who`s who in research visuAl Arts
Transcription
who`s who in research visuAl Arts
who’s who in research visual arts Who’s Who in Research visual arts Proof please do not circulate Who’s Who in Research visual arts intellect Bristol, UK / Chicago, USA First published in the UK in 2011 by Intellect, The Mill, Parnall Road, Fishponds, Bristol, BS16 3JG, UK First published in the USA in 2011 by Intellect, The University of Chicago Press, 1427 E. 60th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA Copyright © 2011 Intellect Ltd All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 9781841504957 Rubedo › Round table discussion: The affects of the abstract image in film and video art, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 79-87. Keywords Beatriz Acevedo Anglia Ruskin University, Lord Ashcroft Building, East Road, Cambridge, Bedfordshire, CB1 8PT, United Kingdom Keywords art, aesthetics, organizational studies Beatriz Acevedo is a lecturer in sustainable management at Lord Ashcroft International Business School at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Her research interests concern the intersection between art, aesthetics and organizational studies. She also utilizes ‘art’ as a way of understanding complex social issues, such as the case of violence, discrimination, leadership, sustainability and conflict. › Memories of Violencia in the work of the Colombian artist Doris Salcedo: A subjective view, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 153-170. Sophia Krzys Acord University of Florida, Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere, 200 Walker Hall, PO Box 118030, Gainesville, Florida, 32611, United States of America Keywords embodied cognition, habitus, music, social interaction, tacit knowledge, humanities, knowledge production, arts, interdisciplinarity Sophia Krzys Acord has arrived at sociology from a background in theatrical design, musical performance and arts education. Her past research includes an ethnography of Parisian artist-squats and the study of artistic censorship in the United States and the United Kingdom. She received a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Exeter, where her dissertation on exhibition-making practices among curators of contemporary art was awarded an 'Honorable Mention' by the American Sociological Association's annual dissertation prize committee in 2010. Her current work interrogates knowledge production, interdisciplinary collaboration and the impact of digital technologies in the humanities disciplines. › Thinking with art: from situated knowledge to experiential knowing, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 125-140. Clive Adams Clive Adams is Director of the Centre for Contemporary Art and the Natural World. He is a curator with a particular interest in the work of artists which engages with nature. He started his career at the Arnolfini, Bristol in the 1970s, and his exhibitions have covered a period from the eighteenth century to the present day. The most recent are 'The Impossible View?' at The Lowry (winner of the Museums and Heritage Award for the best UK temporary exhibition of 2003) and 'The Art of White' at the Lowry until 17 April 2006. Keywords curating, nature › 'Nature and I are Two', Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.1, 56-. Joe Adu- Agyem Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Department of General Art Studies (Art Education), Faculty of Fine Art, College of Art and Social Sciences, University Post Office Box 50, Kumasi, KNUST, Ghana Keywords child art, Ghana, creativity, aesthetics, education Joe Adu-Agyem is Head of Department and Senior Lecturer in the Department of General Art Studies (Art Education), the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST). He holds a Ph.D (Documentation), a Masters degree and a postgraduate diploma in Art Education as well as a BA (Art) degree in Sculpture, all from KNUST. He also has a three-year diploma in Art Education (Cape Coast University) and a four-year teachers’ certificate A (Kumasi). His research interests include documentation, aesthetics and criticism, research methodology, educational administration/psychology, sculpture, secondary education and fashion design. › Enhancing children’s learning: the art perspective, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 143-155. Sean Aita Keywords theatre, acting, performance Sean Aita is a community theatre practitioner and academic. He is currently a senior lecturer in acting at the Arts University College at Bournemouth. He is the former head of education and community at the Royal Theatre in Northampton and the artistic director of Forest Forge Theatre Company, developing performance and participatory projects for and with rural communities. As director of Forest Forge, Sean’s work was shortlisted for the Stage Awards for Achievement in Regional Theatre in 2008. › An unobscured glow: Towards a definition of Rural Theatre, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.1, 55-63. Esra Akcan Esra Akcan is an assistant professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She received her architecture degree from Middle East Technical University and her Ph.D. and postdoctoral degrees from University of Illinois, Chicago Columbia University in New York. She has taught at Columbia University, Humboldt University, the New School, Pratt Institute and METU. Akcan has received awards and fellowships from the Institute for Advanced Studies in Berlin, the Clark Institute, the Graham Foundation, the Getty Research Institute, the Canadian Centre for Architecture, the Mellon Foundation, DAAD, Kinne, and KRESS/ARIT. She is the author of (Land)Fill Istanbul, Çeviride Modern Olan, Architecture in Translation (forthcoming) and Turkey: Modern Architectures in History (with Sibel Bozdoğan, forthcoming). Keywords › Book Reviews, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 151-168. Jamal Al-Qawasmi King Fahd University for Petroleum and Minerals, Department of Architecture, PO Box 312, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia Keywords e-studio, digital design, architectural design education, CAAD Jamal Al-Qawasmi obtained a B.Sc. in Architecture in 1987, M.Sc. in Architecture in 1993, and a Ph.D. in Architecture in 1999 from Texas A&M. Since 1993 he has taught architecture and design computing in several universities and is involved in research and consultation. His experience lies in several fields related to computer applications in architectural education and practice such as programming, drafting and 3D modelling, photo-based 3D modelling, rendering and animation, graphic design and image manipulation, panorama presentations, web development, e-learning, collaborative environments, virtual reality, stereo imaging and virtual reality. His interests include computermediated collaborative design, virtual design education and applications of virtual reality in architectural education. He has published numerous articles, is the founding Chair of the Arab Society for Computer Aided Architectural Design (ASCAAD) and has organized five international conferences in the field of computer and information technology applications in architectural design and education. › Digital media in architectural design education: reflections on the e-studio pedagogy, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.3, 205-. Giorgio Alberti Keywords Eros, HermAfrEros, myths and mythology, archetypes, Carl Gustav Jung After a Master’s degree in Civil Engineering and a Ph.D. in Informatics at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich (Dr. sc. techn. ETHZ) Giorgio Alberti has completed an MBA at the INSEAD in Fontainebleau. After different positions in Management of Multinational Industries and Consulting at international level he is now owner of the AGB Strategy & Management Consulting in MuraltoLocarno (Switzerland). › Amores-Eros and Low Power Society, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 75-78. Sandra Alexander American University in Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Road, Dubai, United Arab Erimates Keywords Paul Cézanne, phenomenology, sense perception, embodied experience Sandra Alexander (D.Phil, Oxford) is an independent scholar based in Oxford. In 2002, she successfully completed her thesis focusing on the themes of art, expression and historicity in the work of Merleau-Ponty. More recently, she has taught for Oxford Brookes University, acted as tutor for the Sarah Lawrence Programme based at Wadham College, Oxford. She currently works at the American University in Dubai. › Beyond 'Cézanne's Doubt', Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 97-110. Mel Alexenberg College of Judea and Samaria, 36 Lohamay Hageto Street, Petach Tikvah, 49651, Israel Keywords autoethnography, artographic enquiry, post-digital age realms of learning creativity, ancient schema, Kabbalah Mel Alexenberg is an artist, educator, writer, and blogger working at the interface between art, science, technology, and culture. His artworks can be seen at www.melalexenberg.com. They explore interrelationships between the post-digital age and Jewish consciousness, space-time systems and electronic technologies, participatory art and community values, high tech and high touch experiences, responsive art in cyberspace and real space, and blogart and wikiart. His artworks exploring digital technologies and global systems are in the collections of more than forty museums worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Jewish Museum in Prague, and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. › Autoethnographic identification of realms of learning for art education in a postdigital age, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 231246. › Ancient schema and technoetic creativity, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.1, 3-14. Dijana Alić University of New South Wales Keywords Dijana Alić holds a degree in Architecture from the University of Sarajevo and a Ph.D. from the University of New South Wales (UNSW). She is currently a senior lecturer in Design, History and Theory in the Faculty of the Built Environment, UNSW, Sydney, Australia. Her research interest focuses on the relationship between modernity and national expression in architecture, particularly in the context of post-World War II 'Eastern' Europe. Alić's work has been published in international journals such as the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Centropa, Journal of Central European Architecture and Related Arts and Open House International. Alić has participated in numerous national and international conferences. › Book Reviews, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 151-168. Giovanni Aloi Roehampton University, Department of Media, Culture & Language, Erasmus House, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PU, United Kingdom Keywords Vargas, Evaristti, Hirst, Abdessemed Giovanni Aloi lectures in History of Art and Media Studies at Roehampton University, Queen Mary University of London, The Open University and the Tate Galleries. In 2006, he founded Antennae, the Journal of Nature in Visual Culture of which he currently is Editor in Chief (www.antennae.org.uk). The journal combines a heightened level of academic scrutiny of animals in art, with a less formal and more experimental format designed to appeal to audiences of academics, artists and general public alike. Giovanni Aloi is currently researching the subject of ‘animal displays in contemporary art’ for his PhD at Goldsmiths, University of London. › The death of the animal, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.1, 59-68. Leila Amaral Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Post Graduation Program of Religious Studies, Rua Marechal Deodoro, 268, CEP 36013-000, Juiz de Fora, Brazil Leila Amaral has a Ph.D. in Anthropology and is a guest researcher at the Post-Graduation Program of Religious Studies of the Federal University ofJuiz de Fora, Brazil. › The festive character of cyber art, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.3, 255-265. Keywords anthropology, religion, technology Peter Amsel Keywords composition, mental illness, creativity, bipolar Peter Amsel is a composer and writer who divides his time between the call of the muse and facing the ongoing road to recovery from bipolar affective disorder, which he has been living with for over twenty years. Peter has sought new meaning in life through advocacy for patients' rights and through writing about issues pertaining to the mental health community. He is currently working on a book about mental health recovery, as well as a number of musical compositions. He is an active participant on Twitter where he can often be found as @CrazyComposer or, on a whimsical side, channeling his cat as @MyCatSeuss. He contributed a chapter in Voices of Experience on personal recovery, published by Wiley. › Creativity and bipolar disorder: Living with mental illness, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 215-221. Erica E. Ander Birkbeck College, University of London, Room G2, UCL Wolfson House, 4 Stephenson Way, London, NW1 2HE, United Kingdom Erica Ander is Research Assistant on the ‘Heritage in Hospitals’ programme at University College London and a heritage consultant specializing in visitor studies and audience development. Her research interests include qualitative methodologies to capture health and wellbeing outcomes in the museum sector. Keywords health, curating, hospital, therapy, heritage › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Peter Anders Keywords cyberspace, cybrids, mixed reality, architecture, augmented reality architecture Peter Anders is an architect, educator, and information design theorist. He has published widely on the architecture of cyberspace and is the author of Envisioning Cyberspace (McGraw Hill, 1998) which presents design principles for online spatial environments. Anders received his doctoral degree from the University of Plymouth Planetary Collegium (2004) and is currently the director of MindSpace.net, an architectural/design practice specializing in media/information environments. › Cybrid principles: guidelines for merging physical and cyberspaces, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.3, 133-146. › Designing mixed reality: perception, projects and practice, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 19-29. Åsa Andersson Leeds Metropolitan University, City Campus, Leeds, LS1 3HE, United Kingdom Åsa Andersson is an artist working predominantly in the area of lensbased media. She works across image-making, writing and art teaching. She holds a Ph.D. in Fine Art and Philosophy (1999, Staffordshire University) and has an interest in site-responsive art practices and multi-disciplinary creative approaches in relation to text, photography, film and print. She is based in Stockholm while an Associate Senior Keywords photography, art object, visual experience, aesthetic, understanding Lecturer in the Leeds School of Contemporary Art & Graphic Design at Leeds Metropolitan University. › Echoes of evocations: sites in transformation, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 125-134. Jorella Andrews University of London, Goldsmiths, Department of Visual Cultures, Lewisham Way, London, SE146NW, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary art, ethical art, photography Jorella Andrews is head of the Visual Cultures department at Goldsmiths, University of London. She is also on the editorial board of Third Text, an academic journal that provides critical perspectives on contemporary art and culture. Her research has a particular emphasis on phenomenological explorations of art, visuality and the ethical. A forthcoming book on this topic, Showing Off: A Philosophy of Image, is forthcoming from I. B. Tauris. › The photographic stare, Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 41-56. Peder Anker New York University, Gallatin School of Individualized Study, 1 Washington Place, Room 425, New York, NY 10003, United States of America Keywords Simon Starling, eco-art, ecology, environmentalism Peder Anker is associate professor at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study and the Environmental Studies Program at New York University. His works include Imperial Ecology: Environmental Order in the British Empire, 1895-1945 (2001) and From Bauhaus to Eco-House: A History of Ecological Design, (2010). › Seeing Pink: The Eco-Art of Simon Starling, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.1, 3-9. Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Kathrine Elizabeth Anker is a Cultural theorist, writer and researcher Planetary Collegium, Center of Advanced Inquiry in the Interactive Arts, Department of Art, Skodsborgvej 324, st.th, 2850 Nærum, 2850, Denmark Keywords Technoetic Arts, semiotics, consciousness, communication, evolution, subjectivity, cognition, sensation, meaning making, philosophy, based in Copenhagen. She is a Ph.D. candidate at the Planetary Collegium, Center of Advanced Inquiry into the Interactive Arts, University of Plymouth. Her current project has the title: 'Subject and Aesthetic Interface - an inquiry into transformed subjectivities'. It places a central emphasis on subjectivity studies, and draws upon the field of art, science and technology from a perspective of Philosophy of Science and a strong, transdisciplinary approach. › Exploring the intelligent art installation as a space for expansion of the conscious mind, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.3, transdisciplinarity 251-258. › The sense of being moved, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 167-172. Magouliotis Apostolos University of Thessaly, Early Childhood Education Department, Argonafton & Filellinon, 38221, Volos, Greece Keywords Greece, preschool children, secondary colours, educational intervention Magouliotis Apostolos is a graduate of Athens School of Fine Arts and completed his Ph.D. thesis at the University of Athens, Greece. He has taught art in Greek primary and secondary schools and lectured in the Department of Preschool Education at the University of Ioannina, Greece. For the last ten years he has been an assistant professor in the Department of Preschool Education at the University of Thessaly, where he teaches Artistic Applications. His research papers have been published in Greek and international journals and conference proceedings. He is the author of seven art education books and an art textbook for Greek primary schools for Years 5-6. › Creating orange purple and green: an experiment with preschool children in Greece, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 37-49. Sinem Arcak University of Minnesota Sinem Arcak is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Minnesota, completing a dissertation titled 'Gifts in Motion: Ottoman-Safavid Cultural Exchange, 1501-1639'. Keywords › CONFERENCE PRECIS, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 179-189. Rachel Armstrong The Barlett School of Architecture, Room 129c Wates House, 22 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0QB, United Kingdom Keywords sustainability, complexity, material computing, synthetic biology, architecture Rachel is a medical doctor with qualifications in general practice, a multimedia producer, and a science-fiction author and arts collaborator whose current research explores the possibilities of architectural design to create positive practices and mythologies about new technology. She is a Teaching Fellow at the Bartlett School of Architecture and a member of Professor Neil Spiller’s AVATAR Research Group. She recently received a Darwin Now Award from the British Council for collaborative field work on a green algae, called Bryopsis, with extraordinary powers of regeneration, and was one of the organizers of the recent Architecture & Complexity: Systems Architecture Workshop held at the Bartlett in February 2009. She has published extensively on posthuman evolution and alien phenomena, working at the intersection of art, science and technology. Her first science-fiction novel The Gray’s Anatomy was published in 2001 by Serpent’s Tail. › Living buildings: plectic systems architecture, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 79-94. › The nautilus – evolving architecture and city landscapes for future sustainable development, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 105-115. Roy Ascott Planetary Collegium, 64 Upper Cheltenham Place, Montpelier, Bristol, BS6 5HR, United Kingdom Keywords moistmedia, syncretic reality, telematics, technoetics Roy Ascott is an artist and theorist whose research is invested in cybernetics, technoetics, telematics, and syncretism. He is founding president of the Planetary Collegium, an international research platform for art, technology and consciousness research, based in Plymouth University with nodes in Milan and Zurich. He has held senior academic positions in San Francisco, Minneapolis, Vienna and Toronto, and is an Honorary Professor of Aalborg University Denmark, and Thames Valley University London. His international exhibitions include La Plissure du Texte , Paris 1983; Planetary Network, Venice Biennale, 1986; Aspects of Gaia, Ars Electronica 1989; Art-ID/CybID, Biennal do Mercosul, Brazil,1999; Moist Manifesto, gr2000az, Graz. 2000. His retrospective ‘The Syncretic Sense’ was exhibited at Plymouth Art Centre in 2009, and at the International Incheon Digital Art Festival in Korea, 2010, including a new production in Second Life of La Plissure du Texte. His theoretical work is widely published, translated › The syncretic imperative, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 109-114. › Introduction: Living Buildings: Plectic Systems Architecture, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 73-74. › Editorial, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 137-137. › LPDT2, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 81-100. Linda Ashton Keywords postcolonialism, postmodernism, teacher education, reflective practice Linda Ashton graduated from Townsville Teachers’ College in 1972. The arts have been the main integrating device for her personal and professional development and teaching across early childhood, primary, secondary and tertiary education contexts. She was a founding member of The N.Q. Ballet Company (precursor to Dance North) which provided a unique blend of skills and knowledge in the performing arts, costume and music. Career emphases: teaching in ECE, primary and education contexts, Arts curriculum development, integrated arts, professional development in the arts for school-based colleagues, researching drawing, teacher education in undergraduate ECE, primary and secondary coursework and collaborative public art projects. › The Other side of the easel: questioning art education through a postcolonial frame, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 243-259. Daniel Ashton Bath Spa University, Department of Film and Media Production, Newton Park Campus, Newton St Loe, Bath, BA2 9BN, United Kingdom Keywords media industries, creative labour, critical media practice Daniel Ashton is Senior Lecturer in Media Communications at Bath Spa University. His research interests include media industries and work, critical media literacy, and higher education pedagogy. He completed his doctorate (Lancaster University) on the UK creative industries economic vision and the development of students as ‘industry-ready talent’. He has recently published work on higher education and digital games industry intersections in Journal of Education and Work and Art, Design and Communication in Higher Education, creative economy policy in Journal of Cultural Economy, and media work and user-generated content in Convergence and Information Technology & People. › Productive passions and everyday pedagogies: Exploring the industry-ready agenda in higher education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 41-56. Paul Atkinson School of Humanities, Communications & Social Sciences, Monash University, Gippsland Campus, Churchill, VIC 3842, Australia Keywords graphic novels, metafiction, Paul Auster, Paul Karasik, David Mazzucchelli, adaptation Paul Atkinson lectures for the Communications and Writing programme at Monash University. His research is broadly informed by the work of the fin-de-siècle French philosopher Henri Bergson and his writings on movement and time. Published articles explore a range of topics including Bergson’s vitalism, comic books after 9/11, movement and recognition, time in superhero comics, affect theory and temporal aesthetics. He is currently working on a series of articles that explore the relationship between processual theories of time, aesthetics and narrative. › The graphic novel as metafiction, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 107-125. Fernando Leal Audirac Keywords future, origin, transvergence, encaustic, boundary Fernando Leal Audirac is a refined and skillful artist, who does not fear to measure himself with the most varied and ancient painterly techniques, in order to explore its secrets, revisited and upgraded within a contemporary and very intimate code of communication. Painter, designer, etcher, fresco-painter, sculptor, Leal Audirac moves along on an extremely personal path, that renders him immune from easy labeling. Leal Audirac has participated twice in the Venice Biennale, the first one in the Centennial in 1995 and has shown his work in galleries and museums in the US, Germany, Italy, Spain, France, Hungary, Rumania, Korea and South America. He has also participated as lecturer and academic tutor for several institutions in the Americas and in Europe. He has written numerous essays on art and literature and participated in several international symposiums regarding art, science and environment organized by the European Environmental Tribunal. www.leal-audirac.com › Origins of the Future: an artist's encaustic perspective, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 199-206. Noam Austerlitz Tel Aviv university, Architecture School, KKL street, Tivon, 36082, Israel Keywords emotions, ethnography, students' experience, design education, reflection, personal and professional development Noam Austerlitz currently holds a teaching position at the school of architecture, Tel-aviv University (Israel). He graduated from the Faculty of Architecture, Bezalel Academy of Arts, Jerusalem, in 1996 and since then he has served as a practicing architect. He has been the owner of a small practice since 1999, concentrating mainly on sustainable architecture and social aspects of design. Since 2005 he holds a Ph.D. degree granted by the Technion, I.I.T. In his academic research Noam is trying to merge his interests in education and architecture. He has been conducting research into design education and the role of emotional and social interactions in the design teaching and learning. His principal areas of research interest are: design theory, pedagogy and design education, creativity and innovative thinking, design psychology, emotion research, education philosophy and science philosophy. Noam is also a practicing architect and owns an architecture firm which focuses on 'green' architecture and sustainable design. › The internal point of view: studying design students' emotional experience in the studio via phenomenography and ethnography, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.3, 165-178. › Editorial for ADCHE special issue, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 139-144. › Reflections on emotional journeys: a new perspective for reading fashion students' PPD statements, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 209-219. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 221-226. Lucía Ayala Humboldt University of Berlin, Hermann von Helmholtz-Zentrum für Kulturtechnik, Unter den Linden 6, 10117, Berlin, Germany Keywords ubiquity, code, history of science, expanded body, virtual reality Lucía Ayala, art historian, finished her binational Ph.D. at the Humboldt University in Berlin (Germany) and Granada University (Spain) under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Horst Bredekamp and Prof. Dr. Ignacio Henares Cuéllar. From a methodological intersection between science and art, she has focused her work on the visualization of the plurality of worlds from the seventeenth century on. She is an associate of the research group Das Technische Bild/The Technical Image in the Hermann von Helmholtz-Zentrum für Kulturtechnik at the Humboldt University of Berlin. Her interests are concentrated on an art historical approach to science, astrophysics and contemporary (socalled) media art. › Surpassing human nature: Reinventions of and for the body as a consequence of astronomical experiments in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 101-113. Elif Ayiter Keywords groundcourse, virtual learning environment, virtual design/architecture, avatar, role play, Elif Ayiter, aka Alpha Auer, is a Designer and Researcher specializing in the development and implementation of hybrid educational methodologies in art and design and computer science, and teaches full time at Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey. Her research interests include data visualization and the development of kinesthetic/somatic/biological interfaces for the metaverse, both in collaboration with teams of computer scientists. She has presented creative as well as research output at conferences including Siggraph, Consciousness Reframed, Creativity and Cognition, ISEA (International Symposium of Electronic Art), ICALT (IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies), ComputationalAesthetics (Eurographics) and Cyberworlds. Ayiter is also the chief editor of the journal Metaverse Creativity with Intellect and is currently studying for a doctoral degree at the Planetary Collegium, CAiiA hub (Centre for Advanced Inquiry in the Interactive Arts), at the University of Plymouth with Roy Ascott. › Integrative art education in a metaverse: ground, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 41-53. › Embodied in a metaverse: Anatomia and body parts, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 181-188. › LPDT2, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 81-100. › Editorial, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 3-5. › Editorial, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 133-134. Susan Bagwell London Metropolitan University, Cities Institute, Ladbrooke House, 6266 Highbury Grove, London, N5 2AD, United Kingdom Keywords city growth, clusters, creative industries, regeneration, ethnic minority enterprise, small business policy Susan Bagwell is Research Development Manager at London Metropolitan University. She has a background in community and economic development, project management, and research, and has experience of working in the voluntary sector, local government and as a freelance consultant as well as higher education. She has an MSc in Entrepreneurial Studies and a Diploma in Social Research and Evaluation. Her research interests include Black and Ethnic Minority SMEs, SMEs and regeneration, local economic development initiatives, urban policy and regeneration, project management and funding strategies, evaluation practice and policy. › Creative clusters and city growth, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 31-46. Sue Bailey United Kingdom Sue Bailey is a Senior Learning and Teaching Fellow in the Faculty of Art and Design at Manchester Metropolitan University. She was previously Fashion Subject Area Leader and has extensive experience in design teaching and curriculum development at undergraduate level. Keywords qualitative variation, research, design projects, visual reproducing, conceptual responses › Student Approaches to Learning in Fashion Design: a phenomenographic study, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.2, 81-95. › Students’ approaches to the ‘research’ component in the fashion design project: Variation in students’ experience of the research process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.3, 113-130. Dallas J. Baker Griffith University and Southern Cross University, 13 Sky Place, Bellingen, New South Wales, 2454, Australia Keywords Dallas J. Baker is in the final year of a doctoral candidature at Griffith University and an Associate Lecturer in the School of Arts and Social Sciences at Southern Cross University. He has an Honours degree in Media Studies and a Masters in Writing. Under the nom de plume Dallas Angguish, he is a writer of poetry and short fiction with work published in the journals TEXT, Lodestar Quarterly, Retort Magazine, Polari Journal and in the anthologies When You're A Boy (2011), America Divine (2011), Anywhere But Here (2006), Bend, Don't Shatter (2004) and Dumped (2000 and US edition 2002). His research interests are Queer Theory and its application to subjectivity in the contexts of creative practice, Practice-Led Research and Creative Writing pedagogy. › Queering Practice-Led Research: Subjectivity, performative research and the creative arts, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 33-51. Erika Balsom Carleton University, Department of Modern Culture and Media at Brown University, Carleton University, 405 St. Patrick’s Bldg, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada Keywords Erika Balsom is Assistant Professor of Film Studies at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada. She recently completed a dissertation entitled 'Exhibiting Cinema: The Moving Image in Art After 1990' in the Department of Modern Culture and Media at Brown University. Her writing has appeared in journals such as Screen, Public: Art/Culture/Ideas and the Canadian Journal of Film Studies, as well as in the catalogue for the recent Deutsche Guggenheim exhibition, Being Singular Plural: Moving Images from India. › Brakhage's sour grapes, or notes on experimental cinema in the art world, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 13-25. Anne Bamford Wimbledon College of Art University of the Arts London, Merton Hall Road, London, SW19 3QA, United Kingdom Keywords virtual world, constructed and manipulated imagery, simulation, technologies, art education Professor