aiming to introduce the viewer into the experience of a fictitious and simulated place. The drawing shows the main street of La Roca Village, a shopping center built imitating the Catalan architecture of the 19th Century, devoted to selling big clothing brands. With more than 4 million of visitors per year, this “no-village” is already the most visited one in Catalonia. Through a transparent material support, white painting and a directed light, the shadow of the graphism is projected onto the wall and dominates the vision, this fact causes a confusion to the viewer as he/she doesn’t know if is watching the drawing itself or the shadow that it generates. The work constitutes a critic to cultural capitalism and invites the viewers to think about the landscapes they inhabit. Considering that La Roca Village streets, inhabited by brands and crowded by consumers, could be a potential model for a society that hides its differences under a performance exclusively dedicated to sell shiny products and fictitious experiences

    Effective strategies to motivate nursing home residents in oral care and to prevent or reduce responsive behaviors to oral care: A systematic review

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    <div><p>Background</p><p>Poor oral health has been a persistent problem in nursing home residents for decades, with severe consequences for residents and the health care system. Two major barriers to providing appropriate oral care are residents’ responsive behaviors to oral care and residents’ lack of ability or motivation to perform oral care on their own.</p><p>Objectives</p><p>To evaluate the effectiveness of strategies that nursing home care providers can apply to either prevent/overcome residents’ responsive behaviors to oral care, or enable/motivate residents to perform their own oral care.</p><p>Materials and methods</p><p>We searched the databases Medline, EMBASE, Evidence Based Reviews–Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL, and Web of Science for intervention studies assessing the effectiveness of eligible strategies. Two reviewers independently (a) screened titles, abstracts and retrieved full-texts; (b) searched key journal contents, key author publications, and reference lists of all included studies; and (c) assessed methodological quality of included studies. Discrepancies at any stage were resolved by consensus. We conducted a narrative synthesis of study results.</p><p>Results</p><p>We included three one-group pre-test, post-test studies, and one cross-sectional study. Methodological quality was low (n = 3) and low moderate (n = 1). Two studies assessed strategies to enable/motivate nursing home residents to perform their own oral care, and to studies assessed strategies to prevent or overcome responsive behaviors to oral care. All studies reported improvements of at least some of the outcomes measured, but interpretation is limited due to methodological problems.</p><p>Conclusions</p><p>Potentially promising strategies are available that nursing home care providers can apply to prevent/overcome residents’ responsive behaviors to oral care or to enable/motivate residents to perform their own oral care. However, studies assessing these strategies have a high risk for bias. To overcome oral health problems in nursing homes, care providers will need practical strategies whose effectiveness was assessed in robust studies.</p></div
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