Abstract :
The re-issue of a nineteenth-century French
Drawing Course is the occasion for an examination
of issues of ‘models of good practice’ in
current art teaching. These are listed as an
expanded set of student-centred pedagogical
paradigms, which embrace the forceful popular
imagery of electronic games and comic strips.
The formalist adaptations of comic-strip imagery
by artists in the 1970s which challenged traditional
divisions between high and popular art, are
contrasted with the scathing Marxist analysis by
Dorfman and Matterlart, Imperialist Ideology in the
Disney Comic, which still has political resonance.
The darkly ambivalent, if much theorised, appropriations
of popular imagery by contemporary
artists Pettibon and Murakami are adduced as part
of an on-going problematic, where ideological
readings are glossed over for fear of jeopardising
the liberal consensus in art and education.