A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive

Education and Learning at Tate has flourished in the past fifty years, from being a small and supplementary function to the usual workings of the gallery in 1968, to currently being placed at the centre of the institution’s function. Artist-educators have worked with education and learning programme...

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Main Author: Ghanchi-Goemans, Ayesha
Published: Goldsmiths College (University of London) 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.702374
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7023742018-07-18T03:13:53ZA critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archiveGhanchi-Goemans, Ayesha2016Education and Learning at Tate has flourished in the past fifty years, from being a small and supplementary function to the usual workings of the gallery in 1968, to currently being placed at the centre of the institution’s function. Artist-educators have worked with education and learning programmes throughout this 47 year history and have been instrumental in developing pedagogies throughout this period. This thesis examines how artists have engaged with learning programmes at Tate from 1968-2015. For this, I have researched the archive at Tate Britain to find examples of education practices and have analysed the varying pedagogical purposes and philosophies developed by the department since 1968. From this research, I have identified that the pedagogical philosophies developed by artist-educators were heavily influenced by the head of the department. I therefore decided to split the research into the five configurations of the departmental structure from 1968 to 2015. I focused on one case study from each phase of the department’s history and interviewed its associated artist-educator and strategist. From this research I found that pedagogical approaches were influenced by concurrent trends in art practices and discourses around art and gallery education. Furthermore, I discovered education programmes throughout this history related to an evolving concept of encouraging ‘agency’ in the gallery. I have grounded these case studies in the context of a critical pedagogic analyses, paying attention to how pedagogy is developed in relations to notions of agency. I conclude with a discussion examining the intersection of department policy, changing notions of agency and the pedagogical identities of the learner and artist.370.71Goldsmiths College (University of London)10.25602/GOLD.00019688http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.702374http://research.gold.ac.uk/19688/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 370.71
spellingShingle 370.71
Ghanchi-Goemans, Ayesha
A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
description Education and Learning at Tate has flourished in the past fifty years, from being a small and supplementary function to the usual workings of the gallery in 1968, to currently being placed at the centre of the institution’s function. Artist-educators have worked with education and learning programmes throughout this 47 year history and have been instrumental in developing pedagogies throughout this period. This thesis examines how artists have engaged with learning programmes at Tate from 1968-2015. For this, I have researched the archive at Tate Britain to find examples of education practices and have analysed the varying pedagogical purposes and philosophies developed by the department since 1968. From this research, I have identified that the pedagogical philosophies developed by artist-educators were heavily influenced by the head of the department. I therefore decided to split the research into the five configurations of the departmental structure from 1968 to 2015. I focused on one case study from each phase of the department’s history and interviewed its associated artist-educator and strategist. From this research I found that pedagogical approaches were influenced by concurrent trends in art practices and discourses around art and gallery education. Furthermore, I discovered education programmes throughout this history related to an evolving concept of encouraging ‘agency’ in the gallery. I have grounded these case studies in the context of a critical pedagogic analyses, paying attention to how pedagogy is developed in relations to notions of agency. I conclude with a discussion examining the intersection of department policy, changing notions of agency and the pedagogical identities of the learner and artist.
author Ghanchi-Goemans, Ayesha
author_facet Ghanchi-Goemans, Ayesha
author_sort Ghanchi-Goemans, Ayesha
title A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
title_short A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
title_full A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
title_fullStr A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
title_full_unstemmed A critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at Tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
title_sort critical analysis of artists' engagement with education programmes at tate, from 1968-2015, as drawn from the archive
publisher Goldsmiths College (University of London)
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.702374
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