I added some new text to the 'Disability Arts' page on Wikipedia, link below:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disability_Art
Find below the sections I added that are highlighted in orange.
I really wanted to fill out the resources for researchers here, such as history of 'disability art' in the USA, names of leading scholars, relevant or useful websites, and the contestation around the concept itself as it continues to evolve. My contribution is just a beginning, and while I'm pleased with it, we'll see what Wikipedia says about it. It fills out another Wikipedia page, 'Disability in the Arts' quite nicely I think.
I ran into great technical difficulty with making my citations (and consequently all other citations) appear on the page, so I'll need extra help with this.
Thanks,
Amanda
I really wanted to fill out the resources for researchers here, such as history of 'disability art' in the USA, names of leading scholars, relevant or useful websites, and the contestation around the concept itself as it continues to evolve. My contribution is just a beginning, and while I'm pleased with it, we'll see what Wikipedia says about it. It fills out another Wikipedia page, 'Disability in the Arts' quite nicely I think.
I ran into great technical difficulty with making my citations (and consequently all other citations) appear on the page, so I'll need extra help with this.
Thanks,
Amanda
Disability Art
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Disability Art or Disability Arts is any art, theatre, fine arts, film, writing, music that takes disability as its theme or whose context could be considered to relate to disability.[1]
Meaning
Disability Arts is an area of art where the context of the art takes on disability as its theme. Disability Art is about exploring the conceptual ideas and physical realities of what is to be disabled or concepts relating to the word.
[edit]Context
Disability Arts is different from the Disability in the arts which refers more to the active participation or representation of disabled people in the arts rather than the context of the work being about disability. Disability Arts does not require the maker of the art to be disabled (see Disability Arts in the Disability Arts Movement for the exception) nor does art made by a disabled person automatically become disability art just because it was a disabled person that made it.
An example of Disability Art by a non-disabled person: Alison Lapper Pregnant, 2005, Marc Quinn[2] would be considered Disability Arts[3] because of its context as he reveals the concept of the work was to make "the ultimate statement about disability"[4]
An example of Disability Art by a disabled person: effective, defective, creative, 2000, Yinka Shonibare, shows photos of foetuses from women deemed to be at risk of delivering a defective baby,[5] therefore looking at the relationship of defectiveness and disability.
An example of art made by a disabled person that is not Disability Art: Dorothea, 1995, Chuck Close; relates to his "strict adherence to the self-imposed rules that have guided his art" and "formal analysis and methodological reconfiguration of the human face" [6] therefore conceptually has nothing to do with disability therefore is not Disability Arts.
As the examples show it is the concept of the artwork that is important not who made it.
[edit]Canon of Disability Art
- Alison Lapper Pregnant, 2005, Marc Quinn
- effective, defective, creative, 2000, Yinka Shonibare
- The broken column, 1944, Frida Kahlo
[edit]Context of Disability Arts in the Disability Arts Movement
Disability Arts is a concept which was developed out of the Disability Arts Movement.[7] In the disability arts movement Disability Arts stood for 'art made by disabled people which reflects the experience of disability.'[8] To be making Disability Arts in the Disability Arts Movement it is conditional on being a disabled person.
[edit]Development of the Concept of Disability Arts in Britain
The development of disability arts began in the 1970s / 80s as a result of the new political activism of the disabled peoples' movement.[7] The exact date the term came into use is currently unverified, although the first use of the term in the Disability Arts Chronology is 1986[9] (please note it is not contextualised in this reference). During this period the term Disability Arts in the Disability Arts Movement has been retrospectively agreed to mean 'art made by disabled people which reflects the experience of disability'[10]
As the movement and term developed, the Disability Arts Movement began to expand from what mainly started out as disabled people's cabaret to all art forms. Disability Arts Movement began to grow year on year and was at its height during the late 1990s.[9] Key exhibitions which looked at Disability Arts happened like Barriers, which was an exhibition considering physical, sensory and intellectual limitation and its effect on personal art practice. (8 Feb - 16 Mar 2007: Aspex Gallery, Portsmouth)[9] and the creation of the Disability Film Festival in London in 1999,[11] – both of which looked at work by disabled people as well as Disability Arts.
