Title: The Arts as a mode of knowing
1The Arts as a mode of knowing
Dr. Elizabeth Grierson
2- The paper engages with UNESCOs defining notion
that the arts shape the world through working
towards the goal of living harmoniously
(Joubert, 2003 3)
3UNESCO defines three focus points
- the importance of recognising
- the existence of diverse view points and cultures
- each individuals ability to influence his or her
future - the necessity to invite active professionals into
schools to complement theory with practice
4The 1990s have been marked by very considerable
and rapid change as national cultures have been
drawn into new global inter-connections. Thee re
new challenges, new risks, new uncertainties and
new struggles.
- Summary statement for Mobilising the Power of
Culture, the fourth Thematic Debate at Higher
Education in the Twenty First Century, Vision and
Action, the World Conference on Higher Education,
UNESCO, Paris, 5-9 October 1998.
5At a time of unprecedented inter-connections
between cultures (9) UNESCO is constructing a
pro-active response to the extraordinary
challenges of globalisation, acknowledging that
in a time of highly accelerated change, the
maintenance of meaningful connections to
inherited cultures has also become even more
problematic (9)
6Two of UNESCOs primary policy objectives in the
1998 Action Plan are
- to promote new links between culture and the
education system so as to ensure full recognition
of culture and the arts as a fundamental
dimension of education for all, develop artistic
education and stimulate creativity in education
programmes at all levels and
- promote education conducive to the mastery and
creative use of new information technologies
among younger generations as users and producers
of messages and content, and give priority to
education in civic values.
7Five questions posed by the 1998 World Conference
have a foundational relevance at this present
UNESCO Meeting on Arts Education in Fiji
(November, 2002).
They are (1998a10)
- How well do educational systems inform young
people about other cultures - those of the past
as well as those different from our own? - The arts are taught with too much emphasis on
technique how can arts education be broadened to
include various contexts in which art forms
originated and flourished? - How can meaningful intercultural education be
made part of university education in the context
of todays globalized information flows and
cyberspace?
8- What are the kinds of research or other academic
activity that universities can undertake to fill
these lacunae?
- Can some methods be identified to enable
universities to work more closely with museums
and antiquities departments to build better
awareness and understanding of cultural heritage?
9- Creative Industries is a category named by New
Zealand Prime Minister in February 2002 as one of
three target areas for enterprise and growth in
the New Zealand economy. The Honourable Helen
Clarks Statement to Parliament, later published
on her website (2002), defined these industries
as a diverse sector, which includes film and
television, visual arts, design, music, fashion,
and multimedia art. (Grierson, 2002)
10A timely word of caution is noted in the UNESCO
Final Report (1998b 57)
- While recognising that globalisation and
internationalisation are irreversible trends,
support for these concepts should not lead to
dominance or new forms of imperialism by major
cultures and value systems from outside the
region rather, it is of vital importance that
every effort should be taken to protect and
promote the strengths of local cultures and
intellectual and scholarly traditions.
11Professionals Role - Complementing Theory with
Practice
- The necessity to invite active professionals
into schools to complement theory with practice
is UNESCOs third focus point to address
(Joubert, 20023). - The General Overview - Arts Education in the
Pacific Region (Joubert, 2002), UNESCOs
position on arts education is to travel beyond
arts esoteric rise from practice - from the
discipline of tools and materials, form and
function and to define the world of arts practice
as a vehicle for life, promise and
achievement.Arts practices have the capacity
to stimulate societal partnerships and solidarity
where its citizens cooperate in an atmosphere of
peace and well-being (20023).
12- The publication from which this case study is
taken is Communities Across Borders New
immigrants and transnational cultures(Kennedy
Roudometof, 2002), -
- from the chapter Navigations Visual Identities
and the Pacific Cultural Subject (Grierson,
2002 156-157)
13 Concluding comments
- contextual approaches to the arts in education
are called for in order to encourage discussion
and dialogue across the designed and pre-packaged
borders of consumer cultureby this means the
arts will move beyond designing culture to
activate new modes of thought and practice while
calling into present significance the defining
cultural heritages of the past that reinforce
local strengths in a globalised world.
14The fundamental proposal I hope this paper leaves
with you is that attention to cultural context
is vital if the arts are to proclaim a continuing
emergence for the local individual and
community in a global world order.
- Teaching the arts in practice through a
contextual investigation of social and cultural
theories and histories will enhance the arts as a
living knowledge for today, a practice which
defines who we are, what we are, why we are, and
where we are. Furthermore by engaging with where
we have been the arts can aid our understanding
of where we are going.
15- I advocate for the arts to be a compulsory part
of every childs educational experience - in
every Pacific location - so that every child is
given the opportunity to be an active part of
their own, their communitys and their regions
future.
16- With a cultural context approach the arts- go
beyond the value-added mentality of
convenient cultural packaging- go beyond
instrumentalised solutions to globally designed
enterprise culture- by this validation lead the
way in opening the political economy of cultural
production to critique and interrogation-
through this knowledge individuals and nations
are then strengthened and stabilised.
17- In order to achieve this aim, presently
encapsulated in the UNESCO framework for the
process of learning in art education, learning to
know, learning to do, learning to live together,
and learning to be, I maintain that it is crucial
that education policy and practice focuses time,
energy, resources and attention on the ethical
values of the arts for social living.
18- To invigorate the arts as potent modes of
knowing, as stated in Global Sites (Grierson
2000 546), - it is through the arts that we
- learn to know how to know
- learn to do through knowing why we do
- learn to live together through knowing why we
live apart and finally learn to be through
knowing what being might become.