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2020

Rhode Island School of Design

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Articles 1 - 30 of 148

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Tale Of Two: The Visual Mixtape, Emma Noel, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Tale Of Two: The Visual Mixtape, Emma Noel, Special Collections, Fleet Library

7th Baker & Whitehill Student Artists' Book Contest 2021

No abstract provided.


Ramen With White Privilege, Sarah Park, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Ramen With White Privilege, Sarah Park, Special Collections, Fleet Library

7th Baker & Whitehill Student Artists' Book Contest 2021

HONORABLE MENTION


Untitled, Ashna Reddy, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Untitled, Ashna Reddy, Special Collections, Fleet Library

8th Baker & Whitehill Student Artists' Book Contest 2022

No abstract provided.


Ozzi Box, Jessica Ruan, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Ozzi Box, Jessica Ruan, Special Collections, Fleet Library

8th Baker & Whitehill Student Artists' Book Contest 2022

No abstract provided.


Story Of The Sea, Kate Tsai, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Story Of The Sea, Kate Tsai, Special Collections, Fleet Library

8th Baker & Whitehill Student Artists' Book Contest 2022

No abstract provided.


Keeping Score: Some Lessons For Artists From The Later Wittgenstein, Nickolas Calabrese Dec 2020

Keeping Score: Some Lessons For Artists From The Later Wittgenstein, Nickolas Calabrese

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

This text rounds up a few lessons fashioned after the idea of keeping score as it relates to the later work of Ludwig Wittgenstein. These lessons are emphatically related to the production of art, so this text might be at its best in the hands of an artist. They all loosely demonstrate the normative dimension of aesthetic production, which amounts to the claim that one is committed, by the act of production, to a communal endorsement for why an artwork ought to exist at all. The final part of this text will expand on this principle of normativity, but it …


It's In Our Hands, Himangi Kanoi, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

It's In Our Hands, Himangi Kanoi, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


How To Be A Cannibal In The 21st Century?, Vidhi Nayyar, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

How To Be A Cannibal In The 21st Century?, Vidhi Nayyar, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


Nee Ner Noo (Travel Sounds), Sophia Brown, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Nee Ner Noo (Travel Sounds), Sophia Brown, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


Br/Leach Montage, Damisa Vanaswas, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Br/Leach Montage, Damisa Vanaswas, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


Zone: Apollinaire, Simpson, Chang, Naya Lee Chang, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Zone: Apollinaire, Simpson, Chang, Naya Lee Chang, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


Zone: Apollinaire, Simpson, Chang, Naya Chang, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Zone: Apollinaire, Simpson, Chang, Naya Chang, Special Collections, Fleet Library

8th Baker & Whitehill Student Artists' Book Contest 2022

HONORABLE MENTION | $100


If We Could Make It Out Alive, Jonathan Dewanto, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

If We Could Make It Out Alive, Jonathan Dewanto, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


Zone: Apollinaire, Simpson, Chang, Naya Lee Chang, Special Collections, Fleet Library Dec 2020

Zone: Apollinaire, Simpson, Chang, Naya Lee Chang, Special Collections, Fleet Library

Baker & Whitehill supplemental content

No abstract provided.


Reconstructing Heritage: Places, Values, Attachment, Lisa Giombini Nov 2020

Reconstructing Heritage: Places, Values, Attachment, Lisa Giombini

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

As natural catastrophes alter the environment, historical towns and other sites of heritage significance are at risk of being damaged, if not disrupted altogether. How should we confront the prospect of these disasters? And how are we to cope with the reconstructions that will be needed as these phenomena occur?

In this paper, I explore philosophical tools for thinking more deeply about the choices surrounding heritage conservation. Recent work in environmental psychology has investigated people’s emotional bond to places and how changes in a place’s structure may pose a threat to individual and social cohesion. Similarly, everyday aestheticians emphasize the …


Manual / Issue 14 / Shadows, Sarah Ganz Blythe, Editor-In-Chief, Amy Pickworth, Editor, Andrea Achi, Emanuel Admassu, Anita N. Bateman, Makeda Best, Gina Borromeo, Rashayla Marie Brown, Shuriya Davis, Akwaeke Emezi, Tayana Fincher, Melanee C. Harvey, Kate Irvin, Sade Lanay, Dominic Molon, Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Kevin Quashie, Matthew Shenoda, Kelly Taylor Mitchell, Leslie Wilson Oct 2020

Manual / Issue 14 / Shadows, Sarah Ganz Blythe, Editor-In-Chief, Amy Pickworth, Editor, Andrea Achi, Emanuel Admassu, Anita N. Bateman, Makeda Best, Gina Borromeo, Rashayla Marie Brown, Shuriya Davis, Akwaeke Emezi, Tayana Fincher, Melanee C. Harvey, Kate Irvin, Sade Lanay, Dominic Molon, Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Kevin Quashie, Matthew Shenoda, Kelly Taylor Mitchell, Leslie Wilson