Anne Bamford is Director of the Engine Room at the University of the Arts London. Anne has been recognized nationally and internationally for her research in arts education, emerging literacies and visual communication. She is an expert in the international dimension of arts and cultural education, and through her research, she has pursued issues of innovation, social impact and equity and diversity. A World Scholar for UNESCO, Anne has conducted major national impact and evaluation studies for the governments of Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Iceland, Hong Kong, and is currently undertaking a study in Norway. Amongst her numerous articles and book chapters, Anne is author of The Wow Factor: Global Research Compendium on the Impact of the Arts in Education which has been published in five languages and distributed in more than 40 countries. › Manipulation, simulation, stimulation: the role of art education in the digital age, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 91-102. › Reviews, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 77-. Antonia Bardis Technological Education Institute of Athens, Department of Photography, Ag. Spyridonos Str, Egaleo, Athens, 12210, Greece Keywords digital photography, realism, traditional photograph, snapshot, simulation Antonia Bardis is a photographer and educator residing in Athens, Greece. She holds a BFA from the University of Illinois and a MA from Goldsmiths College, University of London. She is currently working on a Ph.D. in Photography from the University of Derby. › Digital photography and the question of realism, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.3, 209-. Naren Barfield Glasgow School of Art, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, G3 6RQ, United Kingdom Keywords art, digital art, pedagogy, spatial ontology Naren Barfield is an artist, and has held senior academic positions for several years including leading research in two specialist art and design institutions, currently as Head of Research and Postgraduate Studies, and Professor of Visual Arts at the Glasgow School of Art. He has maintained an active profile over many years principally in the areas of fine art and creative pedagogy. His research and professional practice ranges across art practice, theory, materials and curatorship, and includes publication of books, chapters and papers in refereed journals and exhibition catalogues; curatorship at venues including the Victoria and Albert Museum in London; more than 60 conference and public presentations worldwide since 1991, and more than 80 individual and collaborative exhibitions since 1987. › Spatial ontology and digital print, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 26-35. Martin Barker University of Aberystwyth, Department of Theatre, Film and TV, Penglais Campus, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY23 3AJ, United Kingdom Keywords teaching film, media literacy, vernacular concepts, moral controversies Martin Barker is Professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. He is the author of a number of books, of which probably best-known is Ill Effects: the Media-Violence Debate (co-edited with Julian Petley). He was director of the major international audience research project into the reception of The Lord of the Rings (2003-4) whose results were published (Watching The Lord of the Rings) by Peter Lang in 2007. In 2007 he also directed a research project for the British Board of Film Classification into audience responses to sexual violence on screen, whose outcomes can be found on their website. › Understanding vernacular experiences of film in an academic environment, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 49-. Nick Barnes Keywords participatory research, design, risk, new product development, creative companies Dr. Nick Barnes was Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Research Centre for Design and the Creative Industries at Birmingham City University, Institute of Art and Design, where he worked primarily on the major AHRC research project concerning Risk, Risk Perception and Design. Nick’s doctorate was in environmental management and he has worked on several post-doctoral research projects, including a large EU-funded project examining risk and innovation in the development of new products and technologies in the biotechnology sector. Nick has academic work published in the fields of design management and innovation policy; he currently operates his own research and development practice undertaking projects on behalf of a variety of private, public and third sector organizations. › Researching creative companies: lessons learned from a risk in design project, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 161-178. Suzanne Barnes Massachusetts College of Art and Design, 621 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115, United States of America Keywords illustration, advertising, design Around the age of four, Suzanne Barnes began to make pictures of birds, animals, twigs and rocks, a practice she continues to the present day, only on better paper. Her clients have included Martha Stewart, Reebok, Snapple, Ocean Spray, McDonald’s, Boston Globe, Audubon and Scientific American magazines, and many more in advertising, design and publishing. She teaches other people to make pictures at Massachusetts College of Art and Design, where she is Professor of Illustration. When she’s not making a student sharpen their pencil and get rid of their eraser, she works in her studio and, sometimes, she writes. › Try holding your pencil like this, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 59-62. Carolina Marielli Barreto Carolina Marielli Barreto has a Masters degree in Arts from the Arts Institute at the São Paulo State University – UNESP and graduated in Art Education, with a specialization in Visual Arts. She is currently working as an art educator in the Cultural Centre of the Bank of Brazil and as a collaborator on the Projeto Memória at the Carlos de Campos State Technical School, the old Escola Profissional Feminina de São Paulo (The São Paulo Professional School for Women). Keywords art, gender, professional training, history, applied arts › Art education and professional training: The São Paulo Professional School for Women, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 69-76. Estelle Barrett Deakin University, School of Communication and Creative Arts, Burwood Highway, Victoria, 3125, Australia Keywords tacit knowledge, personal knowledge, creative arts research, Estelle Barrett is Senior Lecturer in the School of Communication and Creative Arts at Deakin University. Her research interests include, body/mind relations, tacit knowledge, affect and embodiment in aesthetic experience and creative practice as research. Her co-edited book with Barbara Bolt, Practice as Research: Approaches to Creative Arts Enquiry, published by IB Tauris London in 2007, combines these interests and her experience in research pedagogy and supervision. practice, sense activity › Experiential learning in practice as research: context, method, knowledge, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 115-124. Jiří Barta University of West Bohemia Pilsen, Institute of Art & Design (IAD), Czech Republic Keywords puppet animation, Czech animation, children, mixed media, political metaphor Jiří Barta was born in Prague in 1948. He has been a successful puppet animation film-maker for over 40 years, initially training at the Department of Film and TV Graphics at the Academy of Art and Design in Prague, and working at the Jiří Trnka Studio as an artist, director and screenwriter since 1978. His first film was Riddles for a Candy (1978), but his breakthrough film was the multi award-winning The Extinct World of Gloves (1982). In 1986, he made his first feature, Pied Piper, which advanced Czech puppet animation by its use of wooden figures with limited movement. In 1993, he made a pilot for a long cherished project, The Golem, and completed a range of commercial projects before embarking on the current feature, In the Attic: Who (2009). › Searching ‘In the Attic’: a visual production diary, Animation Practice, Process & Production, 1.1, 131-153. Christoph Bartneck University of Canterbury, HIT Lab NZ, University of Canterbury, Ilam, Christchurch, New Zealand Keywords Nobel Prize in Physics, inventions, discoveries, global warming social application Christoph Bartneck is Senior Lecturer and Director of Postgraduate Studies at Canterbury University's HIT Lab NZ. His background is in Industrial Design and Human-Computer Interaction. He has published and presented projects and studies in various journals and conferences, as well as served as Assistant Professor in the Department of Industrial Design at the Eindhoven University of Technology. His interests lie in the area of Social Robotics, Design Science and Multimedia Applications. He has worked for several companies including the Technology Center of Hanover in Germany, LEGO in Denmark, Eagle River Interactive in the USA, Phillips Research in the Netherlands and ATR in Japan. › The asymmetry between discoveries and inventions in the Nobel Prize in Physics, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 73-77. Roberto Bartual Roberto Bartual was born in Madrid in 1976. He is a translator, writer and scholar and the author of numerous articles on popular literature published in Diario El Sur, República de las Letras and Despalabro, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Theory of Literature, Comparative Literature, Linguistics and Modern Languages, c. Vinca, 4. 3ºA., Madrid, 28029, Spain dealing with authors such as Alan Moore, Robert L. Stevenson, and Jim Thompson and the hard-boiled genre. He translated an edition of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights illustrated by Balthus (Artemisa, 2007) and the Spanish version of Alan Moore and José Villarubia’s The Mirror of Love (Kraken, 2008). Also a fiction writer, his short stories can be found in diverse anthologies, including Ficciones (Edaf, 2005). He is the co-author of the postmodern revisiting of Lorca’s classic La Casa de Bernarda Alba Zombi (Cátedra, 2009). Keywords William Hogarth, A Harlot’s Progress, engraving, sequential art, broadsheet › William Hogarth’s A Harlot’s Progress : the beginnings of a purely pictographic sequential language, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 83-105. Keren Barzilay-Shechter Keren Barzilay-Shechter, MA is an Israeli expressive therapist specializing in psychodrama. For more than fifteen years, she has worked with children, adolescents and adults in different settings such as community clinics, schools and mental institutions. She is currently a doctoral candidate in expressive therapy where she is researching the role of the defense mechanisms in the Israeli psyche within the context of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. She has special interest in the possible contribution of expressive therapy in enhancing and processing these defenses. Barzilay-Shechter is a faculty member at Lesley University. Lesley University, 5 Phillips Place, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2138, United States of America Keywords expressive arts, therapy, conflict resolution, psychodrama, therapeutic action, methodology, group psychotherapy, Israeli – Palestinian youth › The Artsbridge group, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 333-339. Nurit Bat-Yaar Keywords Nurit Bat-Yaar, author of Israel Fashion Art, is the former fashion editor of Israel's most widely circulated daily newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth. The author is a summa cum laude graduate of New Jersey's Upsala College where she studied art and was granted 'The Upsala Award'. She is also a graduate of Washington, D.C.'s Ardis School of Design where she studied fashion-design. In 1999, she was the curator of the exhibition 'Glimpses of Glamour Fashion Photography in the Mirror of a Century' which opened the new millennium in the Israel Museum of Photography at Tel-Hai. › BOOK REPORTS, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 249-268. Zygmunt Bauman University of Leeds, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, School of Sociology and Social Policy, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords Simmel, progress, freedom, security, fashion Zygmunt Bauman is one of the most significant global social thinkers of our age. His work, spanning nearly five decades, steadfastly refuses to be constrained by arbitrary disciplinary boundaries within the arts, humanities and social sciences. An extraordinarily productive scholar, his writings continue to be relevant to his host subject of sociology, but also to social and political theory, philosophy, ethics, art theory, media/communications studies, cultural studies, and theology. His unique contribution – the conceptual framework ‘liquid modernity’ – has influenced international research within all of these disciplines. By employing the metaphor of ‘liquidity’, Bauman’s later work has captured the fluid and constantly shifting character of our equally individualized and globalized lives and, over the course of a series of related books and articles, has offered one of the most significant interpretations of human societies in the twenty-first century. › Perpetuum mobile, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.1, 55-63. Nancy Beardall Lesley University, 5 Phillips Place, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States of America Keywords relational development, dance therapy, movement therapist Nancy Beardall, Ph.D., B.C.-D.M.T., C.M.A., L.M.H.C., is the Dance/Movement Therapy Coordinator at Lesley University, Cambridge, MA. As a dance/movement therapist, Certified Movement Analyst and educator, Nancy’s work has focused on dance, dance therapy and social/emotional and relational development using the expressive arts in the public schools. She has developed numerous curricula and co-authored Making Connections: Building Community and Gender Dialogue in Secondary Schools with Janet Surrey and Stephen Bergman. › Spirals dancing and the Spiral Integrated Learning Process: Promoting an embodied knowing, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 7-23. Myron M. Beasley Keywords Myron M. Beasley is Assistant Professor of African American Studies and American Cultural Studies at Bates College, Lewiston, Maine. He is a critical ethnographer, curator and performance artist. He is the 2010/11 recipient of an Andy Warhol Arts Writers Grant and a Whiting Foundation Fellowship for his work exploring gender performance among street food vendors of Jacmel and contemporary Haitian artists. Beasley is currently working on a book project on the topic of death and performance art in the African diaspora. He has curated projects in Haiti, Brazil and Morocco, and his writing appears in journals such as Text and Performance Quarterly and Performance Research. › Curatorial Studies on the Edge: The Ghetto Biennale, a Junkyard, and the Performance of Possibility, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 65-81. Mark A. Bedau Reed College, 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd., Portland, OR, 97202-8199, United States of America Keywords protocell, synthetic biology, World Wide Web, autonomous agent, robot Mark Bedau is Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Reed College, Adjunct Professor of Systems Science at Portland State University, Editor-in-Chief of the journal Artificial Life, co-founder of the European Centre for Living Technology, co-organizer of the Tenth International Conference on the Simulation and Synthesis of Living Systems, Head of the Initiative for Science, Society and Policy at the Southern University of Denmark and a PI in the EU FP6 project Programmable Artificial Cell Evolution (PACE). › Living technology today and tomorrow, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 199-206. Honor Beddard Honor Beddard is a curator. She lives and works in London. Raven Row, London › Hilary Lloyd, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 115-119. Keywords Amanda Beech University of Kent, Fine Art, Jarman Building, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom Keywords knowledge, law, recognition, subject, tragic Dr Amanda Beech is an artist and writer. Recent exhibitions include 'The Real Thing', Tate Britain, London, 'Sanity Assassin', Spike Island, Bristol and 'Greetings Comrades, the Image Has Now Changed its Status', Occular Lab, Melbourne. She is Contributing Editor of 'Sanity Assassin' (2010) and 'Episode: Pleasure and Persuasion in Lens-based Media' (2008). She is Co-director of the research group Curating Video and a steering committee member of the research group The Political Currency of Art (PoCA). She is Professor in Fine Art at the University of Kent. › Don't fight it: the embodiment of critique, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 61-72. › Curatorial futures with the image: Overcoming scepticism and unbinding the relational, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 139-151. Ruth Beer Emily Carr University of Art and Design, 1399 Johnston Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6R 1E7, Canada Keywords arts-based research, geographic and cultural transitions, interdisciplinary art, new media, art education, science and art Ruth Beer is an Associate Professor of Visual Art and Assistant Dean at the Faculty of Visual Art and Material Practice at the Emily Carr University of Art and Design. Her extensive record of exhibitions includes museums and galleries in Canada, the United States, Japan, and China. She is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts and is a recipient of numerous awards including a recent Canada SSHRC Research/Creation in the Fine Arts Grant. Her interdisciplinary art practice focuses on mapping stories of geographic and cultural transition. › Research and creation: Socially-engaged art in The City of Richgate Project, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 213-227. › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Pryle Behrman Pryle Behrman is the reviews editor of MIRAJ. WIELS, Brussels › David Claerbout: The Time that Remains, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 103-106. Keywords David Bell University of Leeds, School of Geography, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, Dunedin, UK Keywords art, education, art history, Japan David Bell is a senior lecturer in critical human geography at the University of Leeds, UK. He has written on a range of topics, including urban and cultural geography and science and technology studies. He is currently co-investigator on an ESRC funded research project exploring cosmetic surgery tourism, and is writing a book on cultural policy. › Seven ways to talk about art: One conversation and seven questions for talking about art in early childhood settings, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 41-54. Laura Beloff Aalto University School of Art and Design, P.O. Box 31000, FI-00076, Helsinki, Finland Laura Beloff, researcher, artist and lecturer. Beloff has exhibited widely in museums, galleries and media-art events in Europe and worldwide, e.g. in Vienna 2011, the Venice Biennale 2007 and in Brazil 2008. She frequently lectures about her research and practice in universities and various conferences. In 2002–2006, she was Professor for media arts at the Art Academy in Oslo, Norway. In 2007–2011, she Keywords interface, materiality, mobile art, wearables, wireless wearable technology was awarded a five-year grant by the Finnish state. In 2009–2010, 2011, she has been Visiting Professor at The University of Applied Arts in Vienna (AT). Currently, she is close to completing a Ph.D. at Planetary Collegium, University of Plymouth. More information on her artistic works and activities at http://www.realitydisfunction.org › When the cables leave, the interfaces arrive: Immaterial networks and material interfaces, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.3, 211-220. › Wearable artefacts as research vehicles, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 47-53. › Shared motifs: Body attachments in RL and SL, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 135-146. René Berger Keywords frame, rheomorphism, real time, unmediated mediation, Web 2 René Berger served as Doctor of Letters at the Sorbonne, an honorary professor at the University of Lausanne and former Director of the Museum of Fine Arts in Lausanne. He founded Pour l’Art and the Salon international de Galeries-Pilotes, as well as convening conferences of the ‘Locarno International Video Festival’. He is the Honorary President of the International Association of Art Critics and the International Association for Video in the Arts and Culture, and expert consultant for UNESCO. His publications, translated in many languages, include: Découverte de la Peinture, Connaissance de la Peinture, Art et Communication, La Mutation des Signes, La Téléfission, Alerte à la Télévision, L’effet des Changements Technologiques, Art et Technologie, Jusqu’où ira Votre Ordinateur?, › Tours and detours of paradoxes, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 71-74. Kim Berman Kim Berman, Associate Professor, Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Art Design and Architecture, University of Johannesburg and Founding Director of Phumani Paper. Keywords art, architecture, poverty › Craft enterprise development: Surviving, responding to, and transforming a South African government poverty alleviation programme, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.3, 217-234. Joana Duarte Bernardes Universidade de Coimbra, Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Coimbra, Largo da Porta Ferrea, 3004-530, Coimbra, Portugal Keywords beach, painting Joana Duarte Bernardes has a degree in Literature and Modern Languages from the Universidade de Coimbra. Her areas of study include history, Portuguese studies, memory, and the poetics of limits. Published works include Eça de Queirós: Riso, Memória, Morte (Universidade de Coimbra) and Ma casa onde não se acorda: o cemitério romântico na ficção de Eça de Queirós (Universidade Federal da Uberlândia). › Limit and Utopia: Revisiting the Beach as a Threshold, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 219-230. Susan Best University of New South Wales, Department of Art History and Theory, P.O. Box 259, Paddington, New South Wales, 2021, Australia Keywords affect studies, aesthetics, modern art, contemporary art Susan Best teaches in the Department of Art History and Theory, University of New South Wales. Her first book is published by I B Tauris; it is titled Visualizing Feeling: Affect and the Feminine Avantgarde This project is funded by an Australian Research Council grant. Dr. Best has expertise in modern and contemporary art, with a particular emphasis on conceptual art, women's art and Latin American art. She teaches courses on abstraction, art and psychoanalysis, art, gender, sexuality and the body, and late modern sculpture. › Minimalism, subjectivity, and aesthetics: rethinking the anti-aesthetic tradition in late-modern art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 127-142. Michael Betancourt Savannah College of Art & Design, Motion Media Design, Montgomery Hall, PO Box 3146, Savannah, GA, 31402, United States of America Keywords new media art, conceptual art, process, computer-generated art, visual music, motion graphics, abstract film, video art Michael Betancourt is an artist, media historian, critical theorist, and curator. His essays have been translated into Chinese, Greek, Italian, Persian, Portuguese, and Spanish; journals such as Leonardo, Semiotica and CTheory have published his essays and he has edited five books on visual music technologies invented by artists such as Thomas Wilfred, Mary Hallock-Greenewalt, and Oskar Fischinger. In the course of this research, he discovered the oldest surviving handpainted abstract films, done in 1916 by inventor and artist Mary Hallock-Greenewalt. As an artist, he has exhibited his movies, sitespecific installations, and non-traditional art forms in unseen, unusual, or public spaces since 1992. The second edition of his book, Structuring Time, came out in 2009. › Intellectual process, visceral result: human agency and the production of artworks via automated technology, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.1, 1118. Dipti Bhagat London Metropolitan University, 41 Commercial Road, London, E1 1LA, United Kingdom Dipti Bhagat is a design historian working, in part, to devise inclusive pedagogies for the delivery of design history and theory for undergraduate practice-led design programmes at London Metropolitan University. His research interests include twentieth-century cultural geographies of the material culture of Empire and African diaspora. Keywords academic writing, CETL, collaboration, design, design practice › writing design: A collaboration between the Write Now CETL and The Sir John Cass Department of Art, Media and Design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 177-182. Amos Bianchi University of Plymouth, Planetary Collegium, Milan, Italy Keywords subjectivation, space, body, image, media Amos Bianchi (1975) is coordinator of postgraduate programmes at NABA (Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti Milano, www.naba.it). At the same institution, he has been Assistant Professor of Theory and Method of Mass Media, and he is currently Lecturer of Research Methods. He is a Ph.D. researcher of the University of Plymouth, Planetary Collegium, at the M-Node, based in Milan. › Frames from the life and death of Jean Charles de Menezes, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 5-9. Barbara Bickel Southern Illionois University Carbondael, School of Art and Design Keywords arts based research, feminism, performance ritual, visual art, collaboration Barbara Bickel is an artist, researcher, educator and independent curator. An Assistant Professor in Art Education and Women Studies at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, she teaches courses in art education and studio art. To view her art portfolio and arts-based research online visit http://www.barbara-bickel.com › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Geraldine Biddle-Perry London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London, Holly Cottage, Chapmans Lane, Orpington, Kent, BR5 3JA, United Kingdom Keywords oral history, interdisciplinary, critical thinking, Geraldine Biddle-Perry is an associate lecturer at London College of Fashion and Surrey Institute of Art and Design, teaching across a range of subject areas. She is currently establishing a small oral history archive at LCF of student interviews. Her current research interests are in fashion and dress as a narrative of self and identity particularly in relation to class and leisure in Britain in the 1950s. › Stimulating critical thinking in the theoretically timid: the role and value of active learning oral history assignments within an interdisciplinary context, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.2, 85-100. Iain Biggs University of the West of England, Faculty of Art, Media and Design, Bower Ashton Campus, Clanage Road, Bristol, BS3 2JT, United Kingdom Keywords landscape, memory, music, Puritanism, politics song Dr Iain Biggs is Reader in Visual Art Practice at the Bristol School of Art, Media and Design, UWE, Bristol, where he is programme director for research degrees. His recent work includes the bookworks Between Carterhaugh and Tamsheil Rig: A Borderline Episode and Eight Lost Songs; the article ‘Towards a Polytheistic Relationship to Landscape: Issues for Contemporary Art’ in Landscape Research, 30: 1 (January 2005), pp. 5-22; and the chapter ‘Hybrid Texts and Academic Authority: The Wager in Creative Practice Research’ in K. Macleod and L. Holdridge (eds), Thinking Through Art: Reflections on Art as Research (London and New York: Routledge, 2005). His current work involves the relationship between image, music and text. › Educating 'Local Cosmopolitans': the case for a critical regionalism in art education?, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.1, 16-24. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.3, 116-118. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 3-4. › Recovering landscape: an art between seeing and hearing, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 29-38. › REVIEW, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 103-105. › Song and the Presence of Absent Communities, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.1, 7-23. › The spaces of ‘Deep Mapping’: A partial account, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.1, 5-25. Amanda Bill Massey University, Institute of Design for Industry and Environment, College of Creative Arts, P.O. Box 756, Old Museum, Buckle Street, Wellington, 6140, New Zealand Keywords art and design, governmentality, higher education, research, creativity Dr Amanda Bill is a Senior Lecturer in fashion and textile design at Massey University, New Zealand. Her research focuses on creative subjectivity and the politics of work in the cultural economy. Prior to appointment at Massey University, Amanda operated her own successful textile design studio. She has lectured in design since the inception of design degrees in New Zealand in the early 1990s. Formerly programme leader for the Massey Bachelor of Design in Textiles, she has also taught in visual communication, industrial, and fashion design programmes. Amanda’s Ph.D. is in Sociology and Women’s Studies. Her research has been presented at international conferences on design, fashion and cultural policy. She was a member of the University of Auckland's multi-disciplinary Fashion Project, which researched the globalisation of the New Zealand designer fashion industry and she has published research for Creative New Zealand about marketing the visual arts. › Just another piece of paper: creative research and writing, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 5-15. Johannes Birringer Brunel University, School of Arts, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords collaboration, music, technology, multimedia, dance, theatre, video, performance, digital arts Johannes Birringer is professor of Performance Technologies in the School of Arts at Brunel University (London) where he directs the DAP-Lab and the Centre for Contemporary and Digital Performance. He is a choreographer and artistic director of AlienNation Co., a multimedia ensemble based in Houston (www.aliennationcompany.com). He has created numerous dancetheatre works, video installations, interactive works and site-specific performances in collaboration with artists in Europe, North America, Latin America, China and Japan. Author of several books, including Media and Performance: Along the Border (1998), Performance on the Edge: Transformations of Culture (2000), Performance, Technology & Science (2008), and Dance and Cognition (coeditor, 2005). He founded Interaktionslabor Göttelborn in Germany, and directs media and performance workshops all over the world, in Belo Horizonte, Istanbul, Beijing, Oslo, and at the EMPAC. › Interactive dance, the body and the Internet, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.3, 165-178. Clovis Blackwell Azusa Pacific University, 901 East Alosta Ave, Art Department, Azusa Pacific University, Azusa, CA 91702, United States of America Clovis Blackwell is a Los Angeles-based artist and adjunct professor at Azusa Pacific University. He received a BFA from San Francisco Art Institute and an MFA from Azusa Pacific University in 2009. He has shown across the United States, including the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, and the World Financial Center Gallery in New York City. Keywords Jeff Koons, irony, art appreciation, art student, sincerity › Sincerity and irony examined through the work of Jeff Koons, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 63-68. Bernadette Blair Bernadette Blair is Director of Academic Development and Reader in studio-based learning & teaching in Faculty of Art, Design & Kingston University, Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, Knights Park, Kingston Upon Thames, Surrey, KT1 2QJ, United Kingdom Architecture, Kingston University. She studied Graphic Printmaking at the Regional College of Art Bradford followed by an MA in Printmaking at Wimbledon School of Art. She then worked as a photographer and printmaker exhibiting both nationally and internationally. Her research interests include art and design pedagogy, student learning in the studio environment, feedback and assessment in studio-based practice, the use of photography in printmaking and the application of drawing by designers. Keywords formative assessment feedback, student experience, reflection, perception › ‘At the end of a huge crit in the summer, it was “crap” – I'd worked really hard but all she said was “fine” and I was gutted.’, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 83-96. Charlie Blake Liverpool Hope University, Taggart Avenue, Liverpool, L16 9JD, United Kingdom Keywords graphic novels, humanities, inscription Charlie Blake is currently Senior Lecturer in Critical and Cultural Theory at Liverpool Hope University. He recently co-edited a twovolume study for the journal Angelaki entitled 'Shadows of Cruelty: Sadism, Masochism & the Philosophical Muse' with Frida Beckman of Uppsala University, Sweden, and is currently working on a collection, 'Beyond Human: From Animality to Transhumanism', with Steven Shakespeare, Liverpool Hope University and Claire Molloy, University of Brighton, and a study of sex and the moving image, 'Sexing the Event: Performing the Real in Post-Transgressive Cinema', with Beth Johnson, Keele University. › Pirate multiplicities: Aion, chronos and magical inscription in the graphic novels of Alan Moore, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 121-134. Martha Blassnigg University of Plymouth, Transtechnology Research, Drake Circus, Portland Square B323, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords cultural anthropology, film and cinema studies, media philosophy Martha Blassnigg is a Cultural Anthropologist and Film and Media Theorist with a background in documentary filmmaking and film restoration. She is research fellow at Transtechnology Research at the University of Plymouth, and associate editor for Leonardo Reviews. She conducts qualitative research into the perceptual, creative processes during enhanced or amplified situations such as experiences of spiritual practices and cognition in audio-visual environments, exploring the body-mind correlation in relation to issues such as time, memory and consciousness. › Transformative Aspects of the Angelic Imaginary, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.1, 15-26. Margo Blythman London College of Communication University of the Arts London Keywords non-verbal communication, written assessment, practice-based research, Writing PAD, dissertation, concept mapping Margo Blythman is Teaching and Learning Coordinator at the London College of Communication, University of the Arts, London, where she has responsibility for quality enhancement initiatives including study support, tutorial and student retention. Her current research interests include the micropolitics of organizations, lecturers’ conceptions of their working practices and students’ approaches to design and writing. › Textual and visual interfaces in art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 75-80. › Textual and visual interfaces in art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 139-140. