
Tate Encounters: Britishness and Visual Culture
Research in Process
Duveen Studio, Tate Britain
Friday 20 February - Sunday 22 March
The objectives of this month long research programme are framed by four related areas of interest: education practice within the museum; the status of digital media in museum practice and culture; the racialisation of cultural policy and the role of museums in social regeneration; and narratives of British visual culture through curatorship.
Each session in the programme is recorded and available on http://process.tateencounters.org
Tate Encounters: Britishness and Visual Culture
Research in Process
Duveen Studio
Friday 20 February - Sunday 22 March
What does the Britain in Tate Britain mean to you? What is your encounter with Tate Britain and how would you describe it? Whose and what history and culture is represented by the National Collection of British Art? How do you relate to discussions around national culture and identity? ‘Tate Encounters: Britishness and Visual Culture’, a three year major research project, has been investigating these issues with students from London South Bank University for the last eighteen months.
The project now invites members of the public along with artists, academics, curators, policy makers and Tate staff to discuss these and other questions from their own personal and professional perspectives. In addition to these live research encounters, there will also be programmed screenings of films and interviews made during the course of the project.
The overall aim of the programme is to extend the range of people contributing to the research project and to establish the beginnings of a public dialogue and debate about the research questions and emergent findings. The programme will also mark the conclusion of the project’s fieldwork period.
The objectives of this month long research programme are framed by four related areas of interest: education practice within the museum; the status of digital media in museum practice and culture; the racialisation of cultural policy and the role of museums in social regeneration; and narratives of British visual culture through curatorship.
Each session in the programmes are available on http://process.tateencounters.org
http://process.tateencounters.org
Keywords
Languages:
English Arts & Cultural categories:
arts in a social context Tagged as:
art, britishness, diaspora, identities, museums, new media, tate, visual culture
LabforCulture is a partner initiative of the European Cultural Foundation. LabforCulture is grateful for the support provided by its funders.