Journals

Manual, a journal about art and its making. Shadows. This anti-visibility is not the same as being invisible, rather it is the power to operate against systems of imperial domination, including the gaze. It asks: How do we force the gaze to surrender? What if explanation were off the table? By enabling a petit marronage that can be expressed in the visual and symbolic use of shadow, the gaze is challenged. This issue of Manual and the accompanying exhibition (opening at the RISD Museum Fall 2020) posit that the right to opacity de-burdens contemporary work by artists who identify as …


New Media Art: Curating Social Justice In Contemporary Art Museums And Arts Organizations, Kyung Eun Lee Oct 2020

New Media Art: Curating Social Justice In Contemporary Art Museums And Arts Organizations, Kyung Eun Lee

Masters Theses

My research project includes case studies in which I interviewed nine new media art curators and directors whose curatorial practices offer historical analyses and theoretical perspectives that address the dynamics of social justice by using new media art. I investigate the ways in which social justice is presented in museums and arts organizations. Central to this project is an examination of museum practices where the use of new media art becomes a central platform to showcase issues of social justice.


Defining Montréal: An Exploration On The Evolution Of Montréal’S Brand And Cultural Representations Since 1930, Liliane Lai Oct 2020

Defining Montréal: An Exploration On The Evolution Of Montréal’S Brand And Cultural Representations Since 1930, Liliane Lai

Masters Theses

Spaces contain and create meanings through the interplay of their surrounding physical and mental landscape i.e., geography, social activity, and representation. Like many defined spaces, Montréal is not only a social and spatial manifestation of a singular community, but an ideal conceived and constructed through interpretation, objectives, and media portrayal— a mosaic or assemblage. Conceptualising Montréal as a brand being one of the cultural capitals of Canada is deeply tied to an assemblage of its diverse roots and identity beyond its history. This thesis explores the notion of city branding to understand how a city’s image and reputation evolves in …


Marching Through The Floating World: Processions In Ukiyo-E Prints (2020), Theory & History Of Art & Design Department, Elena Varshavskaya (H791 Instructor) Oct 2020

Marching Through The Floating World: Processions In Ukiyo-E Prints (2020), Theory & History Of Art & Design Department, Elena Varshavskaya (H791 Instructor)

Ukiyo-e Prints Course | Exhibition Catalogs

"Marching through the Floating World is a book that accompanies a student curated virtual exhibition of the same title. This exhibition is dedicated to images of processions in ukiyo-e woodblock prints.

Ukiyo-e or “pictures of the floating world” was a vibrant style of urban art that flourished in Japan in the 17th- 19th century, predominantly in the form of mass-produced woodcuts. Steeped in everyday pleasurable pastimes of townspeople, ukiyo-e prints reflected contemporary culture to its fullest, whether fact or fiction, often the two amalgamated in a witty way.

Processions constituted a noticeable theme in ukiyo-e prints as they were an …


Floating Gardens In The Urban Landscape, Victor Rivera-Diaz Sep 2020

Floating Gardens In The Urban Landscape, Victor Rivera-Diaz

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

No abstract provided.


On Japanese Minimalism, Paul Haimes Sep 2020

On Japanese Minimalism, Paul Haimes

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

Shibumi, a Japanese term referring to a subtle elegance, but at times suggestive of austerity or even bitterness, captures a certain sense of restraint that is reflected in much traditional Japanese design. Although concepts derived from Japanese Zen Buddhism, such as ma, wabi-sabi, and iki, may be more commonly known to English-speaking audiences, this article proposes that shibumi is the more appropriate concept to apply when considering the minimalist nature inherent in much Japanese design. Moreover, this article suggests that shibumi and modernist design tastes may be compatible, despite past suggestions to the contrary. To support …


The Hospitality Of The Abyssal Ground Or Perceptual Architectures Of Indeterminacy, Natasha Lushetich Sep 2020

The Hospitality Of The Abyssal Ground Or Perceptual Architectures Of Indeterminacy, Natasha Lushetich

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

There never has been such a thing as solid ground. As profoundly transient beings, all we can hope for is the hospitality of the abyssal ground.[1] Perhaps that is why our everyday aesthetic appreciation of our natural environment is inseparable from indeterminacy, as change and ambiguity but also potentiality; think of the immensely pleasurable journeys through the rapidly changing shapes in fire- or cloud-gazing. But can the same be said of our machinic environment? In this article, I discuss indeterminacy as a generative principle in four realms: elemental, evental, linguistic, and machinic. Anchoring the transubstantiating potential of the four …


A Philosophical Account Of Listening Musically, Paskalina Bourbon Aug 2020

A Philosophical Account Of Listening Musically, Paskalina Bourbon

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

What is the distinctive character of musical experiences? An answer: musical experience is distinctive because it is of music. I argue, however, that the difference between musical and nonmusical experience cannot be explained with an ontological account of music per se. Instead, we have musical experiences of sounds whenever we listen and attend to sounds in a particular kind of way. I call this special kind of attention “musical listening.” One can explain why musical experiences are distinctive by explaining what makes musical listening distinctive. This account of musical listening suggests an anti-realist stance towards music; there is no …


Editorial Introduction To The Special Volume On Urban Aesthetics, Sanna Lehtinen Jul 2020

Editorial Introduction To The Special Volume On Urban Aesthetics, Sanna Lehtinen

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

No abstract provided.


