Title of article :
Recording the Creative Process: An Empirical Basis for Practice-Integrated Research in the Arts
Author/Authors :
Gillham، Bill نويسنده , , McGilp، Helen نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی 2 سال 2007
Abstract :
A case is made for a form of narrative reporting
(the Creative Process Journal) as a methodology
for practice-integrated research in the arts. It is
argued that this stage of research creativity, which
applies in all domains of academic study but is
often not reported, is fundamental to the kind of
arts research which allocates practice a central
role. The practical and technological character of
making a CPJ, and its consequent benefits to the
maker–researcher are outlined.
Undergraduate students in the visual arts
commonly maintain some record of the process
leading to the final assessed outcome of their
practice. Among qualified practitioners this stage
is rarely recorded systematically and these kind of
data are typically buried or discarded en route,
constituting the ‘undocumented tradition’ referred
to by Agnew [1] below. Agnew was writing in the
context of engineering design history. Our interest
is in the role that a focused recording and analysis
of process could have in explicating design
outcomes, and the development of designers’
ability to evaluate their practice so as to carry it
forward. That this function extends to the visual
arts in general is apparent in a self-report account
by the artist Antoinette Herival [2] which is
discussed below.
It should be made clear that our focus is quite
different from the vogue for ‘learning journals’
[3], which are primarily concerned with ‘reflection’
and self-analysis. Our emphasis is on the
importance of detailed description to provide the
raw data for critical interpretation and interrogation.
Here ‘description’ is as much visual as
textual and we are particularly interested in the
potential of new media for integrating and representing
these varied components in a coherent
and accessible fashion.
The term ‘practice-integrated’ is used in the
sense that the recording, analysis and commentary
on the process of making should be recognised
as fundamental to constructing practitioner
research. We seek to distinguish it from the overinclusive
category of practice-based research and
suggest that that term should be reserved for
investigations where the research element is
essentially something added to practice; and
from practice-related research, a term of wide
application including ‘basic’ research with potential
for informing practice.
Journal title :
International Journal of Art & Design Education
Journal title :
International Journal of Art & Design Education