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Expressando-se: uma interface do ensino de artes visuais com a musicalidadeLima, Luciana Calegari Santos [UNESP] 26 June 2012 (has links) (PDF)
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lima_lcs_me_ia.pdf: 716961 bytes, checksum: 6634410aa6cf8fa3a13a74ccc37e3534 (MD5) / Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP) / A música é uma das formas de linguagem presentes na vida humana, desde a préhistória. Vários são os estudos a respeito da origem dos efeitos sonoros sobre o ser humano, sabe-se que o homem fazia música em seus rituais de caça e adoração. Objetivo: pesquisar como o ensino de História da Arte com o recurso da musicalidade com as crianças influencia na aprendizagem significativa. Método: Pesquisa descritiva, qualitativa realizada com as séries iniciais de uma escola da rede privada de ensino da cidade de São Paulo, em 2008. Resultados: Pelo estudo realizado, percebeu-se a importância da atuação do professor que busca provocar nos alunos um entendimento sobre a área de conhecimento, baseada nas experiências vividas em salas de aula; e esta atuação distingue-o do professor tradicional; e os alunos não precisam ter um conhecimento prévio da obra de Arte, mas, é importante que a vivência seja provocada para que, além da Experiência, tenham uma vivência sonora e visual, para que haja a aprendizagem em Arte / Music is one of the language forms that have been present in human life since Prehistoric times. There are several studies about the origin of the sound effects on human beings; it is known that man created music in their hunting rituals and worship. Objective: To investigate how musical resources added to Art History teaching influences students’ meaningful learning. Method: A descriptive, qualitative study was conducted with the initial series of a private school in the city of Sao Paulo in 2008. Results: Through this research, based on classroom experiences, it was observed that the performance of the teacher who motivates students towards significant learning is of great importance; and that this practice differs from traditional practices; that students do not necessarily have to possess a prior knowledge of a work of Art, but it is important to activate a connection of it to sounds and visuals stimuli, so that besides the Experience, they can have an auditory and visual involvement, and thus, learn Art
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"Pra tudo se acabar na quarta feira" = aproximações, diálogos e estranhamento entre carnaval e teatro nas performances da Comissão de Frente / "Everything ending on wednesday" : approaches, dialogues and estrangements between carnival and theater in the Forn CommissionManzini, Yaskara Donizeti 02 March 2012 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2012 / Resumo: O presente trabalho investiga as aproximações, diálogos e estranhamentos que se estabelecem entre os processos de criação nas artes da cena e os processos de criação dos desfiles das escolas de samba. Na escola de samba os espaços entre componente, família, comunidade, cultura, arte, festa e cena são muito tênues. Desta maneira, optou-se por abarcar este trabalho por meio dos Estudos da Performance, território conceitual multidisciplinar, onde, neste caso, os relevos da antropologia e artes cênicas se destacam. As encenações criadas, pela autora, para a Comissão de Frente da Associação Cultural e Social Escola de Samba Mocidade Camisa Verde e Branco, durante onze carnavais, configuram-se como o mote para a discussão destes processos. Assim, as próprias encenações podem ser consideradas como uma espécie de resultado: a cena. Todavia, o trabalho aponta para as possibilidades de pensar questões como tratamento do tempo/espaço e qualidade de " presença " e, consequentemente, " co-presença " a partir das relações que este tipo de criação, cênico carnavalesca, estabelece / Abstract: This study investigates the approaches, dialogues and estrangements that are established between the processes of creation in the scene arts and the processes of creation in the samba school parades. In samba schools the spaces between members, family, community, culture, art, party and scene are very thin. Thus, we chose to cover this work through the Performance Studies, a multidisciplinary conceptual territory, and, in this case, the relief of the anthropology and the performing arts stand out. The created staging, by the author, to the Front Commission of Cultural and Social Association Samba School "Mocidade Camisa Verde e Branco", for eleven carnivals, appears as the theme for the discussion of these processes. Thus, the stagings themselves can be considered as a kind of result: the scene. However, the work points to possibilities of thinking about issues such as the treatment of time/space and quality of "presence" and therefore "co-presence" from the relations that these types de creation, scenic and carnival, provide / Doutorado / Artes Cenicas / Doutor em Artes
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The Development of an Art I Curriculum Guide for the Mesquite Independent School DistrictBradley, Cynthia Cathy 12 1900 (has links)
This study reports on the development of a curriculum guide to insure some degree of experience uniformity in the first art course available to students in high schools in Mesquite, Texas. Current general education and art education literature as well as curriculum guides from American schools provided the behaviorally oriented framework and objectives, content, and teaching strategies. The guide reflects a balance between the ideal and the real physical environment in which the guide will be implemented. Conclusions include the concepts that teacher education in using behavioral objectives is necessary, that a behaviorally oriented guide will work in Mesquite high schools, that behavioral objectives will facilitate evaluation, and that the trend toward tri-part subject content will increase in art curricula.
