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ART AND THE CITY: URBAN SPACE, ART AND SOCIAL CHANGE
Columbia University Global Centers (CGC), Amman-Jordan
11-14 June 2023
Since 2019, every year in a different city, Art and the City: Urban Space, Art, and Social Change conferences bring together a team of international scholars with an interest in art and the right to the city, urban creativity, aesthetics and politics, cultural and artistic rebellion, aesthetics of urban social movements, and art activism in the urban space. The central goal of the conference series is to critically engage in a multifaceted, multi-disciplinary, and multi-geographic perspective to articulate and promote a richer and more integrated understanding of the ideologies, relationships, meanings, and practices that arise from the diverse interactions among the three social spheres: urban space, art, and society.
Art’s role in the urban space involves a multitude of spatial and temporal dynamics and constitutes emotional, dialogical, and aesthetic interactions. On the one hand, art assists in the improvement of urban development, tourism, public health, race relations, and even welfare. On the other hand, we observe that art lends its competencies to urban activism and social change from the 'right to the city' and anti-gentrification movements to urban social movements with their spatial, ideological, and ecological agenda to the struggles of democracy, civil rights, individual and collective freedoms.
The politico-aesthetic character of these movements has been explored extensively from the point of plural resistance against the authoritative government, the struggle over the appropriation and use of public space, structural and social inequalities, and human rights issues. However, these debates lack a specialized framework and language for contemporary art practice, which places urban space and its social urgencies at the center of its production.
Crucially, the recent discussions on the sociality of art emphasize the therapeutic, ethical, unitary, reconciliatory, and functional attributes of art, focusing on how art contributes to easing tensions between communities and city authorities. Although such criticism of art's engagement with social change is sound, it undermines art’s capacities of struggle and agonism, contestation and re-appropriation that emerge through the creation of common and shared spaces for socialization, mobilization, and political action.
To push forward the dialogues and widen the debates on art’s relationship to the political and the social, Art and the City conferences interrogate what it is to aesthetically experience the city from the perspective of social dissensus and democratic citizenship.
The overarching theme “Urban Space, Art, and Social Change” envelops this year’s following four tracks (in total 9 panels):
1. Aesthetic activism against authoritarianism
2. Art, architecture and the aesthetic struggle for urban commons
3. Public arts, public space and democracy
4. Urban arts and the politics of urban space
The participants from all humanities and social sciences disciplines are invited to analyze the way art:
--is a part of the aesthetics of the urban social movements and their commitment to participative (direct) democracy.
--struggles in the increasingly surveilled, designed, aestheticized and otherwise controlled urban contexts,
--confronts and reconstitutes the concept of public space,
--provides the citizenry with new and innovative ways to engage,
--activates, captures, and subverts the experience of the urban space,
--enables reflexive processes and co-creation of knowledge and worldview,
--reveals hegemonic and counterhegemonic interactions among city authorities, urban developers, and artists,
--empowers marginalized voices and subjects in the city,
--produces new narratives of social organization in the gentrified urban space,
-- reveals, questions and resists authoritarian thinking and doing,
--transforms our understanding of the politics of the urban space,
--changes our sensual and perceptual encounters with the city,
--accentuates potentials and disadvantages related to the interaction of eco-activism with urban ecologies,
--is used in reclaiming the cities as sites of resistance and change.
KEYNOTE
Rosalyn Deutsche, Bernard College &Columbia University
Interdisciplinary Scientific Committee 2023
Eva Branscome, Architectural History, the Bartlett School of Architecture
Anna Dempsey, Visual and Performing Arts, University of Massachusetts
Emre Çetin Gürer, English, Koc University
Friederike Landau, Cultural Geography, Radboud University
John Lennon, English, University of South Florida
Alla Myzelev, Art History, the State University of New York at Geneseo
Robert Nilsson Mohammadi, Society and Culture, Malmö University
Tijen Tunali, Art History, Columbia University
Josepha Wessels, Arts and Communication, Malmö University
Interested participants are requested to submit an abstract of a maximum of 500 words and a short CV to the conference convener Tijen Tunali tt2928@columbia.edu no later than February 28, 2023.
There are limited grants to offset the costs of travel to Amman for junior scholars (Ph.D. and Postdocs). Please state your need for a travel grant in the body of your email.
Selected papers will be invited to contribute to an edited volume by Routledge or to a special issue in Street Art and Urban Creativity Journal.
Tijen Tunali, PhD
Andrew Mellon Fellow
Columbia University, CGC Amman/New York
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