You Can’t Get There From Here: Discovering Where to Begin a Practice-led Inquiry – Notes and Reflections from Thailand

Authors

  • Nigel Power King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi, School of Architecture and Design

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53450/2179-1465.RG.2022v13i2p58-70

Keywords:

Good Beginnings, Practice-as-Inquiry, Knowledge Production, Materiality, Language

Abstract

This article focuses critical attention on an often-overlooked aspect of practice-led research in art and design – how and where practice-led research projects begin. In particular, the article describes and discusses an MFA class in Visual Communication at a Thai University that provides a structured approach to producing what the author describes as good beginnings. Rather than resulting from the decision to continue existing approaches to practice or selecting a new topic for inquiry, the author argues that good beginnings emerge from an intensive period of pre-inquiry that, at one and the same time, invites students to engage with and unpack the motivations and concerns that underly their practices, explore these through practical experimentation, locate them within relevant theoretical contexts, and by so doing, begin the process of reimaging their practice-in-itself as a form of practice-as-inquiry. Working in a situation where artistic inquiry is dominated by conventional understandings of research and the hegemony of linguistic forms of the presentation of knowledge, the author pays particular attention to addressing the complex entanglements of words and works in the development of practice-led projects in a university setting.

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Author Biography

Nigel Power, King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi, School of Architecture and Design

Nigel Power is a designer, artist and academic. His current research focuses on design, modernity and everyday life in Thailand. His creative practice uses archival and found visuals to explore questions of photography, historical memory and power.

References

Carter, P. (2004). Material Thinking. New Academia Publishing. Melbourne University Press.

Elkins, J. (2014). Art critiques: A guide. New Academia Publishing.

Gangakate, C. & xxxxx. (2011). Painting as Intellectual Inquiry: A Contribution to the Development of Practice-based Research in Thailand. International Fine Arts Journal, 15(3). Retrieved April 28, 2022, from tinyurl.com/2p8fx3wu

McGuirk, T. (2008). Knowing by Hand: Embodied Knowledge in Higher Education in the Disciplines of Art and Design. Proceedings of the 11th Conference of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas (ISSEI), Finland, University of Helsinki. Retrieved April 4, 2022, from https://blogs.helsinki.fi/issei2008

xxxxx.. (2012). What is an Experiment? Proceedings of the 6th South East Asian Technical University Consortium (SEATUC) Symposium, Bangkok, Thailand, SEATUC.

Rancière, J. (2009). The Emancipated Spectator. Verso.

Stafford, B. M. (1996). Good Looking: Essays on the Virtue of Images. MIT Press.

Sullivan, G. (2005). Art Practice as Research: Inquiry in the Visual Arts. Sage.

Wang, D, and Linda N. Groat. (2013). Architectural Research Methods. John Wiley & Sons.

Published

2022-06-30

How to Cite

POWER, Nigel. You Can’t Get There From Here: Discovering Where to Begin a Practice-led Inquiry – Notes and Reflections from Thailand. Revista GEMInIS, [S. l.], v. 13, n. 3, p. 58–70, 2022. DOI: 10.53450/2179-1465.RG.2022v13i2p58-70. Disponível em: https://revistageminis.ufscar.br/index.php/geminis/article/view/724. Acesso em: 3 dec. 2024.

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