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Articles

BEAR: active listening, art pedagogy and the safeguarding of difference as a way of working with diversity

Pages 23-37 | Published online: 19 Mar 2020
 

ABSTRACT

BEAR (Base for Experiment, Art and, Research) is a Bachelor of Fine Arts programme established in 2013 and housed in ArtEZ University of the Arts, Arnhem. In the Netherlands, the programme distinguishes itself, amongst other features, for its commitment to the Socratic method that underlines BEAR’s pedagogical vision. In this paper, I propose how certain characteristics of the Socratic method highlight blind spots and challenge normalised values in aspects of art pedagogy, the contemporary field of art, and by extension, broader societal attitudes. In particular, this paper argues that active listening, a key feature of the particular strand of Socratic method that we practise at BEAR, undermines the continued emphasis on individual creativity, and offers in its place a relational structure of collective participation in artistic practice and knowledge production. Moreover, I propose that active listening can be the site in which diversity contributes to what is being shared and produced in a learning context, creating a space for different positions, traditions and embodied knowledge to emerge and enrich the curricula of art pedagogy in specific contexts.

Notes on contributor

Anik Fournier teaches contemporary art theory at Base for Experiment Art and Research at ArtEZ, in Arnhem, and is in charge of the archive at If I Can’t Dance I Don’t Want To Be Part of Your Revolution, in Amsterdam. She studied Art History at the University of McGill and Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV), and she holds a Phd from the Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis. Dedicated to collective strategies and horizontal structures, she has worked in several curatorial collectives. Her current body of research and writing is dedicated to listening practices in contemporary art and art pedagogy, dialogues between historical and new materialisms, and questions related to the documentation and archiving of performance art.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1 The BA at BEAR is a four-year programme. For more information about the programme, see: http://bear.artez.nl/.

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