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The effect of a cultural program in the visual arts on students' ethnic attitudesCipywnyk, Raissa Sonia January 1987 (has links)
The purpose, of this research study was to attempt to discover if a unit of study on aspects of the visual arts of the people of India and Indo-Canadians could result in positive attitude change toward this target group. The basic premise upon which the program was developed was that improved ethnic attitudes could be generated by focussing on similarities in beliefs and practices among the cultures of India, Indo-Canadians, and mainstream Canadians as reflected in their aesthetic products.
The research design used was a nonequivalent control group design. Three intact sixth grade classes in a large suburban school district comprised the sample. Two classes participated in the program while the third class was used as a control group. All three groups were pre- and posttested on measures indicating their attitudes towards Indo-Canadians. A Semantic Differential Measure and a Bogardus Social Distance Scale were the major instruments. This experimental design was complemented by the observation of the two treatment groups throughout the implementation period.
The results of the posttest indicate that a significant positive change in students' attitudes took place as a result of the treatment. The exploration of cultures and cross-cultural similarities in beliefs and practices through the visual arts would therefore appear to be a promising means of improving attitudes towards ethnic groups. / Education, Faculty of / Graduate
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An exploratory, descriptive study of art museum educators' attitudes in regard to art museum-elementary school collaborationLiu, Wan-Chen 05 1900 (has links)
In North America, art museums have rendered services to elementary schools since the
early 1900s. Although the scope and number of these services have expanded in the past several
decades, the nature of the art museum-elementary school collaborative relationship can be
problematic, and even counterproductive to the enhancement of quality of art education. There
are some crucial issues related to the nature of and factors underlying collaboration among
elementary schools and art museums, that need to be carefully considered in order for these
efforts to be successful and fruitful.
Since the relationship between attitudes and behavior is reciprocal, the attitudes of art
museum educators in regard to art museum-elementary school collaboration are crucial to the
quality and effectiveness of any collaborative endeavors and directly impact art museums'
contribution to elementary art education. Therefore, this study explores art museum educators'
attitudes in regard to art museum-elementary school collaboration. The present investigation is
the only study of its kind in Canada to date.
From the fall of 1997 to the spring of 1998, I conducted a survey of art museum
educators in the province of British Columbia, Canada as well as interviews involving nine
informants working in two art museums. Moreover, in order to meaningfully interpret the
interview data, I observed the informants' daily routines in these galleries and collected
documents related to the two study sites. This mixed method design was used to study BC art
museum educators' attitudes in regard to art museum-elementary school collaboration relative to
six specific issues: 1) models of art museum/gallery-school collaboration; 2) pedagogy and
methods of art museum/gallery programs for elementary schools; 3) art museum/gallery
programs and resources for elementary school teachers; 4) elementary school teacher
participation in school-oriented art museum education; 5) content of art museum/gallery
programs for elementary schools; and 6) linkage of art museum/gallery school programs and
elementary school curricula.
The results of this study suggest important implications to the future of collaborative
endeavors bringing together elementary schools and art museums by highlighting issues related
to the dynamics of the art museum educator - elementary school teacher relationships,
professional knowledge and expertise, and curriculum links that strongly impact on such
partnerships. They also provide guidance for future related research. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Inside out/outside in: (sexual diversity : a comparative case study of two post-secondary visual art students)Honeychurch, Kenn Gardner 11 1900 (has links)
While a number of recent studies have addressed the overall educational
experiences of larger groups of gay and/or lesbian students within institutions of higher
learning, there are no in-depth studies which address the experiences of a small number of
gay men and/or lesbians who are students in programs of visual art. This comparative case
study of two gay male students of visual art considers three primary questions: what are
the ways in which individual subjectivities and cultural practices of white, gay, male artists
inter-relate; what is the impact of each artist's cultural productions on the broader culture
in which they are located; and, what are the experiences of each subject within the postsecondary
visual art's program in which each was enrolled. Data was collected through
formal interviews, participant-observation, and an examination of the art practices of each
subject.
This study draws on the contributions, and the inter-relationships, of feminist,
postmodernist, and queer theory literatures. In response to the first primary question, this
study identifies: a range of denominators by which the subjects name themselves; four
categories by which affiliated communities might be identified; a strong positive
relationship between individual subjectivities and the practices of art. Second, this study
concludes that: public response to the art practices of dissident subjects may vary in terms
of mediums and methods; the relationship between language and visual art is variant
between the two artists but the embeddedness of language in visual art is recognized; the
subjects hold opposing views with respect to the role of the art object within culture, but,
in both cases, the art object is seen as being integral, positively or negatively, to individual
identities; art is a means to cultural knowledge, that is, visual art may serve as a means of
articulating various queered theoretical standpoints; and finally, that the possibilities of
camp are a means by which queer identities may be articulated and constituted in visual art
practices. In response to the third primary research question, this study concludes that:
there is either a lack of gay or queer content matter and expertise, or a strong negative
reaction against queer experience in the programs of visual art presently considered; and
finally, that the university is a site of cultural practice which continues to be a major
legitimizer of social authority.