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 153-. › 11th European League Institutes of the Arts Biennial Conference: HEARTH l'art au coeur du territoire › Nantes, France, 2730 October 2010, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 181-184. Bryna Bobick University of Memphis › BOOK REVIEWS, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 9197. Keywords Ingrid Böck TU Graz, Institut für Architekturtheorie, Kunst- und Kulturwissenschatfen, Technikerstraße 4/3, Graz, 8010, Austria Keywords genetic algorithms, design intelligence, selection, Le Corbusier, discourse Ingrid Böck is a scientific assistant at the department of architecture theory, art history and cultural studies at the TU Graz and an architectural designer with Querkraft architects Vienna. She received her degree in architecture from the TU Vienna, where she also taught courses in architecture and design methods. Currently she is engaged in her Ph.D. thesis on Rem Koolhaas/ OMA. She is on the editorial board for GAM (Graz Architecture Magazine)and author of essays on Le Corbusier’s urbanism, virtual versus analogous space, and the idea of the formless in architecture. Previous works include Erasure, Grid, and the City Beyond Planning (2009), Tools of the Virtual, Atmosphere and Bodily Presence (2009), Imaginary and Spatial Immediacy (2008), and R&Sie reading Bataille’s Formless (2007). › Evolutionary design and the economy of discourse, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 67-76. Erik Bohemia Northumbria University, School of Design, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 8ST, United Kingdom Keywords assessment for learning, design pedagogy, Global Studio, educational discourses, collaborative learning Erik Bohemia is a Reader in Three Dimensional Design Studies at the School of Design, Northumbria University, United Kingdom. As a Researcher and an Educator in the field of design, he is interested in the skills and competencies of designers and the match between these and industry requirements. The results from his research in this area have been used to guide the development of curriculum in design so that future graduates may more effectively fulfil industry requirements. Dr. Bohemia’s current research focus is on global product design development processes and its impact on the design profession. His research has been published in international journals and conferences. › Intersections: The utility of an ‘Assessment for Learning’ discourse for Design educators, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 123-134. Rose Bond Pacific Northwest College of Art, Portland, Oregon, United States of America Rose Bond lectures in Moving Image Arts at the Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon. She has shown films at the Sundance and New York International Film Festivals, and is a recipient of an AFI film grant. She produces films using a mix of digital and hand-drawn animation. Keywords animation, installation, poetics › Poetics and public space: an investigation into animated installation, Animation Practice, Process & Production, 1.1, 65-76. Erik Borg Coventry University, Centre for Academic Writing, Gosford Street, Coventry, West Midlands, CV1 5DD, United Kingdom Keywords internally persuasive writing, contextual studies, art education, design education Erik works in the Centre for Academic Writing (CAW) at Coventry University in the United Kingdom. He works in a consultancy role with staff in the disciplines to cascade strategies for teaching Academic Writing, and he offers advice to colleagues on their own scholarly writing. He was formerly a Lecturer in Applied Linguistics at Northumbria University and has also taught at universities in China and Oman. He has Master’s degrees in English literature from the University of Chicago and in TESOL from the University of Leeds. His current Ph.D. research explores the role of writing in Fine Arts Practice and Design, and he is studying the process of learning to write at Ph.D. level in these disciplines. Erik has published articles in Art, Design and Communication in Higher Education, ELT Journal and the Journal of English for Academic Purposes › Internally persuasive writing in Fine Arts Practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 193-. › Writing in fine arts and design education in context, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 85-102. Peter Bosma Netherlands University for Animation, Rotterdam, Netherlands Keywords animation, Netherlands, cinema Peter Bosma is a researcher at the Netherlands University for Animation. He also works as a freelance writer and editor. Books he has edited include Filmkunde (Open Universitiete) and Cinematheek Bewaarboek (Theater Lantaren/Venster). He studied Dutch and Theatre at Utrecht University. › The Dutch Animation Collection: a work in progress, Animation Practice, Process & Production, 1.1, 169-190. Serge Bouchardon University of Technology of Compiegne, rue du Dr Schweitzer, Compiègne, 60200, France Keywords digital creation, electronic literature, interactivity Serge Bouchardon graduated in Literature from the Sorbonne University (France). After working as a project manager in the educational software industry for six years, he wrote his dissertation on interactive literary narrative, and he is currently Associate Professor in Communication Sciences at the University of Technology of Compiegne (France). His research focuses on digital creation, in particular electronic literature. As an author, he is interested in the unveiling of interactivity. › Digital literature and the Digital, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 65-78. Doug Boughton Northern Illinois University, School of Art, Jack Arends Building, De Kalb, IL, 60115 -2883, United States of America Keywords assessment, visual culture, portfolio, technology Dr. Boughton is Professor of Art and Education at Northern Illinois University. His research interests include assessment of student learning in art, portfolio assessment, and art curriculum policy. He was World President of InSEA from 2003 to 2005, has served as Chief Examiner Art/Design for the International Baccalaureate Organization, was Foundation Director of the National Art Education Research Council of the Australian Institute of Art Education, and Consulting Professor in Art Education to the Institute of Education in Hong Kong. Dr Boughton has won numerous honours including the Ziegfeld Award for contribution to International Art Education in 2006. He is a Distinguished Fellow of the National Art Education Association (NAEA), is a member of the Council for Policy Studies in Art Education (USA) and is an honorary life member of the Australian Institute of Art Education. › From fine art to visual culture: assessment and the changing role of art education, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.3, 211-224. Roy Boyne Durham University, School of Applied Social Sciences, 32 Old Elvet, Durham, DH1 3HN, United Kingdom Keywords sociology, economic impact, film, public sculpture, aura, sublime, futurism, situationism, propaganda, social networking, terrorism, spectacle Roy Boyne has published books on French philosophy, the sociology of art and cinema, and cultures of risk. He is a member of the executive editorial board of Theory, Culture and Society, and a board member of Creative Industries. He was guest-editor for the 2007 edition, devoted to cinema, and of Symbolism: a Journal of Critical Aesthetics. He was Vice-Chair of the Board of Culture North East (until its demise in April 2009). He is writing a book for Sage on regional and international cultural strategy, based in part on research he did whilst he was visiting professor at the University of Strasbourg in 2007. › Reviews, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 117-121. › Book Review, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 97-100. Emily Brady University of Edinburgh, Institute of Geography, School of GeoSciences, Drummond Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9XP, United Kingdom Keywords conservation, ethics, aesthetics, animals, ecological art Emily Brady is a Reader at the Institute of Geography at the University of Edinburgh. Her research interests begin in philosophical aesthetics and extend out to various areas, including environmental aesthetics (nature, environment, art, cultural landscapes), everyday aesthetics and Kant. Her work has been concerned with thinking through the nature of aesthetic experience, with particular attention to the role of imagination and emotion and the relationship between aesthetic value and moral value. Brady is the author of Aesthetics of the Natural Environment (2003); and co-editor of Humans in the Land: The Ethics and Aesthetics of the Cultural Landscape (2008) and Aesthetic Concepts: Essays After Sibley (2001). Her current research focuses on aesthetics of nature in the history of philosophy, with a book in progress on the sublime. › Animals in environmental art: relationship and aesthetic regard, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.1, 47-58. Amanda M. C Brandellero Amanda Brandellero is a Ph.D. Researcher at the University of Amsterdam. Her research interests lie in the fields of the cultural industries, migrant cultural entrepreneurship and socio-economic and cultural transformations in metropolitan areas. University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Prinsengracht 130, Amsterdam, 1018 VZ, Netherlands › Keeping the market at bay: exploring the loci of innovation in the cultural industries, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 61-77. Keywords markets, commodification, innovation, creativity, cultural industries Sue Breakell University of Brighton, Design Archives, Faculty of Arts, Grand Parade, Brighton, BN2 0JY, United Kingdom Sue Breakell is Archivist at the University of Brighton Design Archives and Research Fellow in the Faculty of Arts. Her research engages with the nature, meaning and practice of archives, as well as the history of twentieth century art and design. She is interested in the approaches of multiple users (archivists, academics and artists among them) to the notional and physical archive. Keywords archives, documentation, modern art, creative process, design, memory › Collecting the traces: an archivist's perspective, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 175-190. Karolina Breguła Keywords conceptual art, diversity, cultural tension, city Karolina Breguła was born in 1979 in Katowice, Poland and now lives and works in Warsaw. She graduated from the National Film, Television and Theatre School in Łódz, Poland, the European Academy of Photography in Warsaw and the GFU Photography School at Folkuniversitetet in Stockholm, Sweden. She is a visual and conceptual artist who creates photography, video installations and actions, and has shown work in solo and group shows in Poland, Lithuania, Germany and Sweden. She is particularly interested in the subjects of diversity and tension that appear at the meeting points of different cultures. She is interested in relations between people in large societies and relations between people and art. Her inspiration is the city. In her recent works she has been working on the subject of perception of modern art. › Let them see us, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 145-152. Joseph E. Brenner Keywords Nicolescu, cyber space- Joseph E. Brenner received a Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from the University of Wisconsin. He worked in corporate development and technology transfer at the Du Pont Company International headquarters for Europe. Since 1998 he has collaborated with the International Center for Transdisciplinary Research, Paris. time, binary logic, unity of knowledge, consciousness › Logic, art and transdisciplinarity: A new logic for the new reality, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.3, 169-180. Madeleine Brens University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, 184 Hills Rd., Cambridge, CB2 8PQ, United Kingdom Keywords young female offenders, adolescent women, art education Madeleine Brens is a Ph.D. student at the University of Cambridge in the Faculty of Education where she completed her M.Phil. in 2009 (‘The Arts Award: Creating Artists and Arts Leaders’). Madeleine has recently presented her work (‘Female Young Offenders and the Impact of Arts Engagement’) at an international conference (The Emergent Adult, 2010). She completed her teacher training in Canada at Queen’s University (2005) and has taught visual art for several years at a secondary school in Toronto, Canada. › Engagement in the arts and self-efficacy of adolescent women, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 9-19. Ron Broglio Arizona State University, PO Box 870302, Tempe, AZ, 85287-0302, United States of America Keywords skin, Snaebjornsdottir and Wilson, Coates, surface, Umwelt Ron Broglio is Assistant Professor of English at Arizona State University. His research focuses on how philosophy and aesthetics can help us rethink the relationship between humans and the environment. His book Technologies of the Picturesque: British Art, Poetry, and Instruments 1750–1830 (Bucknell 2008) develops the phenomenological engagement between bodies and technology in the British landscape aesthetic. His work On the Surface: Thinking with Animals and Art (University of Minnesota Press, Fall 2011) develops a language for animal studies through examination of contemporary art and phenomenology. Current projects include a dairy cattle art installation at the University of Waterloo, a book project on British Romantic peasant poetry and agriculture, and a manifesto on the animal revolution. › A Left-handed Primer for Approaching Animal Art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.1, 35-45. Alice Haylett Bryan Alice Haylett Bryan is a Ph.D. student at King’s College London. King’s College London › Hiroshima After Iraq: Three Studies in Art and War, Rosalyn Deutsche, (2010), Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 136-141. Keywords Daniela Büchler University of Hertfordshire, School of Creative Arts, College Lane, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, AL10 9AB, United Kingdom Keywords practice-based, practiceled, criteria, method, art and design Daniela Büchler has a BArch, MA(Res), Ph.D. Architecture (Brazil) and Ph.D. Design (United Kingdom). She is Senior Research Fellow at the University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom, Visiting Research Fellow at the Mackenzie Presbyterian University, São Paulo, Brazil, and Guest Scholar at Lund University, Sweden. Daniela has been involved internationally with the organization of conferences, as an invited speaker and as a member of scientific committees. › Eight criteria for practice-based research in the creative and cultural industries, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.1, 5-18. Roger M. Buergel University of Essex, Department of Art History & Theory, c/o Centre for Curatorial Studies, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, CO4 3SQ, United Kingdom Keywords curating, art, American art, history Roger M. Buergel is a writer, curator and university teacher. He received his education from the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. Author and editor of numerous books, including a historiography of post-war American art (1999) and a monograph on Peter Friedl (2000), he curated exhibitions (often with Ruth Noack) that won critical acclaim, like ‘Things we don’t understand’ (Generali Foundation Vienna, 2000) or ‘Governmentality. Art in conflict with the international hyper-bourgeoisie and the national petty-bourgeoisie’ (2000, Alte Kestner Gesellschaft Hannover and CHA Moscow), an exhibition subsequently extended into a theme with variations (2003– 2005, MACBA Barcelona; Miami Art Central; Witte de With Rotterdam; Secession Vienna). In 2003, Buergel became the artistic director of documenta 12, taking place in 2007. Since then he taught Art History at the Art Academy Karlsruhe and curated ‘Barely Something’, a retrospective of Ai Weiwei (2010, Museum DKM Duisburg). › Notes on Display, and a Work by Alejandra Riera, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 103-122. Valerie Ann Bugmann Téllez Valerie Ann Bugmann completed her studies in Art and Electronic Media at the University of Los Andes in Bogota in 2002. Her interest in Electronic Media was further emphasized during her studies in Gothenburg (Sweden), where she received her Master’s degree in Art Artificial Intelligence Laboratorz, Wipkingerweg 21, Zurich, 8037, Switzerland and Technology at the Chalmers University/IT University in 2005. Between 2006 and 2008, she took part in the Ph.D. studies at the ZNode Program from the University of Plymouth in UK and the School for Art and Design in Zurich (ZHdK), Switzerland. After moving to Zurich in 2005 she has participated in several research projects: E-skin (Institute for Cultural Studies, ZHdK), Robot Hand (Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, University of Zurich), Robot Drama (Institute for the Performing Arts and Film, ZHdK and the AILab). These researches enriched her interest in the development and use of wearable technologies/robotic prostheses, and their relation to cognition. Keywords robotics, wearable technology and prostheses, performance and cognition, touch › The drama of digital communication with a human touch, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 45-54. Mie Buhl Danish University of Education, Department of Educational Anthropology, Tuborgvej 164, Copenhagen NV, DK 2400, Denmark Keywords education, visual culture, viewing, production Mie Buhl's research revolves around Media, IT and Visual Culture, with a particular emphasis on university education, teacher training, primary school and educational design. Her interests focus on the visual in digital media along with visual arts and visual culture in education. She is director of the research programme on Media and ICT in a Learning Perspective at Aarhus University. She started her teaching career in 1991 at the Danish Folkeskole. She was the head of an art school from 1993-95 and from 1995-1998 she was a senior lecturer at a teacher training college. Her research career started in 1998 at the Royal Danish School of Educational Studies at the Department of Aesthetics and Media Pedagogy and later at the Department of Educational Anthropology, She was the cofounder of the Visual Culture in Education Unit at the Danish University of Education in 2002. › Visual culture as a strategic approach to art production in education, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 103-114. Paul Buhle Brown University, American Civilization Department, Box 1892, Providence, Rhode Island, RI, 2912, United States of America Paul Buhle published Radical America Komiks in 1969 and edited Wobblies! in 2005. Since then he has edited nine additional nonfiction comic books; he is also winner of the Will Eisner Award and the Harvey Award (with Denis Kitchen) for The Art of Harvey Kurtzman. He has served as Senior Lecturer at Brown University. › Reviews, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 379-403. Keywords Thunder in Guyana, Suzanne Wasserman, Janet Rosenberg Jagan, Cheddi Jagan, British Guyana, › Harvey Pekar, in Memory, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 191-195. Guyana, People’s Progressive Party (PPP), Forbes Burnham, Walter Rodney, Working People’s Alliance, Cold War Karen Bull Coventry University, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords threshold concepts, industrial design, tacit knowledge, CETL, pedagogic research Karen Bull is Deputy Director, Centre of Excellence for Product and Automotive Design at Coventry University. This centre focuses on evaluating spatial design understanding and identifying the transformative threshold concepts associated with students entering the global community of practice for industrial design. Her expertise is in industrial design theory, design analysis and design context.Her background is in product design and her Ph.D. is titled ‘Advanced Personal Telecommunications Products and Industrial Design’. She has continued to research pedagogy in relation to art and design, and is especially interested in the area of critical and reflective learning, eteaching and learning and e-portfolio. › Threshold concepts and the transport and product design curriculum: reports of research in progress, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 169-175. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 95-101. Seth Bullock University of Southampton, School of Electronics and Computer Science, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, United Kingdom Keywords natural architectures, termite mounds, networks, computer simulation, computer modeling After gaining a BA in Cognitive Science and a D.Phil. (Ph.D.) in Evolutionary Simulation Modelling from the School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences at Sussex University (supervised by Dave Cliff and Phil Husbands), Seth Bullock spent two years in Berlin at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development working with Peter Todd on simulating the evolution of adaptive decision-making behaviour in people and other animals. In 1999 he took up a five-year University Research Fellowship at the University of Leeds and became a Lecturer there in 2004. In October 2005 he joined the University of Southampton as Senior Lecturer, and helped to found the Science and Engineering of Natural Systems (SENSe) research group. In 2009 he became head of the SENSe group, and also became Director of Southampton’s new Institute for Complex Systems Simulation (ICSS). › Embracing the ‘tyranny of distance’: space as an enabling constraint, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 141-152. Hilary Bungay Canterbury Christ Church University, Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts & Health, Mill Bay, Folkestone, CT20 1JG, United Kingdom Keywords well-being, group singing, health, older people, ageing Hilary has been at Christ Church University since June 2003. She is a part-time senior lecturer in Medical Imaging and contributes to both radiography profession specific and the interprofessional modules. For two days a week Hilary is seconded to the Sidney De Haan Research Centre where she is currently involved in an evaluation of the Silver Song Club Project (Silver Song Clubs provide opportunities for older people to come together to make music and sing with the guidance of experienced musicians and volunteer support). She has recently been looking at ‘Arts on Prescription’ schemes around the country to investigate the feasibility of setting up a programme locally. Her particular research interests are cancer, older people, and health service evaluation. › The Silver Song Club Project: A sense of well-being through participatory singing, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 165-178. Peter Burleigh University of Basel, Englisches Seminar, Nadelberg 6, CH-4051, Basel, Büro 16, Switzerland Keywords beach, spaces, photography Peter Burleigh is lecturer in English Language and Linguistics at the University of Basel. He received a BSc. in Engineering Science at University of Exeter, and a Master of Studies in General Linguistics at Oxford. Recent publications include 1970s British Sitcom: applied tactics in confined spaces (Portsmouth University) and The Burden of Moment: Photography's Inherent Monumentalizing Effect (Bielefeld). Research interests include linguistics, photography, and the male image. › The Beach as a Space of Defamiliarisation, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 245-257. Rosemary Burnett Rosemary Burnett is author, translator and human rights defender and formerly Scottish Programme Director for Amnesty International. She worked for several years in Guatemala helping to bring the perpetrators of the Guatemalan genocide to justice. Keywords human rights, Amnesty International › Cry, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 123-131. Carl-Peter Buschkühle Carl-Peter Buschkuehle is Professor for Art Education at the JustusLiebig- University in Giessen, Germany. His research centers on an Justus-Liebig-University, KarlGlöckner-Strasse 21 H, Giessen, D35394, Germany ‘artistic education’ where learning objectives and methods are derived from art. Thus he is dealing with the theory of artistic thinking in philosophy and psychology as well as with action research on ‘artistic projects’ in schools and university. Keywords knowledge, reflection and creation, artistic project, freedom and dignity, images and identity › Freedom and dignity Identity through creation, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 309-326. Matthew Bushell University of Northampton, School of the Arts, Park Campus, Boughton Green Road, Northampton, NN2 7AL, United Kingdom Matthew Bushell served three years in the British Army and has just completed a BA in Creative Writing at the University of Northampton. He has also been a director of a local arts organization, project manager for a local participatory arts project and a rehabilitation support worker for people with acquired brain injury. › Reviews, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 223-231. Keywords creative writing, rehabilitation support Pavel Büchler Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester School of Art, Righton Building, Cavendish Street, Manchester, M15 6BG, United Kingdom An artist, teacher and occasional writer, Pavel Büchler is Research Professor in Fine Art at Manchester Metropolitan University. He was a co-founder of the Cambridge Darkroom Gallery, and Head of School of Fine Art at Glasgow School of Art. He writes on contemporary art, photography, film and art education, has co-edited several anthologies of critical writing, and is the author of Ghost Stories: Stray Thoughts on Photography and Film (Proboscis, 1999). Keywords art, film, education, photography › Live view, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 14-17. Chris Byrne Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design, The School of Media Arts & Imaging, University of Dundee, Dundee, DD1 4HT, United Kingdom Keywords digital, networks, hypertext, writing Chris Byrne is a Lecturer at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design, Dundee. Until 2010 he was co-director of ARC Projects (Sofia, Bulgaria), which represented artists from Bulgaria, Bosnia, Estonia, Serbia, Slovenia and the United Kingdom. From 1999 to 2004, he was the founding Director of New Media Scotland, where he curated and organized numerous projects, exhibitions, performances and residencies with artists across Scotland and internationally. Byrne’s main practice as a curator and researcher over the past decade has been focussed on networked and collaborative art practices, Internet art, sound and performance. He has also continued his long-standing interest in moving image media, in particular, video art and experimental film. More recently, he has rediscovered an enthusiasm for artworks experimenting with traditional media: painting, drawing, sculpture and print. › Holding a mirror to ourselves: how digital networks chAng writiN, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 265-277. Joel Cahen United Kingdom Keywords gnostic, sound composing, codes, metaphysics, co-evolution Since 2001, Joel Cahen has worked as sound designer on a number of installations, films, theatre and dance productions. He collaborated with video artist Julian Ronnefeldt and performance artist Lennie Lee and with members of The Black Poodle at Tate Britain. As an experimental film-maker, Busbug was awarded first prize at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 2005 as well as best short film at Shortcuts 2005. His films have been shown at numerous film festivals throughout Europe. He has curated a series of experimental art and music events in London since 2002, including ‘Evil Art’ at the 291 Gallery and ‘The Wormhole Saloon’ at The Whitechapel Gallery. He has a fortnightly show on Resonance fm called TheSaturdayNightMashUp, and has worked as a DJ in London, Berlin, New York and Limerick. › Tech Art: the effects of code and network systems on music and art, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 185-198. Gordon Calleja IT University of Copenhagen, Center for Computer Games Research, Rued Langaards Vej 7, Copenhagen S, DK2300, Denmark Keywords digitality, hypertext, nonlinearity, posthumanism, rhizome, Massively Multiplayer Online Games Gordon Calleja is Associate Professor and the Head of the Center for Computer Games Research at the IT University of Copenhagen. He also lectures in Game Theory. He has published in various journals of gaming and technology studies, and in 2011 published a book, InGame: From Immersion to Incorporation. His work takes an interdisciplinary approach to theoretical issues in Virtual Reality, bringing together neuropsychology, philosophy of mind and the theoretical humanities to explore how technologies of the virtual are reconfiguring the imagination. › Rhizomatic cyborgs: hypertextual considerations in a posthuman age, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.1, 3-16. › Techno-mediated otherworlds, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 129-140. Ben Calvert University of Gloucestershire, School of Art, Media and Design, Pitville Campus, Albert Road, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, GL52 3JG, United Kingdom Ben Calvert is Field Chair in Media Communications at the University of Gloucestershire. His academic background is in the social sciences and his doctorate was a study of the popular financial press in Britain during the 1980s. He has taught on media studies undergraduate and postgraduate programmes, and has recently published work on television studies. Keywords supervision, media studies, practice, theory, collaboration › Supporting and assessing dissertations and practical projects in media studies degrees: towards collaborative learning, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 47-60. Sheena Calvert University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, AL10 9AB, United Kingdom Keywords language, philosophy, photography, avant-garde book arts, dada, logic Sheena Calvert, BA, MFA, lectures in Critical and Cultural studies at the University of Hertfordshire [UH], UK. She holds a BA in design and typography from the Central St. Martins School of Art, and her MFA was gained at Yale University in the USA. She has taught at the University of Massachusetts, Rutgers University, NJ, and at various UK art and design institutions. Currently, she is an AHRC Doctorate Award holder, in the third year of a Ph.D. project within the School of Humanities at the University of Greenwich, entitled: 'In Other Words: A Poetics of Material Language'. Her Ph.D. research investigates the relationship between material language and various philosophies of language: engaging with both analytic and postmodern traditions in philosophy. Other interests include various avant-garde and experimental forms of typography and book arts, poetry, modern architecture (and its discontents), Surrealism, dada, and, more recently, logic. › Recent PhD Abstracts, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 241-245. Minacha Camino University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, United Kingdom Keywords qualitative research, design, fine art, reflective practice, practice and theory Minacha Camino is currently a Lecturer in Critical Studies. She has also published papers for various journals and conferences. Her article in the Journal of Writing and Creative Practice forms part of the preliminary research for Camino’s doctoral dissertation entitled ‘Critical Studies and the generation of text issue: synthesis of practice and theory’. › An examination of the Journal used as a vehicle to bring about a synthesis between theory and practice in Art and Design higher education, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 317-340. David Campany University of Westminster, Media Art and Design, Watford Road, London, HA1 3TP, United Kingdom Keywords art, photography, philosophy David Campany teaches at the University of Westminster, where he is a Reader in Photography. He writes and curates extensively. His books include Art and Photography (Phaidon Press, 2003) and Photography and Cinema (Reaktion Books, 2008). His essays have appeared in The Oxford Art Journal, Frieze, Source, Papel Alpha, Photoworks, AA Files, Tate Magazine, Art Review, , , Ojodepez and Aperture. He is Coeditor of magazine. › Drink the wine, discard the bottle, then drink something else, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 18-21. Cyril Camus University of Toulouse, Département d'Etudes du Monde Anglophone, Tournefeuille, France Keywords literature, popular fiction, myth, graphic novels Cyril Camus is a Ph.D. student and a teaching assistant at the University of Toulouse. His thesis deals with myth and popular fiction writing, through the study of Neil Gaiman’s novels, comics and screenplays. Apart from the Magus conference, his research papers on Gaiman, Moore, comics and fantasy fiction have been published or are to be published in the book Mountains Figured and Disfigured in the English-Speaking World (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2010) and in the journals Otrante: Art et littérature fantastiques (Editions Kimé, autumn 2010 issue) and Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies (Purdue UP, winter 2011 issue). › Neil Gaiman: A portrait of the artist as a disciple of Alan Moore, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 147-157. Susan Carden The Glasgow School of Art, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, G3 6RQ, United Kingdom Keywords art, textiles, technology, practice-led research Susan Carden is a full-time Ph.D. candidate within the Centre for Advanced Textiles at the Glasgow School of Art. A textile designer, whose practice combines craft, structured and digitally printed textiles, her practice-led research explores the use of craft practices as interventions in the digital printing of textiles. She has recently presented at a number of international conferences. › Digitally printed textiles: A number of specifi c issues surrounding research, Craft Research, 2.1, 83-95. Lindsey Carey Lindsey Carey, a lecturer at Glasgow Caledonian University obtained her Ph.D. in the area of consumer psychology and decision-making. Glasgow Caledonian University Her research interests lie in the areas of consumer behaviour and motivations, ethical consumption, eco-fashion, and value-clothing. Keywords › Consumers' perceptions of 'green': Why and how consumers use eco-fashion and green beauty products, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 117138. Bernadette Casey University College Plymouth St. Marks and St. John, School of Creative Arts, Communications and Management, Derriford Road, Plymouth, PL6 8BH, United Kingdom Bernadette Casey is Dean of the School of Creative Arts, Communications and Management and lectures in media studies and sociology at the College of St Mark and St John, Plymouth. Her academic background is in sociology/cultural studies and her doctorate was an ethnographic study of an arts centre. She has taught for many years in sociology and media studies and has published in both disciplines. Keywords supervision, media studies, practice, theory, collaboration › Supporting and assessing dissertations and practical projects in media studies degrees: towards collaborative learning, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 47-60. Laura Borràs Castanyer Universitat de Barcelona, Comparative Literature and Literary Theory, Barcelona, Spain Keywords literary theory, digital literature, distance learning Laura Borràs Castanyer, Ph.D. in Romance Philology (1997) from the UB, has attained the qualification of European Doctor (1997) and has been awarded the Special Ph.D. Prize (1998) in Social Sciences at the same university. She is an associate professor on Comparative Literature and Literary Theory at the University of Barcelona. She devoted the last 12 years to develop the Open and Distance Learning (ODL) on the literary field –mainly on Comparative Literature and Digital Literature as well. Member of the Literary Advisory Board of the ELO, from 2000, she directs and is the main investigator of the International Research Group HERMENEIA, made up of professors and investigators from various European and American universities, whose mission is to study connections between Literary Studies and Digital Technologies. › From ‘words, words, words’ to ‘birds, birds, birds’. Literature between the representation and the presentation: where imagination and reflection still, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 107-120. Carlos Castellanos Simon Fraser University, School of Interactive Arts, 250-13450 102 Avenue, Surrey, BC, V3T 0A3, Canada Keywords phenomenology, embodiment, symbiogenesis, coevolution, artificial intelligence Carlos Castellanos is an interdisciplinary artist and researcher. His research and art practice focus on networks, artificial intelligence, human-computer interaction and cultural theory. He was a National Science Foundation IGERT fellow in Interactive Digital Multimedia and a California State University Sally Casanova Pre-doctoral Scholar. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. at the School of Interactive Arts and Technology, Simon Fraser University, where he is exploring the aesthetics of information technologies and their effects on lived embodied human experience. Castellanos splits his time between Vancouver and San Francisco. › The symbiogenic experience: towards a framework for understanding human–machine coupling in the interactive arts, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 11-18. Oron Catts Dept Anatomy and Human Biology, University of Western Australia, 35 Crawley Avenue, Nedlands, WA 6009, Australia Keywords tissue culture, art, organisms Oron Catts is Artistic Director of SymbioticA, artist/researcher and curator. He founded the Tissue Culture and Art Project (TC&A) in 1996 and is co-founder and Artistic Director of SymbioticA - The Art & Science Collaborative Research Laboratory at The School of Anatomy & Human Biology, University of Western Australia. He is curator of Biofeel exhibition and The Aesthetics of Care? Symposium, 2002 and BioDifferences BEAP 2004 and a research Fellow at the Tissue Engineering & Organ Fabrication Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School (2000-2001). He trained in product design (BA, Honours), and Visual Art (MA) and has exhibited, published and conducted workshops of his own work as well as the work of SymbioticA internationally. › Are the Semi-Living semi-good or semi-evil?, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.1, 47-60. Clive Cazeaux University of Wales Institute, School of Art and Design, Howard Gardens, Cardiff, CF24 0SP, United Kingdom Keywords sense perception, MerleauPonty, cognition, phenomenology, aesthetics Clive Cazeaux is Reader in Aesthetics at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff. He is the author of Metaphor and Continental Philosophy: From Kant to Derrida (Routledge, 2007) and the editor of The Continental Aesthetics Reader (2nd edition; Routledge, 2011). He has also written articles on metaphor, the philosophy of visual arts research, and the relation between art and philosophy. › Categories in action: Sartre and the theory-practice debate, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 44-56. › From sensation to categorization: aesthetic metaphor in Locke and Merleau- Ponty, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 111-124. › Inherently interdisciplinary: four perspectives on practice-based research, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.2, 107-132. Catalina Cepeda Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan, Facultad de Ingeneria Chemica, Av Juarez 421, Cuidad Industrial, Apdo. Postal 1226-A, Merida, Yucatan, Mexico Catalina Cepeda is Professor at the Autonomous University of Yucatan, Mexico, commissioned by the Spanish Agency of International Cooperation. She has a Ph.D. in Biology and researches the intersection between art and science. She designs science education materials in collaboration with visual artists and runs lectures and workshops. She has taken art courses and is currently learning traditional Mexican crafts skills. Keywords science, education, art, DNA, genetics › Art in science education: Creative visions of DNA by engineering students, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 37-42. António Cerveira Pinto R. Alberto Oliviera, Palacio Corecheus, At. 27, Lisboa, 1700-019, Portugal Keywords emergence, syncretism, transvergence, teleonomy, symmetry António Cerveira Pinto is an artist, writer and professional consultant, presently futurizing the world after the cheap oil era. Founder and director of the legendary Quadrum Contemporary Art Gallery in Lisbon, and of the art school Aula do Risco, both in Lisbon, he created – among countless projects – the Great Estuary Project, to transform Lisbon into a biocity in 2020. Post-contemporary culture and cognitive arts are his specific fields of investigation and creativity. › Deep thought: an account of The Spirit of Discovery conference at Trancoso, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 105-108. Marie-Cécile Cervellon International University of Monaco, International University of Monaco, 2 bd Albert II, 98000 Monte-Carlo, Principality of Monaco Marie-Cécile Cervellon holds a Ph.D. from McGill University, Montreal, Canada. She is Associate Professor of Marketing at the International University of Monaco. Her research interests focus on consumer behaviour and misbehaviour related to the luxury and fashion industries, as well as to ethical and green consumption. Keywords › Consumers' perceptions of 'green': Why and how consumers use eco-fashion and green beauty products, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 117138. Simon Chadwick Glasgow School of Art, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, United Kingdom Keywords architecture, crit, critical distance, critical review, design studio Simon Chadwick teaches full time at the Mackintosh School of Architecture. He is currently completing a Postgraduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching in Art, Design and Education. His desire for an improved review system has been fuelled from a theoretical standpoint gained through his practice, teaching and research. Following a successful bid for funding through the Glasgow School of Art Learning and Teaching opportunity, his research has been recognized and supported by the Mackintosh School. › Mutual respect: working towards a modern review model, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 145-152. Brian Chalkley Chelsea College of Art and Design University of the Arts London, 16 John Islip Street, Millbank, London, SW1P 4JU, United Kingdom Keywords Postgraduate Diploma courses, crossovers, curating, learning, teaching strategy Brian Chalkley is Course Director of the MA Fine Art programme and Postgraduate Forum Leader at the Chelsea College of Art & Design, University of the Arts, London. Brian studied at Chelsea College of Art (1970–73) then went on to study at Slade School of Art (1973–75). He has taught in art schools across the United Kingdom at Foundation/BA/MA level since leaving college, and in 1989 he received the Rome Award at the British School at Rome. Brian took up a full-time teaching post at Chelsea in 1991 and was Course Director for the Postgraduate Diploma Course at Chelsea 2000–2006. Brian’s own art practice deals with issues of gender and identity through photography, painting and performance. His recent work was shown at the 2007 Venice Biennale and Frieze Art fair. › Learning in groups: the student experience in Postgraduate Diplomas of Fine Art, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.2, 117-132. Katherine Champion University of Abertay, Department of Urban Studies, Dundee Business School, Tayside, Dundee, DD1 1HG, United Kingdom Keywords Greater Manchester, economic restructuring, industrial location, gentrification, creative industries Katherine Champion is a research assistant in Dundee Business School at the University of Abertay, Dundee. She is currently working on an ESRC funded business engagement project exploring the management challenges facing SMEs in the digital media industries, with a partner firm from the computer games sector. She has recently completed her Ph.D. thesis at the Department of Urban Studies, University of Glasgow which focused on the ways in which space and place matter to the creative industries sector with a case study of selected firms within Greater Manchester. › Hobson's choice? Constraints on accessing spaces of creative production in a transforming industrial conurbation, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 11-28. Jacqueline Chanda College of Fine Arts, Music Buildng, Room 111, P.O. Box 21004, Tucson, Arizona, AZ 85721, United States of America Keywords art history, interdisciplinarity, African art, learning, technology Jacqueline Chanda is Professor of Art Education and Art History and Associate Dean of the College of Fine Arts at the University of Arizona. She obtained her BA in drawing and painting from the University of California at Los Angeles, her MA in Art Education and Ph.D. in African Art History from the Sorbonne University in Paris, France. She is the author of three published books, African Arts and Cultures, Discovering African Art, and Harcourt’s Art Everywhere (coauthored). Her research interests focus on issues of pedagogy and cognition, teaching art history and non-western art in primary and secondary educational environments. › Learning from images: a source of interdisciplinary knowledge, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 7-18. Robin M. Chandler Northeastern University, Department of African American Studies, 132 Nightingale Hall, Boston, MA, 2115, United States of America Keywords cultural identity, pedagogy, race awareness, museums, visual representation Dr. Robin Chandler has been a professional artist for more than 30 years, exhibiting in the United States and abroad and has a portfolio in the visual arts. An interdisciplinary scholar in sociology, Chandler is a known as 'the people's sociologist' by the media, especially on arts, culture, and gender issues. As a Fulbight scholar and Fulbright Specialist she has conducted field research and community projects, and taught and lectured in South America, Africa, Latin America, the Carribean, Australia, Asia and the United States. She is an associate professor in Northeastern University's College of Social Sciences and Humanities. She is a widely published author and has been a consultant to numerous museums, governments, and corporations. › Colorquest©: A museum pedagogy on ethnic self-identity, representation and cultural histories at the Boston MFA, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.3, 173-184. Shaun Chang China Youth University, Journalism Department, E308, 46 Fangjia Hutong, Dongcheng District, Beijing, 100007, China Keywords cultural industries, creative industries, cultural industry reforms, International Creative Industries Alliance Beijing (ICIA) Shaun Chang is the former project director of the International Creative Industries Alliance Beijing (ICIA) and founder of the wenhua industry website. She is currently a lecturer at the School of Journalism and Communication at China Youth University and Communication University of China, Beijing. Shaun Chang has published two books in Chinese in China, Fans are Powerful and A Glimpse of Taiwan Military Villages by Enrich Culture. Shaun Chang runs a production company which produces documentaries for National Geographic Channel and Discovery in Beijing. The comapny is called Infocus Asia China, www.infocusasia.com. › Great expectations: China's cultural industry and case study of a governmentsponsored creative cluster, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 263273. Caroline Chapain University of Birmingham, Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, Birmingham Business School, J. G. Smith Building, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom Keywords creative industries, cultural and creative clusters, creative citizenship, innovation, creative class, local and regional development, public policies Dr. Caroline Chapain is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Urban and Regional Studies at the University of Birmingham. Her main research interests include local and regional economic development, creative industries, digital cities, economic restructuring and plant closure and public policies. Caroline has been involved in a variety of projects looking at creative industries at the local, national and European levels. She is one of the coordinators of the RSA Research Network on Creative Regions. › Drivers and Processes of Creative Industries in Cities and Regions, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 9-18. › Location, location, location: exploring the complex relationship between creative industries and place, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 5-10. J. J. Charlesworth Tate Britain, London J. J. Charlesworth is a freelance critic and associate editor of Art Review magazine. › Doug Fishbone: Elmina, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 99-101. Keywords Jane Charlton York St John University, Faculty of Art, Lord Mayor's Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords student needs, fine art, text-based outcomes Jane Charlton is Senior Lecturer in Fine Arts at York St John University with 21 years of experience teaching undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in Higher Education. Charlton is an artist with recent residencies in Australia, Italy and Cyprus (April 2008) having developed partnerships with seven European universities including external examiner and supervisor of research students from University Suor Orsola, Naples and Monash University. She has experience of national and international projects, course and curriculum development and is committed to enhancing the teaching and learning experience of others and to personal and professional development. Charlton was awarded University Teaching fellow status in 2007/8. › ‘Behind the lines and lines and lines’: student studio solutions to projects that facilitate the exploration of visual and textual languages within fine arts practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 237-259. Kim Charnley Plymouth College of Arts Kim Charnley is a Ph.D. researcher studying the role of theory in politicized art practice. After graduating in fine art he worked for eight years in an art education project based in Portland Square, Bristol. He now teaches at Plymouth College of Art. Keywords theory, practice, arts, education › Dissensus and the politics of collaborative practice, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 37-54. Veena Chattaraman Auburn University, Department of Consumer Affairs, Auburn, AL 36849, United States of America Keywords art, design, marketing, research, apparel, textiles, education Veena Chattaraman is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Consumer Affairs at Auburn University, USA. She received her Ph.D. from the Department of Consumer Sciences at the Ohio State University. Her expertise lies in product and marketing research with an applied emphasis on the apparel industry. She has presented several papers on the pedagogy of teaching and learning, particularly as it relates to the discipline of design at the conferences of the International Textile and Apparel Association. The topics have ranged from scenario-based projects in design to the application of action-learning projects in undergraduate and graduate education. › Action learning: Application to case study development in graduate design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 183-198. Helen J. Chatterjee University College London, Room G17, UCL Wolfson House, 4 Stephenson Way, London, NW1 2HE, United Kingdom Helen Chatterjee is Deputy Director of Museums and Collections and Senior Lecturer in Biological Sciences at University College London. Her research interests include touch and the value of object handling in health and wellbeing, and its pedagogical function in education. › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords education, object handling, touch Laura Chessin Virginia Commonwealth University, 325 North Harrison Street, Room 332/ Box 843085, Richmond, Virginia, 23284-3085, United States of America Laura Chessin is a Professor of Graphic Design at Virginia Commonwealth University. She teaches courses in publication design and typography and documentary studies. Projects include photo documentation of industries native to Virginia, inter-generational traditions of women in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, and a project that address safe shelters from domestic violence. She is a student of classical violin and plays traditional American fiddle music. Keywords sustainability, interdisciplinary, dialogue › A closer look at listening: interdisciplinarity and the varieties of languages employed in the conveyance of problem and solution, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.1, 19-29. Danielle Child University of Leeds Keywords labour, art, education Danielle Child is a Ph.D. candidate and teaching assistant in the School of Fine Art, History of Art and Cultural Studies, University of Leeds. She is currently writing her Ph.D. thesis on ‘Socialised Labour under Change: Collaboration, Contracted Labour and Collective Modes of Production in Art since the 1960s’. › REVIEWS, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 85-. Lloyd Chilvers Roehampton University, Media, Culture and Language, Roehampton University, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PU, United Kingdom Keywords economics, marketing, education Lloyd Chilvers is Academic Learning Support Assistant for the BA Media and Culture, BA Journalism and News Media and MA Media, Culture and Identity programmes at Roehampton University. He is a graduate of Roehampton’s MA Media and Cultural Studies programme and has particular interest in student support in the subject area. Lloyd trained as an economist, and holds a BA Economics from Kingston Polytechnic and an MSc Economics from the London School of Economics. After a spell with a leading business research consultancy, he gained an MBA from Kingston before working as an independent marketing research consultant and business writer. › Learning support: Student perceptions and preferences, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 135-149. Tara Chittenden The Law Society Tara Chittenden is a socio-legal researcher in the Research Unit of the Law Society, London. Her Ph.D., undertaken at the Institute of Education, University of London, examined strategies used to interpret Keywords teen identity, teen media, sexuality, art, cinematic languages, blogs the body of a virtual reality mummy displayed at the British Museum. Prior to her current employment she worked at the British Museum and at Torquay Museum, Devon. She initially trained as a sculptor. Her research interests include: practices of interpretation, teen identity, teen media cultures and media interventions at museums and heritage sites. › Sexing up the secondary art curriculum: a strategy for discussing Robert Mapplethorpe’s photographs of S&M and the black male nude in art classrooms, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 157-167. Isabelle Choinière University of Plymouth -U.K., Arts and Media, 1441 Cuvillier, Montréal, Province of Québec, H1W 2Z9, Canada Keywords eroticism, performativity, dance, interconnectivity, consciousness, spiritual, perception, somatic, technology, exteroception In spring 2005, Isabelle Choinière began a doctorate at the Center for Advanced Inquiry in the Integrative Arts (CAiiA) affiliated with Plymouth University in England, under the co-supervision of Roy Ascott, founder and director of the Planetary Collegium, Enrico Pizotti, from the department of performance and music at Bologna University, and Armando Minicacci, from the department of dance at the University Paris VIII. Founder and director of Corps Indice in Montreal, Canada (a company working with the relationship between dance/performance and technology), Choinière’s artistic approach integrates the interrelationship of disciplines and the questioning of each of their own forms of writing. Her research looks at the ways in which the infiltration of technological thought in the contemporary performative scene may find applications in the development of new performative models. › Eroticism, the sacred and philosophies of modern physics; the body as a catalyser of meaning, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.1, 27-38. Veronique Chossat Centre de Recherche OMI (E.A. 2065), UFR Sciences Économiques et Gestion, 57 bis, rue Pierre Taittinger, 51096 Reims Cedex, France Véronique Chossat is Assistant Professor in Economics at the University of Reims, France. She specializes in the cultural economics field and has published several articles on the gastronomic topic. She won the President’s Prize of the ACEI (Association for Cultural Economics International) in 2002 for an article analysing the role of experts in the definition of the gastronomic quality. Keywords creativity, author's right, copyright, gastronomy, cultural good › Questioning the author's right protection for gastronomic creations: Opportunities versus possibilities of implementation, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 129-142. Martha Christopoulou Keywords Greece, primary, art education, visual culture Martha Christopoulou is an art educator working currently in a primary school in Athens, Greece. Her research interests lie in art and visual (media) culture education, critical pedagogy and reflective practice. She is interested in developing art/visual culture curricula that could enable generalist and art teachers to include and teach about children’s visual and aesthetic experiences in art lessons. › Introducing visual culture education into Greek primary schools: a curriculum intervention, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 97-107. Georgia Kakourou Chroni Coumantaros Art Galler, Branch of the National Gallery, Paleologou and Thermopylon, Sparta 231 00, 231 00, Greece Keywords Greece, Israel, war, peace, visual communication Georgia Kakourou Chroni is curator of the National Gallery of Greece and is responsible for the Sparta Branch of the National Gallery, the ‘Coumantaros Art Gallery’. She graduated from the University of Athens School of Philosophy, is a Doctor of Philosophy from the same university and she holds a Masters degree in Museum Studies from the University of Leicester. She was awarded a Fulbright Foundation scholarship. She teaches Museology and Education and Civilization at the University of the Peloponnese and the Hellenic Open University. Her main research areas are modern Greek art and museum education. She is the author of six books and numerous articles. › Getting to know one another through drawing, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 131-139. Eu Jin Chua Unitec Institute of Technology Eu Jin Chua directs the postgraduate programme at the Unitec school of design and visual arts in New Zealand and is also a doctoral student at the London Consortium, University of London. Keywords › The film-work recomposed into nature: from art to noise in four minutes and thirty-three seconds, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 8996. Wei-Chung Chuo Wei-Chung lives and works in London. He has studied Architecture at the Chaoyang University of Technology and Fine Art at Da-Yeh University, both in Taiwan. He recently finished his MArch (Architectural Design) at The Bartlett Faculty of the Built Keywords Environment, University College London. › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. Matteo Ciastellardi University of Milan, Via Festa del Perdono, 7, Milan, 20122, Italy Keywords tangible media, electronic margin, bar codes, connected design Matteo Ciastellardi has a Ph.D. in Industrial Design and Multimedia Communication (Polytechnic University of Milan) and a Bachelor’s in Theoretical Philosophy (University of Studies of Milan, 2005). He is Tutor of Media Theory and Criticism (Master in Methodology for Information and Communication in Humanistic Science, University of the Studies of Milano, 2003–2005) and Assistant Professor, University of Studies of Milano, Hermes_Net Laboratory. He is currently developing the projects Universal Margin and The Era of Tag. › The world as wide web: following codes to access knowledge-lands, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 173-179. Tommaso Cinti Università degli Studi di Siena, Facoltà di Economia, Piazza S. Francesco 7, Siena, Italy Keywords local system governance, inter-organizational relations, governance-specific factors, social network analysis, museums Tommaso Cinti Ph.D., is Lecturer in Economics and Management of Enterprises, Faculty of Economics, University of Siena. He has been a visiting student at the Université Paris, 1 Sorbonne, and at the University of Seville. His research interests deal with creative industries, local development, cultural cluster and districts, innovation and technology transfer. › Governance-specific Factors and Cultural Clusters: The Case of the Museum Clusters in Florence, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 19-35. Gerald Cipriani Kyushu University Keywords philosophy of culture, aesthetics, visual arts, ethical phenomenology, dialogical studies East/West, Kyoto School Gerald Cipriani is of Corsican Irish origins. He studied Western aesthetics with a doctoral scholarship in Leeds (LMU) and East Asian philosophy in London (SOAS). Between 1993 and 2009, he taught the philosophy of culture, aesthetics and art theory in Leeds, Birmingham, Tokyo, and Taipei. He was a Japan Society for the Promotion of Science award winner and British Academy Fellow at Kyoto University in 2004-2005. He was a Visiting Scholar at the University of Helsinki, Finland, in 2010, invited as a Fellow to Giessen University, Germany, and has been consultant, editor and reviewer for several publishers, including Routledge, Continuum, Springer, Lexington Books and Airiti Press. He now holds a full professorship at Kyushu University, Japan. He has published widely in the fields of phenomenology, hermeneutics, ethics, education, art studies, dialogical philosophy, French poststructuralism and the Kyoto School. He is the founding chief editor of Culture and, with Arto Haapala, of the journal of philosophy › Beyond the institutional site and the ethos of the void: the relevance of Gabriel Marcel's Creative Fidelity, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 167176. Alissa Clarke De Montfort University, Department of Performance and Digital Arts, Faculty of Humanities, Clephan Building, Leicester, Leicestershire, LE1 9BH, United Kingdom Keywords psychophysical, performer training, Phillip Zarrilli, Sandra Reeve, mistakes/failure Alissa Clarke has recently completed her AHRC-funded Ph.D. in the Department of Drama at the University of Exeter where she has also been working as a teaching assistant. Her thesis is entitled ‘Writing through the Body: Exploring Embodied Performative Processes of Writing About Psychophysical Performer Trainings’. Alissa has been practising Phillip Zarrilli’s psychophysical performer training since 2002, and has been involved with Sandra Reeve’s ‘Move into Life’ work since 2005. Her research interests include: psychophysical performance and performer training, feminist and gender theory and performance practice, and documentation of performance. › ‘Advance error by error, with erring steps’: embracing and exploring mistakes and failure across the psychophysical performer training space and the page1, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 193-208. James Edward Clayson American University of Paris, 85, rue de Mauberge, Paris, 7510, France Keywords constructionism, liberal arts, logo, visual thinking, visual modeling James Clayson has been Professor of Applied Mathematics at the American University of Paris for 25 years. He has also taught at the Paris campus of Parsons School of Design and co-directed the Lacoste School of Art in the south of France for many years. He discovered teaching after having had a career in management consulting and operational research in California. He is interested in developing undergraduate courses that integrate visual thinking, computer explorations, public speaking and journal writing into traditional mathematics courses. In addition he is an advocate of George Kelly’s Personal Construct Psychology and uses constructionist approaches to build a common language and learning community within his classroom. The shared building experience is especially meaningful where students come from more than 100 different countries, speak a great number of languages and have passed through many different kinds of educational institutions. › Radical bricolage: building coherence in the liberal arts using art modelling and language, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 141-161. Paul Clements Keywords cultural intermediary, hegemony, instrumentalism, legitimacy, public sphere Paul Clements has worked with excluded constituencies in a cultural capacity for over twenty years. He has written about social/cultural exclusion, community and public art as well as wider cultural issues in academic journals and lectures part-time at Goldsmiths College University of London, for the Open University and as a visiting lecturer at London Metropolitain University. › Public art: radical, functional or democratic methodologies?, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.1, 19-35. Teena Clerke University of Technology, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, P.O. Box 1090 Strawberry Hills, Sydney, New South Wales, 2010, Australia Keywords gender, practice, publication, design, women Teena Clerke has worked as a Graphic designer since 1987, focusing on community cultural development and design for social change. She has participated in solo and group art exhibitions, and has work represented in private collections in Australia and internationally. Clerke has lectured in design since 1994, currently lectures in design at the University of Sydney, and is a doctoral intern at the University of Technology, Sydney, lecturing in adult education. Her doctoral research investigates the experiences of women design academics, and she has published in the areas of design education, doctoral education, feminist qualitative research writing and cultural studies. › Gender and discipline: publication practices in design, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 63-78. Antonia Clews Bath Spa University, Newton Park, Newton St Loe, Bath, BA2 9BN, United Kingdom Antonia Clews is an educational researcher and developer. She works at Artswork, the Centre for Teaching and Learning in the Creative Industries (CETL) and the Centre for Learning and Teaching Development, at Bath Spa University. She uses participatory and visual techniques to inform policy on arts education. Keywords education, arts, visual media, research and development › And I also teach: The professional development of teaching creatives, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.3, 265-278. Sheila Cliffe Jumonji Gakuen Women's University, Saitama, Japan Keywords Internet, globalization, orientalism, fashion, kimono Sheila Cliffe is a graduate of Temple University of Japan and teaches English, and kimono and fashion at Jumonji Gakuen Women’s University in Japan. She is an avid kimono collector as well as a researcher and dyer of kimono. She is working towards a Ph.D. on this topic at the University of Leeds. She lives in Tokyo with her three children. › Revisioning the kimono, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 217-231. Stephen Clift Canterbury Christ Church University, Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts & Health, University Centre Folkestone, Mill Bay, Folkestone, CT20 1JG, United Kingdom Keywords older people, health, group singing, Stephen Clift is Professor of Health Education within the department of Health, Wellbeing and the Family at Canterbury Christ Church University. He has made contributions to health education and promotion in the fields of HIV/AIDS and sex education for young people, international travel and tourism, and evaluation of the Health Promoting School. His current interests are focused on the contributions of the arts and music to healthcare and health promotion. Together with Grenville Hancox, Professor of Music at Christ Church University, he has recently established the Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts and Health. › Choral singing and psychological wellbeing: Quantitative and qualitative findings from English choirs in a cross-national survey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 19-34. › The Silver Song Club Project: A sense of well-being through participatory singing, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 165-178. Nick Clifton University of Wales Institute Cardiff (UWIC), Cardiff School of Management, CSM Building, Western Avenue, Llandaff, Cardiff, CF5 2YB, United Kingdom Nick Clifton is a Reader in Economic Geography and Regional Development at the Cardiff School of Management, UWIC. Nick’s main research interests lie in the fields of regional economics, small business and entrepreneurship, networks, business strategy, innovation and creativity. › Creative knowledge workers and location in Europe and North America: a comparative review, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 73-89. Keywords knowledge economy, location, economy outcomes, creative regions, research network, Regional Studies Association › Second seminar of the Regional Studies Association Research Network on Creative Industries and the Regions – Creative industries, scenes, cities, places: idiosyncratic dimensions of the cultural economy, April 2009, Cardiff, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 113-115. › Location, location, location: exploring the complex relationship between creative industries and place, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 5-10. Jane Coad The University of the West of England, The Centre for Child and Adolescent Health, Frenchay Campus, Coldharbour Lane, Bristol, United Kingdom Keywords health, social care, genetic information, photography, young people Jane Coad is a Senior Research Fellow (Post Doctoral) in The Centre for Child and Adolescent Health, The University of the West of England and Honorary Senior Research Fellow in a DH funded project known as FamilyTalk; (Communicating Genetic Information across Families) at The University of Birmingham. Jane undertakes participatory research with children and young people in a variety of health and social care settings using a range of qualitative research methods both locally in Bristol and Birmingham but also nationally. Her current research projects include engaging children and families in research around communicating genetic information; using photography to explore young people’s perceptions of health and lives, memories of paediatric intensive care unit and the effects of early arts on young children’s health and development. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. Rebecca Coates Rebecca Coates is a Melbourne-based independent curator, writer and lecturer. She is Associate Curator at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art and is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Melbourne. Keywords curator, writer, lecturer › REVIEWS, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 85-. Emma Cocker Nottingham Trent University, Visual Arts (Fine Art), Bonington Building, Dryden Street, Nottingham, NG1 4GG, United Kingdom Keywords wandering, failure, performance, stillness, rehearsal Emma Cocker is a writer based in Sheffield and Senior Lecturer in Fine Art at Nottingham Trent University. Operating under the title ‘Not Yet There’, her writing and research (often developed dialogically through conversations with other artists) interrogates the critical and creative potential within experiences or conditions such as failure, doubt, deferral, uncertainty, boredom, hesitation, indecision, immobility and inconsistency, by exploring models of practice - and subjectivity which resist or refuse the pressure of a single or stable position by remaining willfully unresolved. Cocker has written essays for various exhibition catalogues, publications and journals including The Art Book, a-n, Frieze, drain, Dance Theatre Journal, engage, m/c, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice and artandresearch. Recent book chapters include Performing Stillness – Community in Waiting’, in Stillness in a Mobile World (Routledge, 2011),‘The Restless Line, Drawing’Hyperdrawing: Beyond the Lines of Contemporary Art › Pay attention to the footnotes, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 139-150. Monika Codourey Keywords society and technology, surveillance, biometrics, cross-border circulation, deterritorialization Monika Codourey is an architect. In 2006 she founded Monika Codourey Architekt, a Zurich-based studio for architectural and communication design, strategies, conceptual projects and research. With an international network of collaborators, the studio is involved in architectural design and realisation, media installations, communication design, strategic planning and consulting. She is also a researcher at the Zurich Node of the Planetary Collegium. › Mobile identities, technology and the socio-spatial relations of air travel, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 99-111. Marjorie Cohee Manifold Indiana University, Bloomington, Curriculum & Instruction, 201 N. Rose Avenue, Bloomington, Indiana, 47403, United States of America Keywords adolescents, cultural communities, craft, fan art, media culture Marjorie Cohee Manifold is Associate Professor of Art Education in the Curriculum and Instruction Department, School of Education, Indiana University. Her responsibilities include teaching art methods courses in the art teacher certification program, presenting professional development workshops for pre-service and in-service K-12 teachers, instructing graduate seminars in art education, and directing graduate thesis and dissertations. Professor Manifold is currently President of the United States Society for Education Through Art (USSEA) and a North American World Councilor to the International Society for Education Through Art (InSEA) an affiliate organization of UNESCO. Members of USSEA and InSEA advocate forms of education that nurture life-affirming imagination, creativity, tolerance, appreciation and respect among all people. › Fanart as craft and the creation of culture, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 7-21. Neil Cohn Psychology Department, Tufts University, 490 Boston Avenue, Medford,, MA 02155, United States of America Neil Cohn researches the relationship of graphic expression – particularly the visual language used in ‘comics’ – with language and cognition. He has spoken on this topic internationally, and has authored numerous articles and a book, Early Writings on Visual Language (Emaki Productions, 2003). As an illustrator, his graphic book (with author Thom Hartmann) We the People: A Call to Take Back America Keywords visual language, panels, time, temporal map (CoreWay Media, 2004), addresses the pervasive influence of corporations on American government. Neil is currently a graduate student in psychology at Tufts University, where he has taught courses on the relationship of comics to language and the mind. He received a BA in Asian Studies from the University of California, Berkeley, studied in Japan at Tsuru University, and holds an MA in social science from the University of Chicago. His work can be found online at www.emaki.net. › The limits of time and transitions: challenges to theories of sequential image comprehension, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 127-147. Paul Coldwell Keywords practice-based research, fine art Paul Coldwell is Professor of Fine Art at the University of the Arts London, a position he has held since 2001. He contributes to the Graduate School programme at CCW (Camberwell, Chelsea, Wimbledon) and is also engaged in Ph.D. supervision, particularly in the area of practice-based research. He has taught in many colleges both in the United Kingdom and abroad, was appointed visiting Professor at the University of Northampton (2006-09), was guest Professor at the Chinese University, Hong Kong and Guest Artist at The Art Institute of Chicago in 2010. He is a member of the AHRC Peer Review College and on the editorial board of the journal Print Quarterly. He will be chairing the panel Series & Sequence: The Fine Art Print Folio and Artist’s Book as sites of Inquiry at CAA conference New York 2011 and is a › Tate Modern – an opening for printmaking?, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.1, 46-55. Miia Collanus University of Helsinki, Department of Teacher Education, University of Helsinki, P.O.Box 8 (Siltavuorenpenger 10) FI-00014, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland Keywords Miia Collanus, M.Ed., Department of Teacher Education, Section of Craft Science and Textiles Teacher Education, lecturer in Pedagogy. › The identities of an arts educator: Comparing discourses in three teacher education programmes in Finland, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 7-21. Alan Collins University of Portsmouth, Department of Economics, Richmond Building, Portland Street, Portsmouth, PO1 3DE, United Kingdom Keywords creative industries policy, bureaucracy, public choice, evidencebased policy, creative Britain Alan is Professor of Economics and Head of the Department of Economics at the University of Portsmouth. His teaching interests include Environmental Economics and Policy, Managerial Economics, Social Economics, Transport Economics, and Cultural Economics. Alan is an active researcher in a number of fields, the most significant of which are environmental and natural resource economics, transport economics, and social and cultural economics. He is also on the executive board of the Association of Cultural Economics International (ACEI). › Innovativeness, creativity and public policy: anecdotes, conventional wisdoms and evidence, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 247-257. Roberta Comunian University of Kent, School of Arts, Eliot College, Room W3S.5, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NS, United Kingdom Keywords creative industries, local economic development, public support, creative work, culture-led regeneration Roberta Comunian is Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Southampton. She holds a European Doctorate title in Network Economy and Knowledge Management. She is interested in the role of culture in urban development and creative industries, creativity and competitiveness. She manages the Regional Studies Association Network on ‘Creative Industries and the Regions’ (in collaboration with C. Chapain and N. Clifton): more information available at www.creative-regions.org.uk. › Questioning creative work as driver of economic development: the case of Newcastle-Gateshead, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 57-71. › Location, location, location: exploring the complex relationship between creative industries and place, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 5-10. Juan Carlos Pacheco Contreras Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Carrera 7 No. 40-62, Bogota, 110231, Colombia Keywords socio-ecological systems, perseverance, rural communities, adaptive capacity, crafts Contreras is an industrial designer with a master’s in Environmental Management. He is Assistant Professor in the Department of Design, and Coordinator of the Environmental Area at the Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia, South America. At present he is pursuing a Ph.D. in environmental and rural studies. His research interests include craft production, eco-technological models, local development and strategies of livelihood. › The adaptive capacity of rural crafts in the face of global challenges, Craft Research, 1.1, 101-112. Phil Cooke Cardiff University, Centre for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences, 45 Park Place, Cardiff, CF10 3BB, United Kingdom Keywords creativity, knowledge economy, location, economy outcomes Phil Cooke is Research Professor in Regional Economic Development, and founding Director (1993) of the Centre for Advanced Studies, Cardiff University. His research interests lie in studies of biotechnology, regional innovation systems, knowledge economies, entrepreneurship, clusters and networks. › Creative knowledge workers and location in Europe and North America: a comparative review, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 73-89. Kerrie Corcoran Keywords visual art, pedagogical reasoning, cooperative learning, creativity, knowledge-in-action Kerrie Corcoran is Director of Senior Secondary Studies at Cannon Hill Anglican College in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She has 28 years experience teaching Visual Art in both single sex and coeducational schools in the private and government sector. Kerrie was awarded her Ph.D. at Griffith University in 2006. She has a strong commitment to curriculum development and effective pedagogy in the Visual Arts, and her research interests are in developing the creative abilities of Visual Arts secondary students. › Pedagogical reasoning, creativity and cooperative learning in the visual art classroom, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 51-61. Rikke Platz Cortsen University of Copenhagen, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen, Karen Blixens vej 1, 2300 Copenhagen S, Denmark Keywords comics, time and space, apocalyptic moment Rikke Platz Cortsen is a Ph.D. student in the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Arts and Cultural Studies working on a project concerning time and space in comics. Her MA thesis was titled ‘Simultaneity, Moment, Eternity – on the Construction of Time and Space in Comics by Alan Moore’. She has presented papers about comics at various conferences, including a paper on comics written by Alan Moore and their use of an apocalyptic moment. She is on the editorial boards of the Scandinavian Journal of Comic Art, the Danish comics magazine STRIP!. › Multiple living, one world?: On the chronotope in Alan Moore and Gene Ha’s Top 10, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 135-145. Graham Coulter-Smith Graham Coulter-Smith is the author of Deconstructing Installation art and The Postmodern Art of Imants Tillers and co-editor of Art in the Staffordshire University, Flaxman Building, College Road, Stoke-onTrent, ST4 2DE, United Kingdom Age of Terrorism and The Visual-Narrative Matrix. He is a research fellow at Southampton Solent University working on the VisuoSonic project (www.visuosonic.org) and senior lecturer in Art Theory at Staffordshire University. His interests lie in the fields of contemporary fine art and media art. Keywords art into life, creativity, installation art, interactive art, relational aesthetics evolution › Art games: Interactivity and the embodied gaze, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.3, 169-182. › Evolutionary aesthetics: rethinking the role of function in art and design, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 85-91. Solange Coutinho Federal University of Pernambuco, Av. Professor Moraes Rego, 1235, Recife-PE, 50670-901, Brazil Keywords drawing process, graphic components, trans-cultural commonalities, cognition Solange Coutinho is a Research Professor in the Design Department of the Federal University of Pernambuco whose main interest is information design and education. She has a Ph.D. (1998) from the Department of Typography and Graphic Communication, University of Reading, United Kingdom. She is in charge of the Information Design Research Group in Brazil and is an associated researcher of the Centre de Recherche Images, Cultures et Cognitions (Panthéon-Sorbonne Paris 1). › Children's processes of drawing from memory: a trans-cultural study in France and Brazil, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 5773. Glen Coutts University of Lapland › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 123-125. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 275-277. Keywords art education, applied visual art, art and design education, community art › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 3-5. › EDITORIAL, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 107-109. › EDITORIAL, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 3-6. Rob Cowdroy Rob Cowdroy is a conjoint research professor. His teaching experience has been centred on architectural design and he played a major role in both organizational development and curriculum development for the Keywords assessment, creativity, quality assurance, thinking innovative and internationally acclaimed problem-based, integrated and research-based learning approaches in the B.Arch. programme at the University of Newcastle, Australia, for which he earned the University’s Teaching Excellence Award. Cowdroy’s basic research focus is on the psychological processes of inspiration and related forms of high-level creativity and elite decision processes. For this research he developed empirical methods from psychology and psychiatry for tracking unconscious thinking and inspiration which are central to high-level creativity. His applied research is in new approaches to assessment of high-level creativity and decision-making and the particular case of the ‘brilliant student’ in higher education. › Assessing creativity in the creative arts, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 97-118. Donna J. Cox Keywords metaphor, mapping, astrophysics, virtual reality, postcolonial Donna J. Cox is a recognized pioneer in computer art and scientific visualization. Since 1985, she has been a professor in the School of Art and Design and research artist/scientist at the National Centre for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA). Her collaborative works have been featured in art and science museums, PBS television productions, planetaria, and IMAX theatres around the world, and she has authored many papers on scientific visualization, critical theory, and information design. › The Art and Science of Visualization: Metaphorical Maps and Cultural Models, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.2, 71-80. M. James C. Crabbe University of Bedfordshire, Faculty of Creative Arts, Technologies and Science, Park Square, Luton, LU1 3JU, United Kingdom Keywords media, interdisciplinarity, cross-cultural, ceramics Professor M. James C. Crabbe is Executive Dean of the Faculty of Creative Arts, Technologies and Science at the University of Bedfordshire. He is also a Supernumerary Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford University, and Visiting Professor at the University of Reading, at Beijing Normal University (BNU) and at the International Business Faculty of BNU in Zhuhai in China. He is a member of Arts Interlink, the international arts management consultancy, and in 2008 was a winner of a Great Contributors to China Creative Industries Award. › Linking the ceramic industry, creativity and education in Jingdezhen, China: Given at the First British Ceramics Biennial Conference Artists into Industry at the Wedgwood Museum in Stoke-on-Trent, October 2009, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 305-311. Diana Crane University of Pennsylvania Diana Crane is the author of several books on the sociology of culture, including Fashion and Its Social Agendas: Class, Gender and Identity in Clothing (University of Chicago Press, 2000). Keywords › BOOK REVIEWS, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 237-247. Ben Cranfield Department of Media and Cultural Studies Keywords Ben Cranfield is Director of Programs in Arts Policy and Management in the Department of Media and Cultural Studies, Birkbeck. He is also a co-director of Birkbeck's Centre for Media, Culture and Creative Practice and in 2010 was lead supervisor of a 'Knowledge Transfer Partnership' project examining understandings of 'creativity' in the arts and education. He organized the 2008/09 discussions on curating at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London, and was contributing editor to its 60th anniversary publication How Soon is Now (2008). His doctoral thesis explored the relationship between anarchy and technology at the ICA (1947-69). › Between Consensus and Anxiety: Curating Transparency at the ICA of the 1950s, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 83-100. Bridget Crone › The Image: Disaffect in the theatre of representation, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 123-138. Keywords contemporary art, performance, moving image, film and video, image, affect, disaffect, representation, participation, theatricality, subject, presence, body Jacques Rancière, Gilles Deleuze, Alain Badiou › Round table discussion: The affects of the abstract image in film and video art, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 79-87. Joanna Crotch Mackintosh School of Architecture, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, United Kingdom Joanna Crotch teaches full time at the Mackintosh School of Architecture. She is also involved in gaining Postgraduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching in Art, Design and Education. Her desire for an improved review system has been fuelled from a theoretical standpoint gained through her practice, teaching and research. Following a successful bid for funding through the Glasgow School of Art Learning Keywords architecture, crit, critical distance, critical review, design studio and Teaching opportunity, her research has been recognized and supported by the Mackintosh School. › Mutual respect: working towards a modern review model, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 145-152. Christopher Crouch Edith Cowan University, School of Communications and Arts, 100 Joondalup Drive, Joondalup, Western Australia, 6027, Australia Keywords reflexivity, validity claims, visual art, design, research methods, creative arts, Chinese visual culture, Chinese traditional culture Christopher Crouch has written widely on the ethical responsibility of practitioner in art and design. He lectures on Cultural Theory at Edith Cowan University in Perth, Australia. He is also Visting Professor in Fine Art at Beijing National University, Beijing, and Professor in Visual Art Huang He University in Zhengzhou in the Peoples’ Republic of China. His paper presented at the 2003 Unesco Conference on Intercultural Education was awarded ‘outstanding presentation’. His book Modernism in Art, Design and Architecture is a standard art school text. › Praxis and the reflexive creative practitioner, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 105-114. Andrea Cruciani Keywords tangible media, electronic margin, bar codes, connected design, Andrea Cruciani has a Master in Interactive Digital Television (IDTV) and a Bachelor’s in Digital Communication (thesis ‘Graphic Chemistry. The Three-D representation of Mendeleev’s periodic table’, University of Milano, 2006). Project ‘Multi-platform Promotional Communication for Distribution Industry’. Project University WebTV. He is a McLuhan Fellow in the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology, and is currently developing the projects Universal Margin and The Era of Tag. › The world as wide web: following codes to access knowledge-lands, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 173-179. Sean Cubitt University of Southampton, Winchester School of Art, Park Avenue, Winchester SO23 8DL, United Kingdom Professor Sean Cubitt is Professor of Global Media and Communication at Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton. He is Professorial Fellow in Media and Communications at the University of Melbourne, and an Honorary Professor of the University of Dundee. His publications include Timeshift (1991), Videography (1993), Digital Aesthetics (1998), Simulation and Social Keywords transnational, cinema, technology, globalization, public sphere Theory (2001), The Cinema Effect (2004) and EcoMedia (2005). He is series editor for Leonardo Books at The MIT Press. › Reflections on medium specificity occasioned by the symposium 'Digital Light: Technique, Technology, Creation', Melbourne, 2011, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 37-49. Keith Cummings The Granary, Thicknall Lane, Clent, Stourbridge, West Midlands, DY9 OHP, United Kingdom Keywords glass, craft Keith Cummings is Professor of Glass Studies at Wolverhampton University. He has been teaching, writing and making for over four decades. He has written four books and numerous articles on glass. His latest book Contemporary Kiln-Formed Glass was published by A. and C. Black in 2009. His work is in major collections worldwide, including The Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Corning Museum, New York; and The Museum of Decorative Art, Paris. He was shortlisted for the Jerwood Prize in the Applied Arts in 1998, and has been listed in Who’s Who since 2003. › THE PORTRAIT SECTION, Craft Research, 2.1, 143-160. Leslie Cunliffe University of Exeter, Heavitree Road, Exeter, Devon, EX1 2LU, United Kingdom Keywords creativity, extra-curricular activities, interdisciplinary work, case study Leslie Cunliffe is a senior lecturer at the University of Exeter where he runs the secondary PGCE art course. He has experience of undergraduate and post-graduate teaching and higher degree supervision. He taught in secondary schools for fourteen years. He has exhibited paintings and drawings at the Royal Academy and the Royal Exchange. His research embraces a range of topics to include empirical aesthetics, cognitive processes and art education, the role of declarative and precedural knowledge in art education, Wittgenstein's philosophy and art education, and virtue approaches to creativity and knowledge. He has published in a wide range of books and research journals. › A case study of an extra-curricular school activity designed to promote creativity, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 91-105. Hillary CunliffeCharlesworth Hilary Cunliffe-Charlesworth Ph.D., MA (RCA) BA (Hons) Fine Art Works as a Learning, Teaching and Assessment co-ordinator in the Faculty of Arts, Computing, Engineering and Sciences at Sheffield Hallam. She teaches students across fine art, design and media and is Sheffield Hallam University, Faculty of Arts, Computing, Engineering and Sciences, Furnival Building, Sheffield, S1 2NU, United Kingdom interested in the ways in which creative students engage with new media, and the relationship of employment and professional practice to the educational studio. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 79-88. Keywords fine art, design, media, art education Stuart Cunningham Queensland University of Technology, Creative Industries Faculty, Musk Avenue, Kelvin Grove, Brisbane, Queensland, 4059, Australia Keywords mapping, international comparative mapping, Australia, United Kingdom, employment statistics Professor Stuart Cunningham is Director at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, Queensland University of Technology. He has written extensively on Australian screen industries, cultural policy and on creative industries and innovation. His most recent work is What Price a Creative Economy? (Platform Papers, 2006). › Creative Industries Mapping: Where have we come from and where are we going?, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 7-30. Brian Curtin › BOOK REVIEWS, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 121-130. Keywords Arnold Cusmariu Keywords directional perception, mereotopology, paradigm shift, philosophical analysis, sculpture Arnold Cusmariu received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Brown University with a dissertation under Ernest Sosa on the problem of universals, to which he formulates and defends a radical Platonist solution. He shows, among other things, that the 'Third Man' argument and Russell's Paradox are really the same problem and should be solved the same way. While in academia, he published articles on technical subjects in logic, philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, and metaphysics. He became interested in sculpture in 1984 and obtained training at the Art League in Alexandria, Virginia, eventually settling on stone as his preferred medium. He has produced over 100 pieces to date and has participated in juried exhibits in the Washington DC area, where he lives. Some of his pieces are in private collections. › The structure of an aesthetic revolution, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.3, 163-179. Nina Czegledy KMDI, University of Toronto, Concordia U, Montreal, Hungarian University of Fine Arts, Budapestontreal, Fine Arts Studio (Concordia), Apartment 504 - 300 St. Clair Avenue W., Toronto, Ontario, M4V 1S4, Canada Nina Czegledy, Senior Fellow at KMDI, University of Toronto, Adjunct Associate Professor at Concordia University Montreal and Honorary Fellow at Moholy Nagy University of Arts and Design, Budapest, is an independent artist and curator focusing on art and science collaborations. Her lectures lead to many international publications. › Bioelectromagnetism: discrete interpretations, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.2, 135-142. Keywords science and technology, education, data visualization, electromagnetism, bio-magnetism, bioelectricity, electro-magnetic art, urban ecology Carlos Augusto Moreira Carlos (Guto) Nóbrega is Doctor of Philosophy (2009) from The Planetary Collegium (CAiiA-STAR), based in the School of Art and da Nóbrega Media, University of Plymouth. His doctoral thesis, funded by CAPES – BRAZIL, is a transdisciplinary research in the fields of art, science, technology and nature that investigates how the confluence of these domains (in particular in the last decades) has informed the creation of new aesthetics experiences. As a result of this study, a theoreticalpractical intervention in the field of arts with focus on the ideas of interactivity, telematics, field theories, and the most recent theories of biophotons were developed. During this process he has developed a series of artworks that encompass drawings, photos, videos and robotics systems. Keywords coherence, energy, field, interactive art, mitogenetic radiation › Biophoton – the language of the cells: What can living systems tell us about interaction?, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.3, 193202. Peter Dallow University of Western Sydney, Peter Dallow lives in Sydney, Australia. He teaches Media Studies, and supervises research degrees in media, design and creative arts, in the School of Communication Arts at the University of Western Sydney. School of Communication Arts, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith Campus, Sydney, New South Wales, 1797, Australia He has a background in media and creative arts practice, is actively engaged in nationally funded research into aspects of new digital technologies and their cultural application, and also writes literary fiction. Keywords contemporary arts, creativity, researcher, practice-asresearch, creative arts › Representing creativeness: practice-based approaches to research in creative arts, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.1, 49-66. Marie-Louise Damen VU University Amsterdam, Sociology, Metropolitan-room N516, De Boelelaan 1081, Amsterdam, Netherlands Marie-Louise Damen is a postdoctoral researcher at the sociology department of VU University Amsterdam. She obtained her Ph.D. with a research project about the effects of arts education in secondary schools on the cultural participation of students. › The U-curve going Dutch: Cultural differences in judgements of artwork from different age and expertise groups, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 153-169. Keywords art education, sociology, secondary education Bruce Damer University of East London, The SMARTLab Digital Media Institute, Docklands Campus, 4-6 University Way, London, E16 2RD, United Kingdom Keywords evolution, computer simulation, artificial life, origins of life, primordial digital soup Bruce Damer wears many hats, one as a pioneer of the virtual worlds medium, having helped to develop early ‘avatar’ virtual spaces and communities, another as an expert on the history of computing, in his Digibarn Computer Museum in Northern California, and yet another as a designer and simulation team leader for NASA, modelling current and future space missions. In 1996 he established Biota.org, a nonprofit organization which created a series of interdisciplinary international conferences. › The EvoGrid, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 175190. Mona Damluji University of California, Berkeley Keywords Mona Damluji is a doctoral candidate in Architecture at the University of California, Berkeley. Her dissertation is a postcolonial study of representations of the city and nation-building in Iraq Petroleum Company films during the 1950s. › Book Reviews, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 151-168. Nina Danino › Round table discussion: The affects of the abstract image in film and video art, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 79-87. Keywords Katherina DankoMcGhee The Toledo Museum of Art, 2445 Monroe Street, Toledo, Ohio 43620, United States of America Keywords aesthetic preferences, young children, artworks, museums Katherina Danko-McGhee is the new Director of Education at the Toledo Museum of Art. She is a former Professor of Art Education in the Department of Art at the University of Toledo. She oversees and also teaches the methods course, Art for the Pre and Primary Child, and coordinates the annual Children’s Art Workshop and Art Exhibition. Her research interests are the aesthetic preferences of young children, the environment as third teacher, and museum experiences for children. › Favourite artworks chosen by young children in a museum setting, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.3, 223-235. › Judging a book by its cover: Preschool children’s aesthetic preferences for picture books, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 171-185. Jane Darke Cornwall, United Kingdom Keywords film, art. transience, beach Jane Darke is an artist and filmmaker residing on the coast of Cornwall. Her films include The Wreaking Season and The Art of Catching Lobsters. Her academic interests include transience, natural objects, and the perception of spaces. › Recording the World, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 231-238. Bernard Darras University of Paris 1 PantheonSorbonne, CRICC, UFR 04, 47 rue des Berges, Paris, 75015, France Bernard Darras is Research Professor at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. His main interests are: pragmatic and cognitive semiotics, visual and material cultures and cultural industries. He is in charge of the Centre de Recherche Images, Cultures et Cognitions. Keywords drawing process, graphic components, trans-cultural commonalities, cognition › Children's processes of drawing from memory: a trans-cultural study in France and Brazil, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 5773. Nicholas Davey University of Dundee, Philosophy, Department of Humanities, Dundee, DD1 4HN, United Kingdom Keywords art theory, artwork, aesthetic experience, hermeneutics, language Nicholas Davey, Ph.D., MA, is Professor in Philosophy at the University of Dundee. He has initiated and co-organized the series of Scottish Theoros conferences since 1998. His principal research interests concern hermeneutics, aesthetics, the philosophy of Friederich Nietzsche and the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer. With regard to hermeneutics, his new book Unquiet Understanding: Reflections on Philosophical Hermeneutics will appear with State University Press of New York in 2006. He is currently writing a book entitled The Hermeneutical Imagination which makes a critical analysis of the role hermeneutics plays within aesthetics. › Aesthetic f(r)iction: the conflicts of visual experience, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 135-150. Kate Davies Architectural Association and University College London Keywords architecture, education, ecology Kate Davies Bsc [hons], DipArch, MArch. Kate Davies is a designer, writer and educator. She runs Diploma 6 [previously intermediate 7] at the Architectural Association, London, together with Liam Young of Tomorrows Thoughts Today. Kate graduated from the Bartlett School of Architecture. She has taught previously at London Metropolitan University and Chelsea College of Art and is regularly involved in international design workshops, most recently in Korea, Sweden and Spain. