42 research outputs found

    The rise of Public History: an international perspective

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    This article explores the birth and development of public history and presents the different criteria of its internationalization from the 1970s to the more recent creation of the International Federation of Public History. Based mostly on North America and Europe, the international perspective sets the development of public history in the United States into a broader context of debates about the changing role of historians. While public history was mostly perceived in the 1980s as the application – through consulting – of history to present- day issues, the more recent internationalization is made of a variety of local and national approaches to the field

    Playing Games with Tito:Designing Hybrid Museum Experiences for Critical Play

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    This article brings together two distinct, but related perspectives on playful museum experiences: Critical play and hybrid design. The article explores the challenges involved in combining these two perspectives, through the design of two hybrid museum experiences that aimed to facilitate critical play with/in the collections of the Museum of Yugoslavia and the highly contested heritage they represent. Based on reflections from the design process as well as feedback from test users, we describe a series of challenges: Challenging the norms of visitor behaviour, challenging the role of the artefact, and challenging the curatorial authority. In conclusion, we outline some possible design strategies to address these challenges

    Introduction

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    Bach and fugue as a model for avant-garde painters: the case of Paul Klee

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    'How to paint a fugue'

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    Hanslick and the Visual Arts

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    The aim of Eduard Hanslick's treatise On the Beautiful in Music (1854) was, in his own words, to revise the aesthetics of music. In fact, its impact extended far beyond the domain of musical aesthetics. Hanslick draws frequent comparisons between music and other forms of art; his use of the term 'arabesque' to evoke the rise and fall of melodic lines, in particular, led later artists, critics and writers on art to ask whether analogies might be drawn between our processes of aural and visual perception. They also questioned whether visual art might come to rely for its effect solely on those resources intrinsic to itself, principally colours and forms, in the same way that music had no other content than the melodies and harmonies out of which it was fashioned, as Hanslick had claimed. In this way, advocates of a predominantly abstract or even wholly non-representational form of visual art found in this new aesthetics of music a potential justification for renouncing any kind of representational or narrative content in painting. Hanslick's notion of music as an art consisting of pure forms -- what is sometimes called 'absolute music' -- in many ways foretells the 'formalism' of critics such as Roger Fry, who described Kandinsky's seemingly object-less paintings of the years around 1912-14 as 'pure visual music'. Specific references to On the Beautiful in Music can also be found in the writings of artists and theorists as diverse as Paul Klee and the French aesthetician Charles Henry; through the latter, Hanslick's theories may have influenced the art of the Neo-Impressionist artist Georges Seurat, the 'musical' nature of whose paintings has been the object of a good deal of art-historical speculation
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