201 research outputs found

    ALT Survey 2008/9 Summary Report

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    New to ALT and attending ALT-C 2010?

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    This leaflet provides information about ALT activities and sessions for ALT-C 2010 delegates

    ALT-Epigeum award for most effective use of video - winner and finalists

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    This document announce the winner and finalists of the 2010 award

    CMALT Prospectus

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    About ALT

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    This document provides information about the Association for Learning Technology (ALT)

    Identity/alterity re-de-constructed in repetition and difference

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    This essay offers a close reading of Verdi Yahooda's work Photo Booth Classic (1974–present), its presentation as artists’ pages in n.paradoxa: international feminist art journal, 17, January 2006, and in the exhibitions Said (London: Camberwell Space, 2008) and Now! Now! In more than one place (London: Cookhouse and Triangle Space, Chelsea College of Art and Design, 2016) organized by the Black Arts and Modernism project. The differences in format and presentation over time, as well as the making of this work, as an action performed by the artist in monthly cycles over forty years, are considered in relation to other artworks, the use of documentation as medium, and questions about feminism, ethnicity and Jewishness. The aim is to move beyond the ready identification of this work as simply another example of a woman artist's performance made as if self-to-camera, or as identity politics

    ALT response to the House of Lords Science and Technology Select Committee Short Inquiry into Open Access

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    ALT Learning Environment Review SIG (LERSIG)

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    About LERSIG - Nov 200

    Art criticism and the state of feminist art criticism

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    This essay is in four parts. The first offers a critique of James Elkins and Michael Newman’s book The State of Art Criticism (Routledge, 2008) for what it tells us about art criticism in academia and journalism and feminism; the second considers how a gendered analysis measures the “state” of art and art criticism as a feminist intervention; and the third, how neo-liberal mis-readings of Linda Nochlin and Laura Mulvey in the art world represent feminism in ideas about “greatness” and the “gaze”, whilst avoiding feminist arguments about women artists or their work, particularly on “motherhood”. In the fourth part, against the limits of the first three, the state of feminist art criticism across the last fifty years is reconsidered by highlighting the plurality of feminisms in transnational, transgenerational and progressive alliances
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