File
NAVIGATING THIS CRAZY WORLD: Making Art Helps.
Digital Document
Content type |
Content type
|
---|---|
Collection(s) | |
Resource Type |
Resource Type
|
Genre |
Genre
|
Origin Information |
|
---|
Persons |
Author (aut): Smith, Karylin
Thesis advisor (ths): Day Fraser, Hélène
|
---|---|
Organizations |
Degree granting institution (dgg): Emily Carr University of Art and Design. Graduate Studies
|
Description / Synopsis |
Description / Synopsis
In this thesis, I discuss feminist acts of resistance and the politics of location, relating this to my own artwork and to that of other performance artists. Taking this as a point of departure, I further position my creative practice in relation to other artists who explore identity and self-imaging and who deploy strategies such as camouflage to discuss aspects of the human condition. The artwork leads to a tangible personal transformation in the final performance at the end of the program. Nomadic thought helps to situate the final piece on a trajectory that makes nomadic acts of counter-actualization a viable path forward as a feminist artist. In the following pages, using an autoethnographic approach, I share personal stories that relate to the artwork, weaving together events and situations that took place over a lifetime and synthesized into my current art practice. As an interdisciplinary performance artist, I create wearable, performative art for the camera. I applied for the Master’s program at Emily Carr to step fully into live performance. I began the Master’s in June 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic had begun, making a live audience impossible - and would not become possible - until the end of the program two years later. Being ‘performative’ - sewing wearable art and documenting it on film and video - was my way of adapting to the pandemic restrictions and was a new direction in my practice. In addition to performance/performative art, I write and perform original music, paint, and create video, conceptual and installation art. I will focus this writing on the art that was made during my time at Emily Carr, where I performed for the camera and was eventually able to perform for a live audience at the final grad show in July 2022. This thesis will also discuss the use of humour in feminist art. Humour is often present in my art, but I employ absurdity when levity isn’t possible. By employing absurdity, for example making a beautiful dress with huge 25 foot long sleeves, a sense of humour is evident even if the work isn’t funny. Hence: absurdity strives to reach through this serious moment in time as a reminder that one day, we can laugh about this too. I will position the ‘funniest’ art I have made with other feminist artists who use humour in their work. |
---|---|
Language |
Language
|
Degree Name |
Degree Name
|
---|---|
Degree Level |
Degree Level
|
Department |
Department
|
Institution |
Institution
|
Extent |
Extent
70 p.
|
---|---|
Physical Form |
Physical Form
|
Physical Description Note |
Physical Description Note
PRE-PUBLICATION
|
DOI |
DOI
10.35010/ecuad:18740
|
---|---|
Handle |
Handle
Handle placeholder
|
Use and Reproduction |
Use and Reproduction
This thesis is available to view and copy for research and educational purposes only, provided that it is not altered in any way and is properly acknowledged, including citing the author(s), title and full bibliographic details.
|
---|---|
Rights Statement |
Rights Statement
|
Use License |
Keywords |
Keywords
Intuitive process
Feminist
Nomadic
Wearable
#MeToo
The Duotard
Loneliness
Performative
Performance art
|
---|---|
Subject Topic |
Subject Topic
|
ecuad_18740.pdf30.36 MB
1449-Extracted Text.txt102.84 KB
Cite this
Language |
English
|
---|---|
Name |
NAVIGATING THIS CRAZY WORLD: Making Art Helps.
|
Authored on |
|
MIME type |
application/pdf
|
File size |
31830186
|
Media Use |