What Is An Urban Atmosphere?, Adam Andrzejewski, Mateusz Salwa Jul 2020

What Is An Urban Atmosphere?, Adam Andrzejewski, Mateusz Salwa

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

Atmosphere is one of the key ideas in contemporary aesthetics. The concept proves to be exceptionally useful whenever particular spaces, including interiors or urban spaces, are discussed regarding their unique features. The goal of the paper is to reconsider how an urban atmosphere may be understood. In order to do that, we will shed light on the ontological nature of atmospheres, by revisiting the concept as it recently was presented by some influential proponents of the aesthetics of atmospheres. Contrary to the widespread view, we argue that an atmosphere is not an entity itself. It is not a “quasi-thing” or …


Urban Kinesthetics, Tea Lobo Ph.D. Jul 2020

Urban Kinesthetics, Tea Lobo Ph.D.

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

The question how a city can be an aesthetic object or a beautiful object can be posed in a more fundamental manner: how a city can be perceived in the first place. By city, I mean both a built environment and its less tangible social and political reality, such as hierarchies, interactions, and alliances. A city is never perceived, in this sense, as a whole but only as snippets of buildings, the smell of pollution, and so on. Therefore, it is not accidental that urban aesthetics have traditionally been associated with the figure of the flâneur, a leisurely stroller through …


Visions Of Political Form: Kantian Free Play And Urban Space, Ryan Wittingslow Ph.D. Jul 2020

Visions Of Political Form: Kantian Free Play And Urban Space, Ryan Wittingslow Ph.D.

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

A number of commentators have examined Kantian beauty in regards to its political promise. According to these readings, the free play inherent to beauty is a precondition for realizing political forms that are both pluralistic and non-coercive. But what does this mean for the design of urban spaces where pluralistic and non-coercive politics are supposed to take place? In this paper I offer a reading of urban beauty via a Kantian lens. I argue that any assessment of urban beauty is, in part, an assessment of that space’s capacity to encourage the free play necessary for non-coercive politics and a …


Atmospheric Affordances And The Sense Of Urban Places, Vesa Vihanninjoki Jul 2020

Atmospheric Affordances And The Sense Of Urban Places, Vesa Vihanninjoki

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

The places of our everyday lives constitute a fundamental condition for the sensibility and the meaningfulness of our urban experience. Such places afford us various things, and it is precisely the afforded uses and actions that remarkably affect or even define our experience of a place. It is, however, crucial to ask what makes certain place-based affordances visible to us while others remain invisible. Why do we experience and interpret a place as a “place-for-something,” and what is the role of aesthetics in this process? Not all place-based affordances are equally visible to everyone, and the meaning of personal and …


The Socially Transformative Aesthetics Of Street Culture: From Walter Benjamin’S One-Way Street To The Arcades Project, Jules Simon Jul 2020

The Socially Transformative Aesthetics Of Street Culture: From Walter Benjamin’S One-Way Street To The Arcades Project, Jules Simon

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

This paper discusses the dialectical relationship of what I call an ethical aesthetics of the city, exemplified in the relationship of the Haussmannization techniques of architectural administration and spatial domination in their forms of the functionalist imperative of modern capitalist urban planning and spontaneous, improvisational-yet-collective, innovative modes of street life. I draw significantly on Walter Benjamin’s phenomenological ethics of urban aesthetics, comparing two developments in his reflections on the “everyday lived experience of the city,” specifically, lived experiences of city streets, namely, the work that he published in One-Way Street, and his unfinished work in The Arcades Project. …


Street Art, Decorum, And The Politics Of Urban Aesthetics, Andrea Baldini Jul 2020

Street Art, Decorum, And The Politics Of Urban Aesthetics, Andrea Baldini

Contemporary Aesthetics (Journal Archive)

In the last forty years or so, authorities across the globe have appealed to the notion of decorum to justify authoritarian policies of urban control. Such a notion is distinctly aesthetic insofar as it deals with good taste in matters of appearances and behavior; decorum is about what we should or is appropriate to see and do in public spaces. When considering how deeply discussions and policies of decorum shape our daily lives, it is surprising that aestheticians have largely ignored the city as a subject of inquiry. In this paper, I examine the heretofore largely overlooked link between the …