Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg

Since the late 1990s, the Crossing Communities Art Project in Winnipeg, Canada has created community-based art centred around collaboration and activism. The project began with exchanges of artwork between women in prison in Manitoba and women artists in Winnipeg. It developed into an organization w...

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Main Author: Brynjolson, Noni
Format: Others
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/974784/1/Brynjolson_MA_F2012.pdf
Brynjolson, Noni <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Brynjolson=3ANoni=3A=3A.html> (2012) Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.9747842013-10-22T03:47:02Z Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg Brynjolson, Noni Since the late 1990s, the Crossing Communities Art Project in Winnipeg, Canada has created community-based art centred around collaboration and activism. The project began with exchanges of artwork between women in prison in Manitoba and women artists in Winnipeg. It developed into an organization where women in conflict with the law collaborated on artwork in a wide range of media, including photography, video, performances and urban interventions. This thesis investigates Crossing Communities as a form of new genre public art, and places it in context with other socially engaged art practices that emerged in the 1990s. Like many new genre public art projects, Crossing Communities grew out of feminist activism, community organizing, and a concern with site-specificity. It also exemplifies certain problematic aspects of new genre public art, including the formation of hierarchies between artists and non-artists, and the complicated negotiations that revolve around individual and collective authorship. These issues are examined in depth in this thesis, and are illuminated by interviews with participants, comparisons with other artwork, and a review of relevant literature. Social engagement has become a common theme in contemporary art, with relational aesthetics gaining particular prominence during the past decade. Much of this work hints at the possibility of social change, but remains tied to the notion of art as a sphere separate from society. In contrast, Crossing Communities stretches the boundaries between art and activism and opens up new ways of thinking about community, conflict and difference in Winnipeg’s public spaces. 2012-09-15 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/974784/1/Brynjolson_MA_F2012.pdf Brynjolson, Noni <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Brynjolson=3ANoni=3A=3A.html> (2012) Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg. Masters thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/974784/
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description Since the late 1990s, the Crossing Communities Art Project in Winnipeg, Canada has created community-based art centred around collaboration and activism. The project began with exchanges of artwork between women in prison in Manitoba and women artists in Winnipeg. It developed into an organization where women in conflict with the law collaborated on artwork in a wide range of media, including photography, video, performances and urban interventions. This thesis investigates Crossing Communities as a form of new genre public art, and places it in context with other socially engaged art practices that emerged in the 1990s. Like many new genre public art projects, Crossing Communities grew out of feminist activism, community organizing, and a concern with site-specificity. It also exemplifies certain problematic aspects of new genre public art, including the formation of hierarchies between artists and non-artists, and the complicated negotiations that revolve around individual and collective authorship. These issues are examined in depth in this thesis, and are illuminated by interviews with participants, comparisons with other artwork, and a review of relevant literature. Social engagement has become a common theme in contemporary art, with relational aesthetics gaining particular prominence during the past decade. Much of this work hints at the possibility of social change, but remains tied to the notion of art as a sphere separate from society. In contrast, Crossing Communities stretches the boundaries between art and activism and opens up new ways of thinking about community, conflict and difference in Winnipeg’s public spaces.
author Brynjolson, Noni
spellingShingle Brynjolson, Noni
Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg
author_facet Brynjolson, Noni
author_sort Brynjolson, Noni
title Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg
title_short Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg
title_full Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg
title_fullStr Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg
title_full_unstemmed Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg
title_sort community, conflict, difference: new genre public art in winnipeg
publishDate 2012
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/974784/1/Brynjolson_MA_F2012.pdf
Brynjolson, Noni <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Brynjolson=3ANoni=3A=3A.html> (2012) Community, Conflict, Difference: New Genre Public Art in Winnipeg. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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