In general terms, with respect to epistemologies, research methodologies, and
texts, a number of necessary adaptations emerge which reflect the unique experiences of
queer researchers engaged in the production of social knowledges with queer subjects.
The research findings suggest that the incorporation of the needs of queer students into
the Academy and the Arts would prove valuable, not only to students who so define
themselves, but, because different perspectives reflect different and expanded knowledges,
would contribute to the learning/living experiences of all post-secondary students of visual
art. Recommendations for further research include continuing inquiry which similarly
considers the experiences of lesbians in visual arts programs, and for larger scale studies
with gay and/or lesbian students which may provide alternate kinds of data. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Art Museum Resources and Teacher Use.Eggemeyer, Valerie 05 1900 (has links)
I proposed that both Bruner's (1963) idea of the spiral curriculum and Yenawine's (1992) theories of teaching for visual literacy in the museum set the stage for significant learning for students when used together. If school teachers lay a foundation of knowledge about a museum object, especially through museum resources, then the student may transform and apply this 'prior knowledge' (explicit memories from the classroom) while on the museum visit tour. When docents utilize Yenawine's (1992) methods toward the goal of visual literacy, the semantic knowledge of the classroom is then fused with museum learning, building stronger memories and facilitating deeper understanding as students learn about museum objects. This research explored the correlation of these two theories in a qualitative manner based on observations of actual museum visit preparation in classrooms in Casper, Wyoming, and how it related to a museum tour at the Nicolaysen Art Museum and Discovery Center. The research revealed that conditions do exist within the community that would facilitate Bruner's (1963) idea of a learning spiral, yet not in the manner envisioned. The observed conditions toward a spiral was accomplished through the participant teachers relating the museum exhibit to their operational curriculum in a variety of curricular areas, such as language arts and science, when docents related the tour to classroom learning, and not through museum resources or Yenawine's (1992) methods toward increasing visual literacy, as was previously considered.
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S.T.A.R.S. in the middle school: (Success Through Art Related Skills)Wight, Mary Beth 01 January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Portraits of Artists’ Lived Experiences of Co-Creating ArtWest, Eric Christopher January 2021 (has links)
Much has been said about what artists experience when they make visual art individually, but less has been said about what artists experience when they make art together. The study is based on the author’s perception, elaborated below, that artistic co-creation in the visual arts seems to be regarded as less valuable than individual artistic creation. To explore and richly describe the experience of artistic co-creation from the perspective of artists themselves, I initially invited three duos of artists to create visual art together in an experimental, time-bound co creation.
After the onset of COVID-19, however, I amended the study by inviting participants to co-create art by virtually passing pieces of art to one another. I then interviewed them about their experience. Guided by a phenomenological approach, I conducted semi-structured interviews using questions sourced from the study purpose and related research questions. These interviews, held periodically through the co-creative project, sought to uncover the emergent themes of the experience of artistic co-creation. After reviewing the transcripts from these interviews, I created a representative written likeness of each duo experience, called a portrait, using the qualitative modes of portraiture.
Six themes emerged from these portraits in the ways the artists reflected on their experiences of creating art together, including: moments of relationship and connection in the process of co-creation, the context and structure of the experiment, seeing experiences differently in the process of co-creation, finding agreements between the perspectives of the co-creators, developing creative rhythms based on temporal parameters, and learning in the partnership of the project.
I did not begin this study with a formally-articulated conceptual framework, but I was influenced in my thinking by Basquiat and Warhol’s relationship and subsequent collaborative artworks. This research contributes to the literature in key areas by examining existing assumptions about the value of artistic co-creation in the visual arts.
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Bilder av Sjömän : En studie om queera uttryck och maskulinitet / Sailors in art : A study of queer expression and masculinitySkoting, Joel January 2020 (has links)
In this essay I will study three different paintings by the Swedish artists Lars Lerin and Gösta Adrian Nilsson (also known as GAN). All of these pieces incorporate sailors as part of their motives. The aim of the study is to analyse how these pieces differ in how they convey homoerotic themes. Both of these artists refer to their sexuality through their artistry, the sailor being a common motive between the two. I will also examine how the sailor relate to different ideas of masculinity. To do this I will use methods from both the iconologic and semiotic schools of art analysis, before comparing the different pieces, presenting my interpretations of them. The result of this study shows that these artists use varying methods to present their sexual identity. The motives of GAN are more subtle than those of Lars Lerin, relying on symbolic interpration rather than men posing suggestivily. This is not suprising, as homosexuality was still illegal during GANs life. The artists also portray masculinity in different ways.
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