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. Ian Dawe Selkirk College, School of University Arts and Sciences, Castlegar Campus, 301 Frank Beinder Way, Castlegar, BC, V1N 4L3, Canada Keywords biology, Alan Moore, grotesque, eroticism Ian Dawe received an MA in Film Studies from the University of Exeter in 2007, with a dissertation on director Terry Gilliam including an exploration of the grotesque in film. He currently teaches Film Studies and World Cinema at Selkirk College in Nelson, BC, Canada, where he has also lectured on the literary tradition of Watchmen. A longtime comic book and film enthusiast, he also has a background in the sciences and teaches Biology and Biological Anthropology. › The Moore film adaptations and the erotic-grotesque, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 177-193. Shezad Dawood Shezad Dawood trained at Central St Martin’s and the Royal College of Art before undertaking a Ph.D. at Leeds Metropolitan University. He works across installation and film, looking at a discursive model of practice that takes in both mystical and literary/historical narratives. Often drawing on his complex heritage, his projects have been influenced by Sufism as much as Samuel Beckett, and his large-scale interventions often work with musicians, actors and other collaborators across a breadth of global locations. Dawood’s work has been exhibited internationally, included as part of Altermodern - curated by Nicolas Bourriaud at Tate Britain, and the 53rd Venice Biennale (both 2009). Upcoming projects include a collaboration with contemporary dance choreographer Jasmin Vardimon at Sadlers Wells in London (2011), and a feature-length sci-fi film, which will go into production in the summer of 2011. Dawood currently lives and works in London, where he is Senior Lecturer Keywords text, theory/practice, reenactment, documentation, theatre › The killing of Chief Crazy Horse – An allegory in 3 parts, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 119-140. Barbara de la Harpe Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Design and Social Context Office, 200 Ballarat Road, Hamilton, VIC 3300, Australia Keywords design and architecture, studio learning and teaching, constructivism, scholarly teaching, scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) Barbara de la Harpe is the Associate Pro Vice Chancellor, Learning and Teaching in the College of Design and Social Context at RMIT University. For eighteen years she has been involved in teaching and academic professional development in higher education. Her background is in science education and educational psychology, and her fields of expertise include: learning; generic skill development; university change management; and teacher professional development. Her Ph.D., study was on student learning and she is widely published in learning and teaching. › Through the learning and teaching looking glass: What do academics in art, design and architecture publish about most?, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.3, 135-154. Emanuel Dimas de Melo Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta, an architect, urban planner, musician and photographer, has dedicated his life to the research of Pimenta Keywords virtual architecture, contemporary experimental music, virtual music, cognition, perception, mirror neuron, logic, discovery, democracy, isonomy, synaptic mind processes through the Theory of Thought and Neurology. In the last years of the 1970s he started to create his musical compositions inside virtual environments. In the early 1980s he coined the concept virtual architecture. As composer, he collaborated with John Cage and remained a composer for Merce Cunningham from 1986 till his death in 2009. With twenty-five published compact discs, four CD-ROMs, about 40 books, and several papers, his works have been regularly published in England, the United States, Japan, the Netherlands, patterns Portugal, Brazil, Germany, Switzerland, Hungary, Italy and Spain. He is director of the Arts, Sciences and Technology Foundation Observatory, in Trancoso, Portugal and of the Holotopia Academy, in the Amalfi Coast, Italy. › Mind: scarlet ocean, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 117-128. › MONDO: Literature and democracy: the metamorphosis of the future cognitive mutations and human values: REDUX, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 171-184. Lisa De Propris University of Birmingham, Birmingham Business School, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom Keywords cultural clusters, creative class, local and regional development, jewellery industry, creative cluster, Birmingham Lisa De Propris is a Senior Lecturer in Industrial Economics in the Birmingham Business School. Her main research interests include clusters, competitiveness in clusters and regions, innovation, knowledge economy and clusters, city and creative industries and EU regional policy. She has worked on the Birmingham Jewellery Quarter on a British Academy Grant and is currently PI for a NESTA research project in ‘Creative Clusters and Regional Innovation’. › Drivers and Processes of Creative Industries in Cities and Regions, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 9-18. › Creativity and Space: the opportunity of an urban creative jewellery cluster, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 37-56. Victoria de Rijke Middlesex University, Department of Arts and Education, The Burroughs, London, NW4 4BT, United Kingdom Keywords play, sound, poetry, nursery, Dada Originally a primary-school teacher, Dr Victoria de Rijke is Principal Lecturer in English, Education & the Performing Arts and cocoordinator of the Research in Education, Arts, Language & Learning Centre (REALL) at Middlesex University. With support from an AHRC research grant, she is currently writing a book on the cultural history of the duck for Reaktion Books’ acclaimed Animal series. The Quack Project is a multimedia CD-ROM featuring animal sounds made by young children using ten different languages spoken across London. › Dare to Dada: an argument for visual and verbal avant-garde poetry in the nursery, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.3, 211-222. Sheila de Rosa Keywords motherhood, art, feminism, Kristeva, Louise Bourgeois Sheila de Rosa is a multimedia artist working in print, photography, ceramics and glass. Since graduating with an MA in Fine and Applied Art Practice from the University of Hertfordshire last year, she has divided her time between completing a commission for the Brighton Festival Fringe, organizing a solo show and facilitating arts practice to a variety of groups. › Mother, dear Mother, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.2, 83-90. Michael Dean Michael Dean, B.A. (Honours), MArch, lives and works in London. He has studied at the University of Sheffield School of Architecture and at The Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment, University College London. Keywords › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. Çigdem Demir Gazi University, Gazi Egitim Fakultesi, 06500 Teknikokullar, Ankara, Turkey Keywords creativity, brainstorming, art, education Çigdem Demir was born in 1975 in Ankara, Turkey. She graduated from Hacettepe University, Fine Arts Faculty, Graphic Design Department in 1998 with an award for excellence. She obtained her MA from Hacettepe University in 2001, spending one year in the Multimedia Department at Brera Academy in Milan, Italy, through a research scholarship from the Italian Government in 2001. She is currently a Ph.D. student at Hacettepe University and a research assistant at Gazi University. She has received ten graphic design awards, particpated in national and international exhibitions, and speaks four languages. › Enhancing creativity in art education through brainstorming, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 153-160. Anna M Dempster Birkbeck College, Department of Management, University of London, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom Dr. Anna M. Dempster is a Lecturer in Management, Birkbeck College, University of London and Deputy Director of the Creative Industries Observatory, University of the Arts, London. Her current research is broadly concerned with entrepreneurship and strategic management in highly uncertain environments, including the impact of risk and uncertainty on creativity and innovation. Keywords entrepreneurship, strategic management, risk, creativity, innovation › An Operational Risk Framework for the Performing Arts and Creative Industries, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 151-170. › Review, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 313-316. Paul G. Dempster University of Leeds, School of Medicine, Leeds Institute of Health Sciences, Charles Thackrah Building, 101 Clarendon Road, Leeds, LS2 9LJ, United Kingdom Paul joined the Institute of Health Sciences in 2008. Currently he is a Research Manager and Fellow in the Academic Unit for Primary Care. His prior research in the Yorkshire Centre for Health Informatics and the Centre for Health and Social Care focussed on examining the rollout of electronic health programmes and investigating the role of governance within Foundation Trust Hospitals. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. Keywords ageing, death, bereavement, social care Rayna Denison University of East Anglia, School of Film and Television Studies, Arts 2 Building, Room 1.46, c/o Room 2.40, Norwich, Norfolk, NR4 7TJ, United Kingdom Rayna Denison is a professor at the University of East Anglia Department of Film and Television Studies. She specializes in Japanese cinema and manga, and the worldwide distribution and circulation of these media. Her work has been published in Animation and Scope: An Online Journal of Film Studies. › Transcultural creativity in anime: Hybrid identities in the production, distribution, texts and fandom of Japanese anime, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 221-235. Keywords fandom, anime, creativity, hybrid identity, creative industries Tyler Denmead University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge, 184 Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 8PQ, United Kingdom Keywords urban art, emerging artists Tyler Denmead is a doctoral candidate at the University of Cambridge. Prior to graduate studies, he was the founding executive director of New Urban Arts, an interdisciplinary storefront arts studio for urban teenagers and emerging artist mentors. In recent years, New Urban Arts has been recognized by First Lady Michelle Obama, the US Department of Education, and the Ford Foundation supported Artogrpahy programme. › Meeting and extending participants: exploratory case studies of community artist pedagogy, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.3, 235-246. Rea Dennis University of Glamorgan, School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Atrium Campus, Adam Street, Cardiff, CF24 2NX, United Kingdom Keywords autobiography, memory, embodiment, improvisation, performance Rea Dennis is a scholar and practitioner based at the School of Creative and Cultural Industries, University of Glamorgan, UK. She has a long interest in story and theatre-based methodologies for cultural development and has applied these in various contexts over the past twenty years. She completed her Ph.D. in Applied Theatre at Griffith University in Australia in 2004. Her interests include unblocking human potential through expressive arts and autobiography/memory and physiological performance practices. › Sensing the story: structure and improvisation in writing for performance, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 231-250. Silke Dettmers University College for the Creative Arts, Oakwood Park, Maidstone, Kent, ME16 8AG, United Kingdom Silke Dettmers is a sculptor. Also a Senior Lecturer, she teaches at the University College for the Creative Arts, Maidstone. Most recently her work was exhibited as part of 'Art Projects', selected by the London Artfair (2008), Mark Barrow Fine Arts, London (2007). › On the necessity of wonder: How to explain an artwork to a committee, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.1, 37-55. Keywords art practice, research, institutions, art writing, sculpture Angela Devas Thames Valley University, London College of Music and Media, St Mary's Road, Ealing, London, W5 5RF, United Kingdom Angela Devas currently teaches media, film and communication studies at Thames Valley University. She has had many years experience of teaching and programme management in media and film studies. Her research interests include pedagogy, ‘race’, gender and nationality. Keywords discourse, power, reflection, subjectivity, surveillance › Reflection as confession: discipline and docility in/on the student body, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 33-46. Belidson Dias Universidade de Brasília, Artes Visuais, SQN 206 Bloco K apt 201, Brasília, DF, 70844-110, Brazil Keywords visual culture, spectatorship, art education, Belidson Dias has a BA in Art Education from the Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil (1989), an MA in Visual Arts - painting - from the Manchester Metropolitan University (1992), and a Ph.D. in Curricular Studies in Art Education from the University of British Columbia (2006). She was also a Fellowship program recipient for the MA in painting at the Chelsea School of Art & Design (1993). Currently she is Associate Professor (adjunct in Brazil) of the Department of Visual Arts of the University of Brasilia. Her experience bridges the areas of feminism, queer theory visual arts and visual culture education, with emphasis on the study of representations of gender and sexuality in contemporary visual arts. Lately she focuses on the study of queer theory and the critical studies of sexuality to analyse the visual arts, specifically cinema and photography. › Film spectatorship between queer theory and feminism: transcultural readings, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 143-152. Lily Díaz Aalto University, Department of Media, 135C, Hämeentie, Helsinki, SF 00560, Finland Keywords informatics, interactivity, digital media, virtual reality Lily Díaz is an artist, designer and researcher working in he area of informatics and interactive and digital media. Currently she is professior and head of research in the Department of Media of the School of Art and Design at Aalto University in Helsinki. Her art and design work has been exhibited in galleries such as the Royal Academy of Art in London, the Martin Gropius Bau Museum in Berlin, Planetario Alfa in Monterrey Mexico and Design Museum Helsinki. She has conducted research and development projects in areas such as visualization and information design, design and implementation of digital archives related to cultural heritage, and design of interfaces for virtual reality. › New research practices for a new media, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 3-4. › By chance, randomness and indeterminacy methods in art and design, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 21-33. María Del Río Diéguez Autónoma University of Madrid, Artistic, Plastic and Visual Education, Faculty of Education, Campus de Cantoblanco, Office I-319, Madrid, 28049, Spain María del Río Diéguez. Ph.D. Lecturer. Dept. of Artistic, Plastic and Visual Education. Faculty of Education. Autónoma University of Madrid (U.A.M.). (Office I-319). Coordinator of Art Therapy Program of University Hospital Puerta de Hierro Majadahonda (Madrid). MA in Art Therapy; MA in Psychotherapeutic Intervention. Member of Reseach Team. Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education, art › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Val Diggle University College Falmouth, Learning Futures, Woodlane, Falmouth, TR11 4RH, United Kingdom Keywords critical, self-reflection, mapping, praxis, journaling, creative process Val Diggle is a writer and visual artist who has worked as an academic teaching critical and cultural studies and as a Learning Advisor for postgraduate students in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. Her research interests include locative arts practices and narratives that occupy the liminal zones between hypertext and the 'real world'. She is currently working on the loaning project, as part of a practice-based Ph.D., mediated through the on-line supergame 'geocaching', and is an Academic Skills Advisor for the University College Falmouth, incorporating Dartington College of Arts. › Beautiful place/beautiful view – journey scrolls and writing structure in the hea(r)t of the southern hemisphere, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 211-225. Clive Dilnot Parsons The New School for Design, New School University, 2 W 13th Streeet, New York, NY 10011, United States of America Keywords critical, processes, market forces, economics, crises Clive Dilnot’s areas of interest include fine art, the history of art, and social philosophy. He has taught at Harvard University and in the United Kingdom. He is Professor of Design Studies and Director of Design Initiatives at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; he also directed graduate studies in design in Hong Kong. He has written extensively on the history and theory of art, design, and architecture; his most recent work is on design ethics. › The Critical in Design (Part One), Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 177-189. › Being prescient concerning Obama, or Notes on the politics of configuration (part one), The Poster, 1.1, 7-29. Anne-Sophie Dinant Anne-Sophie Dinant is Associate Curator at the South London Gallery. Associate Curator, South London Gallery › 'Situações-Limites': the emergence of video art in Brazil in the 1970s, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 59-67. Keywords Ruth Dineen University of Wales Institute, Cardiff Ruth Dineen is Head of Department of Creative Communication at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, and Honorary Professor at Sichuan Institute of Fine Arts, Chongquin, China. She recently School of Art & Design, Cardiff, CF11 9JP, United Kingdom received a Teaching Fellowship Award in recognition of excellence in learning & teaching - one of the first to be awarded in Wales. Her research interests include the promotion of learner creativity, particularly in the contexts of the United Kingdom and China, and the relationship between assessment and student motivation. She is currently developing a Welsh Centre for Creative Pedagogy in art, design and media. Keywords creativity, learner, assessment, art and design › The promotion of creativity in learners: theory and practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.3, 155-172. Michel De Dobbeleer Ghent University, Department of Slavonic and East-European Studies, Rozier 44, Ghent, 9000, Belgium Keywords Watchmen, graphic novels, political history, Slavic languages, siege narratives Michel De Dobbeleer (1978) is a Slavist, Italianist and Classicist, and teaches Old Church Slavonic Language, Literature and Culture at Ghent University. At the same time, he is finishing his Ph.D. in epic theory and narratology in the study of premodern historiographical texts, specifically Nestor-Iskinder’s medieval Russian Tale on the Taking of Constantinople. His publications mainly deal with ‘siege narratives’ (their plots, chronotopes, representation of sieges in comics, etc.) and narrativity in comics. › Googling ‘Vice-President Ford’ and the ‘Keene Act’: The discovery of Watchmen’s uchronical universe, twenty years after publication, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 159-175. Dunja Dogo Keywords modern languages, sacred symbology, Soviet Russia, symbology, propoganda In 2009 Dunja Dogo finished her Ph.D. at the University of Siena (Department of Modern Literature and Sciences of Languages), with a thesis entitled Icons of Martyrs and Fighters. Survival and Metamorphosis of Sacredness in Russian Propaganda Posters and Films Before and After 1917. Her areas of interests include the history of the Russian revolutions, cultural history of Soviet Russia (i.e. propaganda methods, collective memory, representation of history in film and posters of the 1920s and 1930s) and the symbology of the Russian and European socialist parties. › Sacredness in Russian SocialistIconography before and after 1917.Invention of a new revolutionarytradition, starting from the old one, The Poster, 1.2, 141-165. Margaret Dolinsky HR Hope School of Fine Arts Indiana University, 1201 E. 7th St. Room 123, Bloomington, IN, United States of America Keywords perceptual shift, digital painting, projection, light, imagination Margaret Dolinsky creates interactive art for high-speed networks and collaborative art experiences for the CAVE Automated Virtual Environment. Her recent work involves digital projections for opera and experimental film. Her research focuses on how digital art provokes shifts in perception and enhances sensory awareness. Exhibitions include SIGGRAPH, Ars Electronica, ICC, and the Walker Art Center. Her work is published in Leonardo, Discover, Computer Graphics World, US 64 Margaret Dolinsky News and World Report and ACM’s Computer Graphics. She received an MFA from University of Illinois at Chicago. She is an Associate Professor and Research Scientist at the H.R. Hope School of Fine Arts at Indiana University Bloomington and a researcher with the Planetary Collegium at the University of Plymouth, United Kingdom. › Transformative navigation: energizing imagery for perceptual shifts, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.1, 49-64. Simon Downs Loughborough University, The School of Art, Loughborough, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom Keywords illustration, graphics, culture, animation Simon Downs is Lecturer in Graphic Communication at Loughborough University. Simon trained as a classical painter and worked as a draughtsman illustrator before computer aided design moved his practice into animation, interaction design, graphics and many other fields of communication design. He worked as a designer and illustrator for 15 years; working as a freelancer, a contractor and consultant for various banks and publishing houses. He is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, an H.E.A. Reviewer, and Member of the Design Research Society (and their S.I.G. on Design Pedagogy). Simon's research is built around the questions of: how culture is formed and so operates; how graphics is formed by and contributes to these operations and how we can tell if a graphic intervention is working. › Editorial, The Poster, 1.1, 3-6. › Reviews, The Poster, 1.1, 121-128. › A loud, preposterous moral crusade, The Poster, 1.2, 135-140. Karin Drda-Kühn Vertikult, Schleiermacherstraße 8, Darmstadt, D-64283, Germany Keywords network development, creative networks, regional Karin Drda-Kühn has a Ph.D. (1989) and an MA (1987) from the University of Darmstadt (Germany) in Art History and German and English Language and Literature Studies. Since 2006, she has been the Managing Director of Association Culture and Work (www.kultur-undarbeit.de) and a member of numerous cultural economy committees. Her responsibilities in the Association are research and application projects in cultural economy and culture tourism, policy development, development, cultural economy and operation of the portal www.vertikult.de, an employment and service platform for cultural workers. › From culture to cultural economic power: Rural regional development in small German communities, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 89-96. Linda Drew The Glasgow School of Art, Deputy Director & Director of Academic Development, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, G3 6RQ, United Kingdom Keywords qualitative variation, research, design projects, visual reproducing, conceptual responses, doctoral supervision Linda Drew, Ph.D., is an education and arts leader who contributes to improvements in the quality of learning and teaching both within the UK and internationally. Using creative and collaborative approaches to lead and engage academic and support staff, students and related stakeholders through significant change within single or multiple environments, has built a reputation for publication and leading research in pedagogy, design and creative practice. Prof. Drew has practised as a consultant for change management in Art and Design Higher Education and was previously Dean of the Graduate School for Camberwell College of Arts, Chelsea College of Art and Design and Wimbledon College of Art at the University of the Arts London (UAL). Prof. Drew also held the position of Head of College at Chelsea College of Art and Design (UAL, acting 2006-2007). Before joining the University of the Arts as Dean of Academic Development in 2003,Art, Design and Communication in Higher Education › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.2, 68-68. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 132-132. › Students’ approaches to the ‘research’ component in the fashion design project: Variation in students’ experience of the research process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.3, 113-130. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.1, 6-6. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 3-4. › Art, Design and Communication in Higher Education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.2, 113-116. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.1, 3-3. › ADCHE Editor reflects on Editorial Board and its role, purpose and future, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 57-57. