There are many master programmes available for students within artistic practices, but none (that we are aware of in the Netherlands) aimed specifically at fieldwork as an artistic practice. This provides an interesting gap in the curriculum that we as FoAM plan to explore with series of pilot sessions. We don't intend to create a course or programme, but rather test possibilities. With a mixed participant group of about a dozen people, half of which would be students. With a spread across ages and backgrounds, including at least some people that live locally.
This program is in collaboration with Strandlab Almere, ArtScience Interfaculty
To develop the pilot we're hosting some exploratory design sessions focussing on three aspects:
These sessions will be held at Strandlab Almere
During Climate as Artefact, FoAM organised a session on the relevance of Fieldwork for artistic practice and posed the first tentative questions about its absence from both in artistic and scientific curricula (in the Netherlands). Jan de Graaf and Jeroen van Westen introduced the subject of fieldwork by asking: What is the Field? And what is the Work? We may all have differing interpretations, but it lead Theun to write down his motivation for using fieldwork as a research method:
Many of the most fundamental challenges to human cultures are at play in the hybrid landscapes that are emerging and disintegrating out there in the great out-doors. To engage with the full complexity of varying territories and the dynamics of environmental processes, fieldwork has become a vital ingredient to artistic practice. Fieldwork isn't just being outside - as stated by eminent landscape thinker Jan de Graaf. It is a method of enquiry that starts from radical exposure of the participants, their thoughts and their acts. Perceiving, being and working in full exposure to the complexities and subtleties of an area which is being navigated in collaboration with local guides, both human and non-human. Experts may range from artistic or scientific researchers to representatives of ancient cultures. Fieldwork teams are established to have a wide range of backgrounds and ways of knowing, that challenge or compliment each other. Fieldwork then is a multi-sensory exploration that is based on direct experience, open-ended experimentation and in-situ prototyping starting from local circumstances, complexities and relations. Enquiry as an embodied act that seeks - in the words of Jens Hauser - to be un-split from environmental processes, natural cycles, climatic conditions, seasons, (non)human cultures - which collectively may be captured by the term otherness.