TY - JOUR
T1 - Inherently interdisciplinary
T2 - Four perspectives on practice-based research
AU - Cazeaux, Clive
PY - 2008/4/1
Y1 - 2008/4/1
N2 - I review four book-length studies of practice-based research: Carter (2004); Gray and Malins (2004); Hannula, Suoranta and Vadén (2005); and Sullivan (2005). I outline the positions adopted by each of the books on the nature and scope of practice-based research and assess the extent to which they present clear, coherent and applicable accounts. A thesis present in all four books, I argue, is that art is uniquely placed to generate research on account of its being inherently interdisciplinary, that is to say, art in and of itself involves combining different subjects and methods. However, while all four books set out perspectives and methods relevant to this view, none provides a fully worked-out theory. Carter (2004) and Sullivan (2005) offer the most explicit and sustained studies of interdisciplinarity, but omit to say precisely how it generates knowledge. Interdisciplinarity is hinted at by Hannula, Suoranta and Vadén (2005) and by Gray and Malins (2004) as being crucial to artistic research, but the idea is not pursued. I demonstrate briefly how Kant's theory of knowledge can go some way towards filling the gap left by the four books in the interdisciplinary debate. On his view, concepts determine the content of experience, and the interdisciplinary tension between concepts creates occasions for reality to surprise us and new observations to be made.
AB - I review four book-length studies of practice-based research: Carter (2004); Gray and Malins (2004); Hannula, Suoranta and Vadén (2005); and Sullivan (2005). I outline the positions adopted by each of the books on the nature and scope of practice-based research and assess the extent to which they present clear, coherent and applicable accounts. A thesis present in all four books, I argue, is that art is uniquely placed to generate research on account of its being inherently interdisciplinary, that is to say, art in and of itself involves combining different subjects and methods. However, while all four books set out perspectives and methods relevant to this view, none provides a fully worked-out theory. Carter (2004) and Sullivan (2005) offer the most explicit and sustained studies of interdisciplinarity, but omit to say precisely how it generates knowledge. Interdisciplinarity is hinted at by Hannula, Suoranta and Vadén (2005) and by Gray and Malins (2004) as being crucial to artistic research, but the idea is not pursued. I demonstrate briefly how Kant's theory of knowledge can go some way towards filling the gap left by the four books in the interdisciplinary debate. On his view, concepts determine the content of experience, and the interdisciplinary tension between concepts creates occasions for reality to surprise us and new observations to be made.
KW - Interdisciplinarity
KW - Knowledge
KW - Practice
KW - Research
KW - Transcognition
KW - Verbalization
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77950746172&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1386/jvap.7.2.107_1
DO - 10.1386/jvap.7.2.107_1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77950746172
SN - 1470-2029
VL - 7
SP - 107
EP - 132
JO - Journal of Visual Art Practice
JF - Journal of Visual Art Practice
IS - 2
ER -