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 5-8. › ADCHE Editor and Associate Editor: a real-life scenario of reflection in action, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 107-110. Jim Drobnick › EDITORIAL, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 3-4. Keywords Johanna Drucker Keywords visual poetry, book art, philosophy, photography Johanna Drucker is Breslauer Professor of Bibliographical Studies at UCLA. She has published extensively on the history of written forms, typography, design, contemporary art and visual poetics. Her most recent titles include Sweet Dreams: Contemporary Art and Complicity (University of Chicago Press, 2005), Graphic Design History: A Critical Guide (with Emily McVarish, Pearson, 2009) and SpecLab:Digital Aesthetics and Speculative Computing (University of Chicago Press, 2009). In addition to her scholarly work, Drucker is internationally known as a book artist and experimental, visual poet. › Temporal photography, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 22-28. Andrew Dubber Birmingham City University, Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, City North Campus, Perry Barr B42 2SU, Birmingham, West Midlands, UK Andrew Dubber is Reader in Music Industries Innovation at Birmingham City University. He is a member of the Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research and is part of a HERA European Jazz research project called Rhythm Changes. Dubber's research interests include digital media cultures, online music enterprise, cultural learning, radio in the digital age, music as a tool for social change and music as culture. Keywords radio teaching, critical listening skills, vocationalism, student broadcasting, New Zealand, Internet, digital culture, music industry › Monkey on the Roof: Researching creative practice, music consumption, social change and the online environment, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 19-31. Piotr Dumala Poland Keywords animation, film, The Forest, Crime and Punishment Piotr Dumala is a Polish film director, writer, and animator. His most well-known films are The Forest and Crime and Punishment, which was included in the Acme Filmworks Animation Show of Shows. He is known to implement a technique known as 'destructive animation', in which the creation of one frame requires the erasure of another. His article for Animation discusses how live-action directors, in particular Ingmar Bergman, influence his work. › Out of the trees and into The Forest – a consideration of live action and animation, Animation Practice, Process & Production, 1.1, 33-50. Paul Duncum School of Art and Design, 143 Art and Design Building, UrbanaChampaign, Illinois, IL 61820, United States of America Paul Duncum is an associate professor of Art Education at the University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign. He has published extensively on popular visual culture, the aesthetics of the everyday, and children’s unsolicited drawings and is co-editor of On Knowing: Art and Visual Culture published by Canterbury University Press. Keywords embodiment, visual culture, popular culture, modernism, post-critical › Visual culture and an aesthetics of embodiment, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 9-20. › Thinking critically about critical thinking: towards a post-critical, dialogic pedagogy for popular visual culture, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 247-257. Alan Dunn Leeds Metropolitan University, Broadcasting Place, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS1 3HE, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary art, public art, public spaces Alan Dunn is presently Associate Senior Lecturer in Contemporary Art at Leeds Metropolitan University. He was born in Glasgow in 1967 and studied at Glasgow School of Art and The Art Institute of Chicago, graduating with a Masters Degree in 1991. Between 2001 and 2007 he was Lead Artist on the internationally recognized Internet TV project ‘tenantspin’, collaborating with city-wide elderly high-rise tenants and national regeneration agencies. He has developed and distributed collaborative content with Philip Jeck, Mike McCartney, Marcel Duchamp, Fiona Banner, Chris Watson, Gerhard Richter, Foreign Investment, Agnes Martin, John Cage, Lydia Lunch, The Big Issue, Bill Drummond, Will Self and BBC Radio 3. › Generous, but no’ social (twentyyear voyage beyond the bath-tub), The Poster, 1.2, 193-213. David Durling Birmingham City University, Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, Gosta Green, Birmingham, B4 7DX, United Kingdom David Durling is Professor and Associate Dean (Research) in the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, Birmingham City University, UK. His education was in furniture and industrial design, with a Ph.D. in design education. He has practised design in various fields including furniture, interiors, product design and design management. For a decade he ran a design consultancy specialising in science laboratory planning and equipment. His research interests range across doctoral Keywords design research, research management, peer review studies, creativity and its links with personality, education, and research methods training. He has held several professional positions. › Guest Editorial – Best practices in Ph.D. education in design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 133-140. Steve Dutton Keywords installation/performance, text/image institute, performative, animal, encounter Steve Dutton works as an artist both collaboratively and individually. His projects have been exhibited throughout the United Kingdom and internationally; in Txtrapolis at NAFA in Singapore; Kookmin Gallery in Seoul, Text + Work in Poole, United Kingdom; CAFKA in Kitchener, Ontario; Mercer Union Centre for Contemporary Art in Toronto and Sheppard Fine Arts, Reno. Artwords press has recently published Misleading Epiphenomena, a collaboration between Dutton, Swindells and architectural theorist, Barbara Penner. He is Professor in Creative Practice at Coventry School of Art and Design. › Apocotropes Dutton and Peacock The Dog and Duck Dutton and Swindells, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 251-256. › Writing Encounters: ‘Institute of Beasts’ (2008), Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 117-125. Jochen Ecke Johannes Gutenberg University, British Studies, Jakob-Welder-Weg 18, 55128 Mainz, Germany Keywords literature, time and space, Alan Moore, graphic novels Jochen Ecke teaches English literature at the Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany. He has written his master’s thesis on concepts of time and space in Alan Moore’s later works and is currently preparing his doctoral thesis on British comics of the 1980s. In addition to co-editing Comics as a Nexus of Cultures (McFarland, 2010), he has done extensive work in the German comics industry, serving as German editor and occasional translator on works by Ed Brubaker, Greg Rucka and Alan Moore. › ‘Solve and coagula’: Alan Moore and the classical comic book’s spatial and temporal systems, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 105-119. Ann-Mari Edström Malmö University, Teacher Ann-Mari Edström received her Ph.D. in September 2008 at the Department of Education at Lund University in Sweden. Her research focuses on learning in visual art practice in higher education from a student perspective. The article published in Art, Design & Education, Dept of Culture, Language & Media, Malmö, 20506, Sweden Communication in Higher Education 7(1) 'Art Students Making Use of Studio Conversations', discusses findings from the empirical investigation of MFA students’ learning experiences, which was also the subject of her thesis 'Learning in Visual Art Practice'. She is a lecturer at Malmö University, Sweden and her current research project embraces higher education in visual art practice within the Nordic as well as the Baltic countries. Prior to her doctoral studies, the author was active as a glass artist and taught at preparatory art school level. She received a Master of Fine Art at the University College of Art, Crafts and Design, Stockholm in 1988. Keywords higher education, phenomenography, studio art, supervision, visual art practice › Art students making use of studio conversations, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.1, 31-44. Harriet Edwards Royal College of Arts, Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2EU, United Kingdom Keywords reflective practice, dyslexia, mature students, international students, learning styles Harriet Edwards is the English for Academic Purposes Coordinator at the Royal College of Art. Her work deals with international students as well as with writing development at M.A. and Research level, and the co-running of a new creative writing initiative at the college. She was a project team member of Writing PAD and is now assistant editor for its Journal of Writing in Creative Practice (Intellect). In April 2007, she began a Ph.D. that is exploring how contemporary design processes might impact Higher Education writing culture. The research project is based in the Landscape, Architecture and Design School at Leeds Metropolitan University. › Writing Purposefully in Art and Design (Writing PAD), Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 89-102. › Art and design students employing aspects of the visual and metaphoric to structure and create meaning in writing. An insight from the MA dissertation-writing Intranet site at the Royal College of Art, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 119-. › Design research by practice: modes of writing in a recent Ph.D. from the RCA, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 53-68. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 317-321. › Reviews:Inspiring Writing in Art and Design: Taking a Line for a Write, Pat Francis (2009), Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 254-. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 359-365. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 171-180. › Writing experiments with a lateral leaning, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 211-225. Buthayna Eilouti Prince Sultan University College for Women, Interior Design Department, P.O. Box 53073, Riyadh 11586, Saudi Arabia Keywords architectural design education, dynamic design, responsive architecture, digital studio, collaborative design pictorial representation diagram Buthayna Eilouti is associate professor of Architecture and chair of Interior design department in Prince Sultan University in KSA. She earned a Ph.D., M.Sc. and M.Arch. in Architecture from University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States. Her research interests include: computer applications in architecture, design programming, design studies, methods and pedagogy, visual studies, shape grammar, Islamic architecture, intelligent buildings and information visualization. › A problem-based learning project for computer-supported architectural design pedagogy, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.3, 197-212. › A spatial development of a string processing tool for encoding architectural design processing, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.1, 57-74. Elisabeth El Refaie Cardiff University, School of English, Communication and Philosophy, Humanities Building, Colum Drive, Cardiff, CF10 3EU, United Kingdom Keywords metaphor, memory, comics, autobiography Elisabeth El Refaie works at the Centre for Language and Communication, Cardiff University, where she teaches undergraduate and postgraduate modules on various aspects of interpersonal and media communication. The focus of her research is on new literacies and visual/multimodal forms of metaphor, narrative and humour. A recently completed British Academy-funded research project, Editorial Cartoons and Geopolitical Perceptions, conducted in collaboration with Kathrin Hörschelmann from Durham University, explored young British people’s interpretations of newspaper cartoons. Her work has appeared in several edited volumes and in a wide range of scholarly journals, including the Journal of Pragmatics, and the Journal of Sociolinguistics, Visual Communication, and Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education. She is currently writing a book on autobiographical comics, to be published with the University Press of Mississippi. › Subjective time in David B.'s graphic memoir Epileptic, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 281-299. Chad Elias University of York Keywords Chad Elias is a lecturer in the History of Art at the University of York, UK. A recent graduate of Northwestern University's Ph.D. programme in Art History, Elias's research focuses on the politics of documentary and archival practices in contemporary art, particularly as they relate to the obstruction and movement of images in territories shaped by war. › Book Reviews, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 151-168. James Elkins Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism, Department of Visual and Critical Studies, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 112 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL, 60603, United States of America Keywords modern painting, modernism, aesthetic, Leningrad, marine James Elkins is a Professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. His writing focuses on the history and theory of images in art, science, and nature. Some of his books are exclusively on fine art (What Painting Is, Why Are Our Pictures Puzzles?). Others include scientific and non-art images and archaeology (The Domain of Images, On Pictures and the Words That Fail Them), and some include natural history as well (How to Use Your Eyes). › Two forms of judgement: forgiving and demanding, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.1, 37-46. Jennifer Elsden-Clifton RMIT University, School of Education, PO Box 71, Bundoora 3083, Victoria, Australia Jennifer Elsden-Clifton is a student in the Faculty of Information and Communication at Central Queensland University, Australia. She recently submitted a doctoral thesis which explored the transformative potential of art education. Her other areas of interest are cultural studies, sexuality and gender studies. Keywords feminist poststructuralism, transformation, subjectivity, students’ art › Negotiating transformative waters: students exploring their subjectivity in art, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 43-52. John Elsom Arts Interlink Keywords arts management, Chinese creative industries, modernity Dr. John Elsom is the director of Arts Interlink, the international arts management consultancy and was the 2008 winner of the Award of International Outstanding Contribution to the Creative Industry of China. His latest book, Missing the Point: The Rise of High Modernity and the Decline of Everything Else, was published by The Lutterworth Press in 2007. › Copyright in a digital age, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 283-289. Lewis Elton Keywords change, creativity, enquiry-based learning, quality Lewis Elton is Visiting Professor of Higher Education, University of Manchester; Honorary Professor of Higher Education, University College London and Professor Emeritus of Higher Education and Visiting Distinguished Scholar, University of Surrey. He is a Fellow of the American Institute of Physics and of the Society for Research into Higher Education. His most recent work has been concerned with the culturecomplexity theory, purposeless collaboration scholarship of teaching and learning, including the research/teaching nexus in higher education and the balance between collegial and ‘top down’ management in universities. › Assessing creativity in an unhelpful climate, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 119-130. › Complexity, Universities and the Arts, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 205-209. Catherine Elwes University of the Arts London Catherine Elwes is Professor of Moving Image Art at CCW Graduate School, University of the Arts London. › Peter Campus: Opticks, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 107-110. Keywords Mathew Emmett Estranged Space Keywords Mathew Emmett, AADipl B.Sc. (UCL) is an Architect, academic and conceptual artist, who questions mediated-realities and mnemonic structures by exploring multidimensional total environments. Emmett is the co-founder of transdisciplinary research group 'Estranged Space', and currently holds an artist residency at the Roman Baths at Bath. Emmett has co-directed international summer schools in Detmold, Germany and has lectured at Technische Universiteit, Eindhoven. In 2007, Emmett received a research grant to attend the Karlheinz Stockhausen Composition and Interpretation Course, Kuerten, Germany, for the analysis of compositional strategies of 'Licht-Bilder', to formulate a system for interpreting sound as a spatial concept for architecture. Throughout his career Emmett has received many awards for collaborations, including with Kaos Theatre and World Heritage Project. Recent publications include Space Craft - Developments in Architectural Computing, Architectural Voices, Listening to Old Buildings and Architects' Sketchbook. › Bunker auscultation: A classification system for a proto-method of sensory space composition, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 287-303. Astrid Ensslin Astrid Ensslin is Senior Lecturer in Digital Humanities at Bangor University. Her main research interests are in the fields of digital University of Bangor, School of Creative Studies and Media, College Road, Bangor, Gwynedd, LL57 2DG, United Kingdom literature and theory, video games and ludology, discourse analysis, semiotics and communication. She has a BA/MA from Tuebingen University (2002), a Postgraduate Teaching Certificate from Leeds University and a Ph.D. from Heidelberg University (2006). She is founding editor of Intellect's Journal of Gaming and Virtual Worlds. Keywords digital literature and theory, video games, communication › Women in Games 2007: new platforms,new perspectives, new players:University of Wales, Newport, School of Art, Media and Design, 19– 21 April 2007.Conference report, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 77-78. Mavis Enti Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, General Art Studies, College of Art, PO Box FN 743, c/o Department of General Art Studies (Art Education), KNUST, Kumasi, Kumasi, 233, Ghana Keywords child art, Ghana, creativity, aesthetics, education Dr. Mavis Enti holds a BA degree in Art (Painting) from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ghana and a Ph.D. in Art Education from the same institution. Her Ph.D. dissertation centred on Art Therapy and Child Psychology; which are her areas of specialization. Currently, she is a Lecturer at the Department of General Art Studies (Art Education), KNUST and also a consultant in psychology at OAA Consult, Ghana. Her research interests are child psychology, art therapy, guidance and counselling, aesthetics and criticism and research methodology. › Enhancing children’s learning: the art perspective, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 143-155. Suzan Duygu Eristi Anadolu University, Faculty of Education, Department of Computer Education and Instructional Technologies, Eskisehir, 26470, Turkey Keywords interactive art education, technology, cultural awareness Suzan Duygu Eristi is Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Education and Instructional Technologies at Anadolu University, Turkey. She has MA and Ph.D. degrees in Fine Arts Education focusing on computer-assisted art education, design and instruction. She lists her research interests as technology-assisted art education, cultural studies, digital storytelling, qualitative research methods in art education, multicultural art education, graphic design, interactive instruction and instructional design. › Using an interactive art education application to promote cultural awareness: a case study from Turkey, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 241-256. Robert A. Erlewine Robert Erlewine is an Assistant Professor in the Religion Department Illinois Wesleyan University, 1312 Park Street, Bloomington, IL, 61701, United States of America at Illinois Wesleyan University. He holds graduate degrees from Boston College (M.A. in Philosophy) and Rice University (Ph.D in Religious Studies.) His research is primarily in the field of modern and post-modern religious thought, especially its Jewish, Christian and post-Christian varieties, particularly in regard to philosophical and theological accounts of tolerance and pluralism. Keywords religion, Christianity, Judaism, post-Christianity, philosophy, theology › When the Blind Speak of Colour: narrative, ethics and stories of the Shoah, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.1, 25-36. Jale Erzen Middle East Technical University, Faculty of Architecture, Inonu Bulvari, Ankara, 6531, Turkey Keywords perception, environment, sensory, experimental, the body Jale Nejdet Erzen studied painting at the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles from 1968 to 1974. She received her Ph.D. in Architectural History (focusing on the Ottoman architect Sinan) from the Technical University of Istanbul in 1982. From 1981 to 1984 she worked as editor of the fine arts journal BOYUT. Since 1991 she has acted as the president of the SANART Association of Aesthetics and Visual Culture in Turkey and has organized international symposia. Between 1995 and 1998 she was secretary-general of the International Association of Aesthetics. She has paintings in public and private collections in Turkey and in private collections in Europe and the United States of America. She is a Professor in the Faculty of Architecture, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. Her publications concern environmental aesthetics, aesthetics, contemporary art, Ottoman architecture and Turkish artists. › An ecological approach to art education: environmental aesthetics, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 179-. Mark Evans Coventry University, Performing Arts Department, Priory Street, Coventry, West Midlands, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords reflective practice, creative writing, performing arts, assessment task Mark Evans is Head of the Performing Arts Department at Coventry University. He has written and researched around movement training for actors, improvisation and performance, physical theatre, creative enterprise education and reflective professional practice. His book on the early twentieth-century French theatre director, Jacques Copeau, was published by Routledge in 2006, and he is now working on a critical analysis of movement training practice for the modern actor. › Another kind of writing: reflective practice and creative journals in the performing arts, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 69-76. Kate Evans Scarborough Psychotherapy Training Institute, 117 Columbus Ravine, Scarborough, YO12 7QU, United Kingdom Keywords creativity,, creative writing therapeutic writing, free writing, writerly self, mental well-being, depression Kate Evans BSc MA is a writer and a UKCP-registered psychotherapeutic counsellor, working out of Scarborough Psychotherapy Training Institute. She is co-ordinator of, and tutor on, the BA (Hons) in Creative Writing at the University of Hull Scarborough Campus. › The chrysalis and the butterfly: A phenomenological study of one person’s writing journey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 173-186. Stephen Farthing Rootstein Hopkins Chair in Drawing, Chelsea College of Art, University of the Arts, London, 16 John Islip Street, London, SW1P 4JU, United Kingdom Keywords design, communication, education, painting Stephen Farthing is the Rootstein Hopkins Professor of Drawing at the University of the Arts, London. He was previously the Executive Director of the New York Academy of Art and for ten years was the Ruskin Master and Professional Fellow of Saint Edmund Hall, Oxford. He was also the Artist in Residence at the Hayward Gallery in London. In 2007 he was awarded a Visiting Hood Fellow at the Institute of Creative Arts & Industries, University of Auckland, New Zealand. He has been commissioned by, amongst others, The National Portrait Gallery, London, and the British Embassy in Paris. He has had over 38 single exhibitions of his work and over 48 group exhibitions. He has written and edited extensively, including '1001 Paintings to see before you die,' (Cassell Illustrated 2006) and has appeared many times on radio and television. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 71-. Jurgen Faust Keywords design discourse, designing media, designing design, media designer, first–order and third– order design Jurgen Faust is full Professor for Media Design at the University of Applied Science MHMK Munich and Dean of the Media and Communication Faculty. He is the International Consultant for the Group Istituto Europeo di Design in Milan. Previously he was a Professor of Design Theory at Tecnologico de Monterrey, Mexico. Between 1999 and December 2005 he was a Professor for New Media and Dean of Integrated Media at the Cleveland Institute of Art. He has taught art and design and theory with an emphasis on design processes and the possible transformation into other disciplines. Faust is a practising researcher, designer and artist who has exhibited in many museums andgalleries in Europe and United States. The focus of his recent publications is on transforming design. › Designing design and designing media, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 109-114. Dita Judith Federman University of Haifa, Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies, DMT training, Mt. Carmel, Haifa, 31905, Israel Dita Federman is a researcher, lecturer and the director of Dance Movement Therapy training at the Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies, University of Haifa, Israel. She is an accredited Dance Movement Therapist, psychotherapist and senior supervisor (DMT). Dr. Federman has experience working within psychiatric settings and with children, adults and the geriatric population. Keywords empathy, kinesthetic ability, DMT, group, training, assessment › Kinesthetic ability and the development of empathy in Dance Movement Therapy, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 137-154. Anne Fenech Keywords leisure, drama, engagement, neuroscience, therapy Anne Fenech is currently a lecturer at the University of Southampton School of Health Sciences. Her background is in management (MBA), gerontology (MSc) and occupational therapy (DipCOT). Her career history has included several Head Occupational therapist posts before moving into general/policy management and more recently a research fellowship. She is currently the English Board Member for the South East Region of the College of Occupational Therapists and also a Registration Assessor for the Health Professions Council. › Inspiring transformations through participation in drama for individuals with neuropalliative conditions, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 63-80. Marián López Fernández-Cao Complutense University of Madrid, Department of Didactics of Plastic Expression, Faculty of Education, Office 1611, c/ Rector Royo Villanova s/n, 28040, 28040, Spain Marián López Fernández-Cao. Ph.D., MA in Psychotherapeutic Intervention. Senior Lecturer (Tenured) Dept. of Didactics of Plastic Expression. Faculty of Education. Complutense University of Madrid (U.C.M.). (Office 1611). Head of Research Team nº 941035: Aplicaciones del Arte en la Integración Social: Arte, Terapia y Educación Artística para la Inclusión (UCM). Coordinator of the MA of Art Therapy and Art Education for Social Inclusion. Director of the Feminist Research Institute (UCM). Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Laurence Figgis The Glasgow School of Art, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, G3 6RQ, United Kingdom Keywords samizdat, zine, selfpublishing Laurence Figgis is an artist and writer based in Glasgow and is Lecturer in Fine Art Painting and Printmaking at the Glasgow School of Art. Exhibitions include Flying/ Stealing, Galleria S.A.L.E.S., Rome (2006), The Great Macguffin, Transmission Gallery Glasgow (2005), and Franz Ferdinand, Grazer Kunstverein, Graz (2004). Figgis works in collage, drawing, text-based media and sculpture using both visual and verbal elements to develop his own fictional and imaginative narratives. He has written and lectured on a range of subjects, including contemporary painting in Scotland and the interpretation of folklore in film. › Hampstead Revisited, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 301-325. Mick Finch Keywords tableau, medium, medium specificty, practice, theory, painting, abstraction as representation Mick Finch's research interests include painting, abstraction as representation, hegemonic structures, materiality of images, pictorial dispositifs, economies of transcription, archives and appropriation. His current research focuses on a discursive field of painting particularly in terms of issues of abstraction, as representation, in relationship to, and as, hegemonic structures. This has constituted his research in terms of his studio practice in paintings made between 1996 2005 but also in the form of a number of published texts. › Writing on Practice, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 3-5. › Studio notes: Closer Than You Think, Ply- series, Riposte, Sublimey and Nevermind, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 83-98. Joanne Finkelstein University of Greenwich, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, London, SE10 9LS, United Kingdom Keywords deception, appearances, identity, image Joanne Finkelstein is a sociologist trained in the ‘Chicago School’. She has published six monographs including Dining Out: A Sociology of Modern Manners (1989, Polity, Oxford); The Fashioned Self (1991, Polity, Oxford); After a Fashion (1994, Melbourne University Press); The Sociological Bent: A Study of Metro Culture (2005, Thomson, Sydney); and The Art of Self Invention (2007, IB Tauris, London). She has undertaken research consultancies in the food, science, communications and insurance industries. She is currently Executive Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Greenwich. › Fashioned identity and the unreliable image, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 161-171. Terry Finnigan University of the Arts London, London Coilege of Fashion, 20 John Princes Street, London, W1G OBJ, United Kingdom Terry Finnigan is the Creative Learning in Practice CETL Co-ordinator at London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London. Her current research interests are around widening participation in higher education, critical pedagogy and the important role of student voice in change initiatives. Keywords CETL projects, diverse learners, widening participation, change initiatives, inclusive pedagogic practices › ‘Tell Us About It’: Diverse student voices in creative practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 135-150. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 183-187. Teresa A Fisher New York University, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, 82 Washington Square East, Pless Hall, 2nd Floor Annex, New York, NY 10012, United States of America Keywords Boal, facilitation, applied theatre, informed consent Teresa A. Fisher is a doctoral candidate in the educational theatre programme at New York University. A former mental health counsellor and play therapist, Teresa’s interest is in using theatre to explore how we understand our bodies, focusing on obesity. She is an educator, theatre artist, and an administrator. She is also the Production Manager/Administrator for the Program in Educational Theatre’s New Plays for Young Audiences summer series for the New York City Arts in Education Roundtable. › First do no harm: Informed consent principles for trust and understanding in applied theatre practice, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 157-164. Jennifer Fisher › EDITORIAL, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 3-4. Keywords Nick Fitch Nick Fitch is a Ph.D. candidate in Art History at Columbia University. Columbia University Keywords › 'Situações-Limites': the emergence of video art in Brazil in the 1970s, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 59-67. Claire Flannery Claire Flannery is a critic based in London. The Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin › Mirosław Bałka: apple T., Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 111-114. Keywords Katja Fleischmann James Cook University, School of Creative Arts, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD 4811, Australia Keywords curriculum design, employability, learning and teaching pool, multidisciplinary collaboration, design education Katja Fleischmann is a senior digital media design and new media arts educator at the School of Creative Arts at James Cook University, Australia. Her international experience as designer and educator informs her current doctoral research interest: the development and implementation of an alternative learning and teaching model for undergraduate digital media design education. She has received national recognition from the Australian Learning and Teaching Council for this work. › The POOL Model: Foregrounding an alternative learning and teaching approach for digital media design in higher education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 57-73. Jerome Fletcher University College Falmouth, Tremough Campus, Penryn, TR10 9EZ, United Kingdom Keywords e-literature, children's literature Jerome Fletcher is Associate Professor of Performance Writing at University College Falmouth. He has published three children’s books, three literary concept books and a translation of a French novella. His work has been translated into nine languages. He has done a number of collaborative multimedia performances in galleries and museums in Vienna, New York, Bregenz, London, Paris, Edinburgh and several other cities. The main focus of his research and practice is e-literature. He is part of the Electronic Literature as Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice (ELMCIP) consortium of seven universities researching e-literature communities in the European context. He will be presenting a paper and performing at E-Poetry in SUNY Buffalo, New York in May. › …ha perdut la veu: Some reflections on the composition of e-literature as a minor literature, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 53-63. Adele Flood Adele Flood, an experienced educator and researcher, is on the Council for Australian Art Education and a past Council member of the International Society for Education through Art. She is the editor of the Swinburne University of Technology, Academic Development and Support, P.O. Box 218, Hawthorn, VIC, 3122, Australia Journal of Australian Art Education and on the editorial boards of International Journal of Art and Design Education and Quality Assurance in Education. In her doctoral thesis, Common Threads, she investigated ideas of artistic identity, narrative, memory and agency. Adele is a practising artist; her exhibition called Sojourn, based upon on travels to the South of France, was exhibited at the Collingwood Gallery in Melbourne, Australia in March 2007. She is Assistant Director of Academic Development and Support at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, where she is responsible for teaching quality and enhancement. Keywords virtual world, constructed and manipulated imagery, simulation, technologies, art education › Manipulation, simulation, stimulation: the role of art education in the digital age, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 91-102. Maria Flôr Dias Universidad de Minho, Largo do Paço, 4704-553 Braga, Portugal Keywords bigheads, arts education, culture, interdisciplinary, Portuguese patrimony Maria dos Anjos Flôr Dias currently holds a position as invited Lecturer at Instituto de Estudos da Criança (Universidade do Minho). She graduated from the Conservatório Nacional de Lisboa and holds an MA in Education sciences (Universidade Nova de Lisboa – UNL). Her current research, leading to a Ph.D., focuses on the emergence, development and function of artistic education on nineteenth and twentieth century Portuguese primary schools. › Male & Female BIGHEADS: Different ways of looking, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 285-296. Hendrik Folkerts Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Paulus Potterstraat 13, 1071 CX Amsterdam, Netherlands Keywords art, art history, curating Hendrik Folkerts is an art historian based in Amsterdam. He currently works as curator of the public programme at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and as coordinator of the curatorial programme at De Appel Art Centre, Amsterdam. Folkerts frequently publishes in such journals and platforms as Metropolis M, Afterall Online, Tubelight and for the Stedelijk Museum (Bureau) Amsterdam. › REVIEWS, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 85-. Jo Foord Jo Foord is a Principal Research Fellow at the Cities Institute, London Metropolitan University, where she undertakes research on urban and regeneration issues. She has a research and teaching background in Cities Institute, Ladbroke House, 6266 Highbury Grove, London, N5 2AD, United Kingdom Human Geography and has worked in local government. Her particular research interests are in urban social and cultural inequalities. She is currently completing research into the governance of disadvantaged urban areas in Vancouver as part of a comparative study of Canadian ad British cities and engaged in multidisciplinary research into the quality of life in mixed-use inner city neighbourhoods. She has also undertaken research into local cultural policy and creative industries, consumption and retail change, and gendered employment all within the context of the uneven development of city spaces. Keywords urban, regeneration, social and cultural inequalities, cultural policy, creative industries, urban development › Strategies for creative industries: an international review, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 91-113. Richard Forster United Kingdom Keywords