Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition

In transforming the folk tale into a visual medium, contemporary artists have illuminated the remarkable flexibility of this cultural heritage. The Omani Legends and Stories exhibition held in 2012 featured forty-two contemporary artists inspired to re-interpret folk tales that encapsulated beliefs...

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Main Author: Nada Al-Ajmi
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Sultan Qaboos University 2016-06-01
Series:Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1136
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spelling doaj-3b48530ebcd145bea4af5bf79f20a4fc2020-11-25T00:45:16ZaraSultan Qaboos UniversityJournal of Arts and Social Sciences2312-12702522-22792016-06-0172839810.24200/jass.vol7iss2pp83-981084Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories ExhibitionNada Al-Ajmi0Department of English College of Arts & Social Sciences, Sultan Qaboos UniversityIn transforming the folk tale into a visual medium, contemporary artists have illuminated the remarkable flexibility of this cultural heritage. The Omani Legends and Stories exhibition held in 2012 featured forty-two contemporary artists inspired to re-interpret folk tales that encapsulated beliefs and values relevant in present-day Oman. Several years later, qualitative interviews were conducted with seven of the artists whose work depicted stories focused on representations of women. Together with some analysis of academic writing in the field of traditional tales, this study also garnered artists’ viewpoints as expressed in their art works and revealed in discussions with the artists themselves. It was found that there is continuity in the cultural values and beliefs across generations, that folk tales are still being passed on and that women were represented in them in an intriguingly positive light. The continuing observance of cultural restrictions practiced on women was not supported in either the folk tales or the artists’ own viewpoints. The example provided by Oman’s visual arts industry may inspire similar initiatives in other societies and further research on possible linkages between different art mediums that could be harnessed to further the betterment of women’s socio-cultural situation.https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1136Folktales, Contemporary Art, Omani Legends, Women, Omani Culture.
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nada Al-Ajmi
spellingShingle Nada Al-Ajmi
Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition
Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Folktales, Contemporary Art, Omani Legends, Women, Omani Culture.
author_facet Nada Al-Ajmi
author_sort Nada Al-Ajmi
title Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition
title_short Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition
title_full Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition
title_fullStr Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition
title_full_unstemmed Innovative Applications for Presenting Heritage in the Visual Arts Medium: A Case Study of the Omani Legends and Stories Exhibition
title_sort innovative applications for presenting heritage in the visual arts medium: a case study of the omani legends and stories exhibition
publisher Sultan Qaboos University
series Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
issn 2312-1270
2522-2279
publishDate 2016-06-01
description In transforming the folk tale into a visual medium, contemporary artists have illuminated the remarkable flexibility of this cultural heritage. The Omani Legends and Stories exhibition held in 2012 featured forty-two contemporary artists inspired to re-interpret folk tales that encapsulated beliefs and values relevant in present-day Oman. Several years later, qualitative interviews were conducted with seven of the artists whose work depicted stories focused on representations of women. Together with some analysis of academic writing in the field of traditional tales, this study also garnered artists’ viewpoints as expressed in their art works and revealed in discussions with the artists themselves. It was found that there is continuity in the cultural values and beliefs across generations, that folk tales are still being passed on and that women were represented in them in an intriguingly positive light. The continuing observance of cultural restrictions practiced on women was not supported in either the folk tales or the artists’ own viewpoints. The example provided by Oman’s visual arts industry may inspire similar initiatives in other societies and further research on possible linkages between different art mediums that could be harnessed to further the betterment of women’s socio-cultural situation.
topic Folktales, Contemporary Art, Omani Legends, Women, Omani Culture.
url https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1136
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