Critical Conversations 2021: Natalie Loveless: How to Make Art at the End of the World: Revisited
Natalie Loveless is an artist, theorist, curator, and associate professor of contemporary art and theory at the University of Alberta
CRITICAL CONVERSATIONS 2021
Presented by the University of Saskatchewan Art Galleries and Collections
Inaugural speaker: Prof. Natalie Loveless, University of Alberta
Date: Thursday, Feb. 11, 2021
Time: 7 pm - 8:30 pm
Location: Online via Webex
Register through Eventbrite.
Join the webinar at this link: https://usask.webex.com/usask/j.php?MTID=me0c3b8e997640b5c9901196e2dd5f740
Meeting number (access code): 167 416 9550
Meeting password: unMns4Fmf68
About this talk
As an intervention into normative scholarly practice, research-creation has gained increasing visibility and validity over the past decade within the academy. Often mobilizing interdisciplinary and collaborative methods, with one foot always firmly grounded in artistic literacies, research-creation asks us to attend, with detail, to the methods we mobilize as well as our modes of output and publication at the level of constitutive form. This talk will return to some of the key provocations laid out in Loveless' 2019 book, How to Make Art at the End of the World: A Manifesto for Research-Creation, and consider what has shifted in the tumultuous years since its publication.
Speaker's bio
Natalie Loveless is an artist, theorist, and curator. She is an associate professor of contemporary art and theory in the History of Art, Design, and Visual Culture at the University of Alberta, located in ᐊᒥᐢᑿᒌᐚᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ (Amiskwacîwâskahikan) on Treaty Six territory (Canada), where she also directs the Research-