Disabled people's politics in Britain was changed by the Disability Discrimination Act, which was first brought in 1995.[12] In the subsequent years as people adapted to the protection of legislation a new wave of politics entered in the Disability Arts Movement. In 2004 the revised Disability Discrimination Act, signified the end of the domination of art based on discrimination politics in the Disability Arts Movement. A new generation of disabled people where less political[7] and carried an agenda of integration. This combined with the Carers Movement highlighted a change in attitude that acknowledged the work of the Disability Arts Movement to claim the term Disability Arts but showed a movement away from the idea that only disabled people could make Disability Arts. It began to be recognised that disability art needs to be "supported by society itself and not just by disabled people".[13]
In 2007 London Disability Arts Forum held a debate at Tate Modern on the motion 'Should disability and Deaf art be dead and buried in the 21st Century?' produced in response to arts cuts from the Arts Council faced by disabled-led arts organisations at the time. This debate has become significant in the way Melvin Bragg's article highlighted how Disability Arts like Marc Quinn's sculpture Alison Lapper Pregnant raise the profile of disability in the arts.[3] This debate and subsequent article set in motion a change for many people to recognise that the new generation of disabled people and artists did not feel it necessary to control the term disability arts but to open it out for a wider view on disability .
Very few people are aware of disability as a topic of art,[14] mainly due to the lack of accessible and cohesive academic work and publications around the subjects of Disability Arts and the Disability Arts Movement. It has yet to enter into art curriculum or establish itself as a strongly recognised concept in the arts – so development of the subject needs much more work for it to justify its place as a relevant term long term in the arts. On the other hand, in some instances, artists, curators or theorists who identify as disabled and make, curate or write about disability in their creative practices feel ambivalent about this category.
In some circles Disability Arts is still promoted as "art made by disabled people that reflects the experience of disability." This is most notably the line taken by NDACA Co-op,[15] who is predominantly made up of members who were key to the development of the Disability Arts Movement. Although it is more commonly accepted that non-disabled people can make valid disability arts, even by people that strongly align themselves with the Disability Arts Movement.[16]
Development of the Concept of Disability Arts in USA
VSA, (previously Very Special Arts), the international organization on arts and disability in the USA, was founded more than 35 years ago by Ambassador Jean Kennedy Smith to provide arts and education opportunities for people with disabilities and increase access to the arts for all. With 52 international affiliates and a network of nationwide affiliates, VSA is providing arts and education programming for youth and adults with disabilities around the world.[17]
The development of disability arts in the USA is also tied to several non-profit organizations such as Creative Growth in Oakland, CA that serves adult artists with developmental, mental and physical disabilities, providing a professional studio environment for artistic development, gallery exhibition and representation and a social atmosphere among peers. [18]Organizations with similar mandates in the Bay Area include Creativity Explored in San Francisco, and NIAD Art Center in Richmond (National Institute of Art & Disabilities).
Currently, the leading scholars in disability arts in the USA include Michael Davidson, Lennard Davis, Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Ann Fox, Joseph Grigely, Georgina Kleege, Petra Kuppers, Simi Linton, Ann Millett-Gallant, David. T Mitchell, Carrie Sandahl, Susan Schweik, Tobin Siebers and Sharon L. Snyder, who write about a range of topics within disability arts, such as performance, literature, aesthetics, visual art, music, art history, theatre, dance and more.
Bodies of Work: Network of Disability Arts & Culture (including artists and organizations) is one of the leading disability arts festivals occurring in Chicago every few years, whose art illuminates the disability experience. From the local to the international, “bodies of work” explores innovative forms of artistic expression, derived from unique bodies and minds, that explore the disability experience, advance the rights of disabled people, and widen society's under-standing of what it means to be human.[19]
Artists who identify as disabled and make work about disability are growing in numbers, as are curators who identify as disabled and curate exhibitions on disability. Katherine Ott is a Curator at the National Museum of American History at the Smithsonian Institute who has curated a number of exhibits on the history of the body, disability, ethnic and folk medicine, integrative and alternative medicine, ophthalmology, plastic surgery and dermatology, medical technology, prosthetics and rehabilitation, sexuality, visual and material culture and other ephemera. [20]
External links
- http://www.shapearts.org.uk
- http://www.disabilityartsonline.org.uk
- http://www.dacymru.com/
- http://www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies/archiveuk/
- http://www.bodiesofworkchicago.org/
- http://exhibits.haverford.edu/whatcanabodydo/
- http://www.kennedy-center.org/education/vsa/
- http://www.creativityexplored.org/
- http://creativegrowth.org/category/news/
- http://niadart.org/
- http://www.sinsinvalid.org/
- http://axisdance.org/
- http://www.lpaonline.org/dwarf-artist-coalition
- http://www.americanhistory.si.edu/disabilityrights/welcome.html
- http://amhistory.si.edu/polio/
- http://americanhistory.si.edu/exhibitions/hiv-and-aids-thirty-years-ago
- http://www.blindatthemuseum.com/
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