art, ocean, landscapes Richard Forster is an artist and essayist who was born in the United States in 1970. He received a BA in Fine Art at Manchester Polytechnic and a MA in Visual Theories at the University of London. In 2006, he was selected for a Jerwood Artists’ Platform hosted by Cell Project Space in London. Richard currently lives in England. › Seascapes, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 211-217. Maurizio Forte University of California, Humanities and Art Department, 5200 North Lake Road, Merced, CA, 95343, United States of America Keywords metaverse, virtual collaborative systems, cyberarchaeology Maurizio Forte, Ph.D., is a full professor of world heritage at the University of California, Merced, and Professor of Virtual Environments for Cultural Heritage at the University of Lugano. He is member of the board of directors of several international organizations such as Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative (ECAI), Virtual Systems and Multimedia (VSMM) and International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS). His research topics are virtual heritage, cyberarchaeology, landscape archaeology, proto-history, and methodology of archaeological research. His research work and teaching are focused on the interpretation, communication and reconstruction process in archaeology and cultural heritage. He has coordinated research projects in Italy, India, Turkey Ethiopia, Egypt, Syria, Kazakhstan, Peru, China, Oman, and Mexico. He is editor and author of several books including Virtual Archaeology (Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1997), Virtual Reality in Archaeology (Oxford, Archaeopress, 2000), and of over 200 › Cyber-archaeology and metaverse collaborative systems, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 7-19. Rebecca Fortnum Camberwell College of Arts University of the Arts London, 41 Tyrrell Road, London, SE22 9NE, United Kingdom Keywords documentation, practice, research into practice, creative process Rebecca Fortnum read English at Oxford before gaining an MFA from Newcastle University and taking up a fellowship at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, United States. She has been a Visiting Fellow in Painting at Plymouth University and at Winchester School of Art, a visiting artist at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and a Senior Lecturer at Norwich School of Art and Wimbledon School of Art. She has received several awards including from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, the British Council, the Arts Council of England, the British School in Rome and the Art and Humanities Research Council. She has exhibited widely including solo shows at the Collective Gallery, Edinburgh, Spacex Gallery, Exeter, Kapil Jariwala Gallery, London, Angel Row Gallery, Nottingham, The Drawing Gallery, London and Gallery 33, Berlin. She was instrumental in founding the artist-run spaces Cubitt Gallery and Gasworks Gallery in London. › Special Edition Editorial: The Problem of Documenting Fine Art Practices and Processes, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 167-174. Jean-Paul Fourmentraux Jean-Paul Fourmentraux is a sociologist (Ph.D.). Professor at Lille 3 University and member of the Geriico laboratory of communication sciences, associate researcher at the Raymond Aron Centre for Sociology and political studies (CNRS UMR 8036) in Paris School of the High Studies in Social Sciences (EHESS). His latest book is Art and Internet. New forms of creation, (2005, 2010, CNRS, Paris, France). Lille 3 University, UFR Arts et Culture, Pont de Bois, Rue du Barreau – BP 60149, Villeneuve-d’Ascq, 59653, France Keywords crossing values, boundary organizations, interdisciplinarity, industrial innovation, artistic research › Linking art and sciences, an organizational dilemma. about Hexagram consortium (Montreal, Canada), Creative Industries Journal, 3.2, 137-150. John Fox Keywords printmaker, poet, author John Fox is a prolific artist, printmaker, poet, author, cultural provocateur and grandfather who works internationally. He was the cofounder (1968) and Artistic Director of Welfare State International, the legendary Arts Collective which, after 38 years of joyous mayhem, he archived on April Fools Day 2006. He is course leader of the MA in Cultural Performance at Bristol University. › The Oystercatcher's Tale, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 239-243. Alice Fox Bradford College, 13 Farfield Road, Shipley, West Yorkshire, BD18 4QP, United Kingdom Keywords temporality, materiality, web-based artefacts, open source software, active notation Alice Fox is a textile artist studying Contemporary Surface Design and Textiles at Bradford School of Art and Media. Her work combines elements of print, weave and embroidery. She has an intense interest in the natural world and in the detail of organic things. Her acutely observed work on Fifteen Images brings digital manipultation of textile images alongside printmaking and embroidery. › Music and textiles interact, Craft Research, 1.1, 39-61. Tania Fraga Institute of Mathematics and Art, 454, Ap 1401, V Buarque, Sao Paulo, CEP: 01221-020, Brazil Keywords art and technology, computer art, interactive arts, virtual reality, robotic art, architecture Tania Fraga is an Architect and Artist. She holds a Ph.D. in Communication and Semiotics from Sao Paulo Catholic University; is the Vice President of the Institute of Mathematics and Art, Sao Paulo; is developing research with a Senior Post Doctoral research grant from the Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) at School of Arts and Communication from the Sao Paulo University, Brazil; and is a member of the Zero Gravity Consortium, USA. In 1999, she developed research with a Post Doctoral grant from the Brazilian Ministry of Education at Centre for Advanced Inquiry in Interactive Arts and Science, Technology and Art Research at Plymouth University, United Kingdom. From 1987 until 2003 she was a professor at the Art Institute, University of Brasilia, Brazil and in 2003, she was a member of the Advisory Research Committee of the Banff New Media Centre, Canada. › Thinking Liquid Thoughts: Version 2, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.3, 169-. › Numeric Tessituras, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 243-250. Mary Anne Francis University of the Arts London and University of Brighton, School of Arts and Media, University of Brighton, Grand Parade, Brighton, BN2 OJY, United Kingdom Keywords art-writing, postautonomy, critique, art-school critique, fine art Mary Anne Francis attended a non-selective state school, which has informed an ongoing commitment to Widening Participation initiatives. She is currently Senior Lecturer in Fine Art at the University of Brighton, and Research Fellow in Writing and Art, ChelseaCamberwell-Wimbledon Graduate School, University of the Arts London. › Dirty work: art beyond ‘autonomy’, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 3344. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 199-204. › A theory of critique…in practice: practice as critique, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 241-251. › ‘Widening Participation’ in the Fine Art Ph.D.: Expanding research and practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 167-181. › In the Café Flaubert, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 133-149. › Discussion paper from the Working Group on ‘Situational Fiction’, Chelsea College of Art & Design, University of the Arts London: On the value of ‘Situational Fiction’ for an artist’s writing1, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 151-158. › Here and there: An artist's writing as aesthetic form, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 97-109. Jill Franz Keywords interior design, design methodology, aesthetics, personenvironment interaction, sociocultural studies Jill Franz is an Associate Professor in Interior Design at Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane. Her points of expertise are interior design theory and practice, design methodology, aesthetics, person-environment interaction, socio-cultural studies, practice-led research, art-informed inquiry and design research methodology. In 2004, she and Steffen Lehmann published their paper Side-by-side: A Pedagogical Basis for (Design) Transdisciplinarity. › Publication Review, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 195-202. Biljana C Fredriksen Vestfold University College, College of Education, P.O. Box 2243, Tonsberg, Vestfold, 3103, Norway Keywords dynamic curricula, meaning making, art materials, creativity, early childhood Biljana C. Fredriksen has been teaching visual arts in interdisciplinary early childhood teacher education programmes at the College of Education, Vestfold University College in Norway since 1998. She started conducting a number of field studies with young children (0–5 years) in 2005. She is currently studying for her Doctorate degree at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design. The study is funded by The Norwegian Research Council. › Meaning making, democratic participation and art in early childhood education: Can inspiring objects structure dynamic curricula?, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 381-395. Bess Frimodig Bess Frimodig is an artist and researcher focused on printmaking and its social role. She works internationally with a focused practice of University of the West of England, Centre for Fine Art Print Research, United Kingdom printmaking and social engagement through collaborative projects. The practice combines exploring transformation through the arts alongside with wider notions of dialogue, audience participation and cultural democracy with lecturing and writing. Keywords higher education, social engagement, outreach, community arts › Insight on OutReach: Towards a critical practice, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 145-161. Maria Fulkova Charles University, Faculty of Education, M.D. Rettigove 4, 116 39 Prague 1, Czech Republic Keywords gallery education, teacher, education, cross-cultural, pedagogy Marie Fulková lectures at the Faculty of Education, Department of Art Education, Charles University in Prague. Her research focuses on discourses of art and art education and links between cultural and educational institutions. Her book Diskurs Umeˇní a Vzdeˇlávání/Discourse of Art and Education was published in 2008 (Praha: H&H). She is also involved in curriculum research and development and interdisciplinary approaches in education. She collaborates with galleries and museums in Prague and abroad. › Through the eyes of a stray dog: encounters with the Other, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 111-128. Matthew Fuller Goldsmiths, University of London, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Keywords Jeremijenko, Bec, Coates, phenomenology, sensoria Matthew Fuller is the David Gee Reader in Digital Media at the Centre for Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths College, University of London. His publications include ‘Behind the Blip, essays on the culture of software’; ‘Media Ecologies, materialist energies in art and technoculture’; and ‘Software Studies, a lexicon’. Research for ‘Art for Animals’ is supported by the Fonds voor Beeldende Kunst, Vormgeving en Bouwkunst of the Netherlands. › Art for animals, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.1, 17-33. Bjarne Sode Funch Roskilde University, Department of Psychology and Educational Studies, Denmark Keywords aesthetic experience, art Bjarne Sode Funch is Associated Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychology and Educational Studies at Roskilde University in Denmark and Senior Researcher at the Esbjerg Art Museum. Professor Funch’s research interests include personality psychology with a focus on phenomenological and existential theories and methods, the psychology of art, and aesthetic education. He is the author of The Psychology of Art Appreciation (1997) and a number of education, attitude, mental imagery, art encounter publications that focus on the psychological theories of the aesthetic experience, strategies for museums education, and partnerships with schools. Funch’s teaching incorporates phenomenological studies in different areas of personality psychology as a point of departure for an existential understanding, particularly different types of art appreciation, including the aesthetic experience, the relationship between art and spirituality, artistic creativity, and the influences of art in the individual and its importance in society. › Introducing people to art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.1, 47-60. Clayton Funk The Ohio State University, Department of Art Education, 1961 Tuttle Park Place, Columbus, Ohio 43210, United States of America Keywords art education, material culture Clayton Funk’s research is about the history of art education, material culture in the early twentieth century. These cultural histories of art education reveal webs of learning filters, learning ways and learning machines. His work is published as articles, book chapters and book reviews and his studio work includes graphics, web development and fibres. Funk holds a doctorate in Art Education from Teachers College, Columbia University and an MFA in Painting and Printmaking from Bowling Green State University. › Things to come, things already done: a review of 20UNDER40: Reinventing the Arts and Arts Education for the 21st Century, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 71-75. Gonçalo Furtado Faculdade de Arquitectura da Universidade do Porto, Rua do Campo Alegre 78-7, Oporto, 4169007, Portugal Keywords interface, meta-space and sciences of complexity, Cedric Price, John and Julia Frazer, generator, intelligent architecture Gonçalo M. Furtado C. Lopes graduated in Architecture (Oporto University, Portugal), obtained a Master in Architecture (Universidad Politecnica da Catalunha, Spain), and Ph.D. in Theory and History of Architecture (University College of London, England). His Ph.D. dissertation focuses on the encounters of the British professionals Gordon Pask, Cedric Price and John Frazer - and provides a complete account of two outstanding architectural projects related to systems and computation - Generator and Japan Net. He has given lectures in Portugal, United Kingdom, United States, Spain, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico. He is the author of: Notes on the Space of Digital Technique (Oporto: Mimesis, 2002), Marcos Cruz: Unpredictable Bodies (Oporto: Mimesis, 2004) and Off Fourm: Postglobal City and Marginal Design Discourses (Bogota: Pei, 2004). › Brief notes on two inf inite scales, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.2, 87-96. › Cedric Price's Generator and the Frazers' systems research, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 55-72. Kenneth G. Hay University of Leeds, School of Design, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords painting, new media, studio practice, digital imagery, sound, multimedia, Cubism, contemporary art Professor Kenneth G. Hay BA, MA, Ph.D., FRSA, is Chair of Contemporary Art Practice and Deputy Head of School, in the School of Design, the University of Leeds, where he works as an artist, writer and lecturer. As an artist he works in the fields of painting, photography, print, digital imagery, video, sound and multimedia. As an academic his research interests are in Italian art and philosophical aesthetics, art practice as research, modernism and postmodernism, architecture history and theory, Cubism, Cyberspace, European Art from 1900, and the contemporary world art. He exhibits regularly in the UK and abroad, most recently in in the Italia Telecom Future Centre, San Salvador, Rialto, Venice (Sept 2004); in the Galeria Pryzmat, Cracow, Poland (July 2004), in London, 'Deptford X' (June 2004); and simultaneously in Bradford Cartwright Hall and the Brno Gallery, Czech Republic (May-June 2005). › Concrete abstractions – a Della Volpean perspective on studio practice as research, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 64-77. Stephen A. Gage The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, Wates House, 22 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0QB, United Kingdom Keywords façade, environmental controlcybernetics, governor, helmsman, hybrid terrain Stephen Gage is Professor of Innovative Technology at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London. His professional career spans the design and construction of buildings, academic teaching and research in government, private and academic contexts. Currently he coordinates the technical aspects of design research at the Bartlett, UCL, and is a founder member of the Bartlett Interactive Architecture Workshop. His many published building designs are recognized as leaders in their field. His long experience as a designer has sustained an interest in the way the technology of building can subtly modify the external environment. His other area of research comes from a long-standing interest into the time-based aspects of architecture that relate to human occupation and building use and takes forward an early interest in cybernetics and building brief writing. › Edge monkeys - the design of habitat specific robots in buildings, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.3, 169-180. › The boat/helmsman, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 15-24. Julia Gaimster London College of Fashion, 20 John Prince's Street, London, W1G 0B, United Kingdom Keywords virtual worlds, art and design, emotions, interactions, learning Julia Gaimster is the Head of eLearning at the London College of Fashion. She has 20 years experience in fashion education and during that time she has developed expertise in the use and development of virtual learning environments (VLEs) and e-Learning resources. She gained her Doctorate in Education at Surrey University in 2004. Her research interests cover the pedagogy of eLearning in art and design, work based learning and the use of Web2 technologies and virtual worlds to support learning and teaching in art and design. She has worked on a variety of e-Learning resources including Seeing-drawing and the Textiles Online Resource Guide. She is currently developing an online resource (Sketchbook) designed to facilitate cross-disciplinary visual research in art and design. The Art, Design and Media Subject Centre are sponsoring this project. › Book Reviews, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 93-96. › Reflections on Interactions in virtual worlds and their implication for learning art and design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 187-199. David Gall University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Department of Art and Art History, 9201 University City Blvd, Charlotte, NC, 28223-0001, United States of America David Gall completed his BFA and MFA studies in India, and his Ph.D. at the Pennsylvania State University. His writing includes articles on Caribbean art, related critical and historical issues, as well as on social theory in art education. › Insight from another side: what art education can learn from Aurobindo, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 207-218. Keywords spirituality, intuition, visual culture, art education, aesthetics Ray Gallon Keywords social networking, information, education, media, behaviour Ray Gallon has been a social networker since 1985. He has consistently pursued a split life, between art, the media and industry. He has been a lighting and sound designer for the theatre and an independent media and sound artist. Ray has enjoyed a long career as a radio journalist and producer for CBC, NPR, WDR (Köln), Deutsche Welle, Radio Netherlands International and France Culture. He is a former programme manager of WNYC-FM (Public Radio in New York City), where he won three Armstrong Awards. Ray is a frequent speaker for the groups; Society for Technical Communications (STC), Rencontres A.M.E. in Vallais, Switzerland, and other conferences and festivals. › Media behaviour: towards the transformation society, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 115-122. Rejane Galvão Coutinho Instituto de Artes- UNESP, Rua Dom Luis Lasagna, 400, Ipiranga, Sâo Paulo, 04266-030, Brazil Keywords art, gender, professional training, history, applied arts Rejane Galvão Coutinho is professor in the Arts Institute at São Paulo State University – UNESP where she teaches undergraduate and postgraduate courses for art teachers. Her main research areas are the history of art education; artistic and aesthetic development and museum education. She is an associate researcher with the Grupo de Pesquisa em Arte e Formação de Educadores – UNESP, and the Centre de Recherche Images, Culture et Cognition (Paris1, Pantheon Sorbonne). Her most recent publication is Artes Visuais: da exposição à sala de aula (Visual Arts: From Exhibition to the Classroom) (São Paulo, Edusp, 2005), co-written with Ana Mae Barbosa and Heloisa Margarido Sales. › Art education and professional training: The São Paulo Professional School for Women, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 69-76. Alice Gambrell University of Southern California, College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, Los Angeles, CA, 90089, United States of America Keywords animation, stop motion Alice Gambrell is Associate Professor of English at the University of Southern California. She received her BA from Dartmouth College, a MA and Ph.D in English from the University of Virginia, and a Ph.D from the Savannah College of Art and Design. She has produced many scholarly articles, art installations, and conference papers since 2009. Her research interests include modernism, gender studies, minority discourse analysis, and new media. › In visible hands: the work of stop motion, Animation Practice, Process & Production, 1.1, 107-129. Jonathan Gander Kingston University Business School, Kingston Hill, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, KT2 7LB, United Kingdom Keywords strategic resources, clusters, fashion industry, apparel Jonathan Gander is a senior lecturer in strategic management at Kingston University Business School, London. He has experience as a consultant in fashion retail and has provided executive business training to multinational companies and government associations. His main area of research is in the organization of the cultural economy. He has published a number of academic papers on this topic, for example in the Journal of Organizational Behavior, and the ournal of Cultural Economics. design, music industry › Product development within a clustered environment: The case of apparel design firms, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 273-289. Mette Gårdvik Nesna University College, Arts and crafts, 8700 Nesna, Norway Keywords handicraft skills, art education, teacher education Mette Gårdvik is assistant professor of Arts and Handicrafts at Nesna University College’s teacher education programme. Her research focuses on conservation of handicraft skills and has presented and been published regionally, nationally and internationally. Her works have been displayed at various exhibitions throughout her home country of Norway. › It doesn’t help to call a professor if your washing machine is leaking: The Norwegian Minister of Knowledge, December 2009, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 127-136. Gregg Garfin University of Arizona, 715 N. Park Ave, 2nd Fl. Tuscon, Arizona, 857210156, United States of America Keywords sustainability, interdisciplinary, dialogue Dr. Garfin is Deputy Director for Science Translation and Outreach. He is trained as a climatologist, dendroclimatologist and geographer. He is an investigator with the Climate Assessment for the Southwest (CLIMAS) project. His recent research and outreach activities focus primarily on the following topics as they pertain to the south-western United States: drought; effective communication of climate history and forecasts to decision makers; relationships between climate and fire, and adaptation to a changing climate. › A closer look at listening: interdisciplinarity and the varieties of languages employed in the conveyance of problem and solution, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.1, 19-29. Ken Garland Keywords graphic design, art education, advertising, ethics Ken Garland is best known for the 1964 'First Things First' manifesto, a statement on artistic integrity and ethics. He has written on art and design since 1959. His interests include practical art education, international changes in graphic design methodology, and the politics and ethics of graphic design for advertising. › My design work for CND, The Poster, 1.2, 187-191. Mehrdad Garousi Freelance fractal artist, painter, and photographer Keywords painting, photography, graphics, fractal art, topological sculpting Mehrdad Garousi is a freelance artist and researcher and has been involved with painting, photography and graphics for several years. Having experimented with different media, he chose mathematical and generative arts including fractal art and topological sculpting as one of the newest and most wonderful common areas between mathematics and art. In addition to participating continually in several art exhibitions of different events like Bridges, Joint Mathematics Meetings, ISAMA, Computational Aesthetics, Generative Art, he has also published some papers on this in recent years. › Fractals and the second life, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 147-163. Alfredo Palacios Garrido Alfredo Palacios has a Ph.D. degree in Fine Arts and a Masters degree in Aesthetics and Theory of Art. Currently he works as a Lecturer in Art Teacher Education at University College Cardenal Cisneros, Alcalá University, Madrid. His research centres on community art and the educational role of public art, heritage and architecture. Alcalá University, University College Cardenal Cisneros,, Alfredo Palacios Garrido, c/ Colombia, nº30, 9ºD, Madrid, 28106, Spain Keywords public art, community art, heritage education, teacher training › Escribir el Lugar: collaborative projects in public spaces, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 195-206. Gregory P. Garvey Quinnipiac University, Department of Visual and Performing Arts, 275 Mount Carmel Avenue, CAS 1-322, Hamden, CT, 6518, United States of America Keywords de-realization, depersonalization, dissociative-identity disorder, second life, avatar Gregory P. Garvey teaches in the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Quinnipiac University. His interactive computer based installations have been exhibited in the United States, Canada and Europe and have been written about in publications such as , National Geographic, Daily Telegraph and others. Previously at Quinnipiac University, he was the Visiting Fellow in the Arts and also an Associate Artist of the Digital Media Center for the Arts at Yale University. Prior to joining Quinnipiac University he was Chair of the Department of Design Art at Concordia University in Montreal and was a member of the Board of Directors of the Montreal Design Institute. He received a Masters of Science in Visual Studies degree from MIT and was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT from 1983-85. › Dissociation and Second Life: Pathology or transcendence?, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 101-107. Emil Gaul Nyíregyháza College, 4400 Nyíregyháza, Sóstói út 31/B, Hungary Keywords dress, young people, taste culture, secondary school, subcultures Professor Emil Gaul PhD, DLA, works in the Department of Visual Culture at Nyíregyháza College, Hungary. Dr Gaul started his career as an interior designer, designing trade exhibitions for international fairs in Europe and overseas for ten years. For the next ten years he was PR Manager for a Design Centre and organised, among other things, nationwide youth competitions ‘Let’s Design Objects’ for 9–18 year old children. He is the founding member (1987) of Teacher Education at the Hungarian Academy of Craft and Design, where he teaches didactics and special methodology. He completed a Ph.D. degree in 2002 on ‘The structure and development of design and technology capabilities for students aged 12–16 years’. › Appearances can be deceptive: A report on the dress, tastes and values of Hungarian secondary school pupils, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 63-74. Christine Geraghty University of Glasgow, School of Culture and Creative Arts, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, United Kingdom Keywords communications, cultural studies, disciplinary status, vocational education, student views Christine Geraghty is Professor of Film and Television at the University of Glasgow. Previously, she served as Head of the Media and Communications Department at Goldsmiths College and taught film studies part-time for many years before taking a full-time post in 1993. She is the author of Women and Soap Opera (Polity, 1991) and British Cinema in the Fifties: Gender Genre and the ‘New Look’ (Routledge, 2000). With David Lusted, she also co-edited The Television Studies Book (Arnold, 1998) and she is the author of numerous articles, including ‘Reflections on history in teaching cultural studies’in Cultural Studies, 10:2. › 'Doing Media Studies': reflections on an unruly discipline, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.1, 25-36. Murat Germen Sabanci University, Visual Arts and Communication Design Program, Sabanci University, FASS, Orhanli, Tuzla, Istanbul, Marmara, 34956, Turkey Keywords virtual architecture, metaverse, representation, virtual reality, perception, photography, contemporary art, digital imaging, computational art, documentary, Murat Germen is an artist / architect using photography as an expression and research tool. He has a BSc degree in City Planning from Technical University of Istanbul and an MArch degree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he went as a Fulbright scholar and received AIA Henry Adams Gold Medal for academic excellence. He works as a professor of photography and multimedia design at Sabanci University in Istanbul and previously worked for various state and private universities such as Bilkent, Yeditepe, Istanbul Technical, Yildiz and Bilgi University; teaching various topics. fiction › Using 2D photography as a 3D constructional tool within the metaverse, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 35-50. Mario Gerosa Independent curator and researcher Keywords architecture, curating, virtual worlds Mario Gerosa (1963) studied architecture at the Politecnico in Milan, graduating in 1987 with a thesis on the imaginary places described in A la recherche du temps perdu, by Proust. He has always been fond of imaginary architectures and in 1989, he created and he was the curator of the exhibition ‘Proust au Grand Hotel de Balbec’ (Palazzo Sormani, Milan), dedicated to the hotel described in A la recherche du temps perdu. In 1991, he conceived the exhibition ‘Le camere del delitto. Gli interni mentali di John Dickson Carr’ (Mysfest, Cattolica), dedicated to the interiors of the thrillers linked to the ‘locked rooms murders’. In 2006, he wrote the ‘Convention for the protection of the virtual architecture eritage’ (http://virtualarchitecturalheritage .blogspot.com) and founded Synthravels (www.synthravels.com), the first tour operator for travels into virtual worlds. › A playful attitude: Fun and seriousness in the art of the virtual worlds: How fun and seriousness in the art of the virtual worlds can predict the shape of the forthcoming future, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 165-184. Robyn Gibson University of Sydney, Faculty of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia Keywords art education, art education in Australia, student engagement, motivation, achievement, creative teaching practices, art as research, research as art Robyn Gibson is Associate Dean of Undergraduate and Preservice Programmes in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at the University of Sydney. She lectures in Visual and Creative Arts Education in both the Bachelor of Education (Primary) and Master of Teaching (Primary) programmes. Her current research focuses on the use of creative learning, teaching and assessment in tertiary contexts. › Primary-age children’s attitudes to art, art making and art education, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 177-193. Eugene Giddens Anglia Ruskin University, Helmore 158, Faculty of Arts, Law and Social Eugene Giddens is Skinner-Young Professor in Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature at Anglia Ruskin University. He is an associate editor of the forthcoming Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson and a general editor of the Oxford Complete Works of James Shirley. Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, CB1 1PT, United Kingdom › Digital revolutions and digital delays: Electronic editions of renaissance literature, Book 2.0, 1.1, 21-30. Keywords James K. Gimzewski University of California Los Angeles, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, 607 Charles E. Young Drive East - Box 951569, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1569, United States of America Keywords nanotechnology, nanometre, nanobots Jim Gimzewski is Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the University of California Los Angeles. He is cofounder of the Institute of Nanotechnology, UK, a member of the board and chairman of its European advisory board. Prior to joining the UCLA faculty, he was a group leader at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, where he did research in nanoscale science and technology for more than eighteen years. Dr. Gimzewski pioneered research on mechanical and electrical contacts with single atoms and molecules using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and was one of the first persons to image molecules with STM. His accomplishments include the first STM-based fabrication of molecular suprastructures at room temperature using mechanical forces to push molecules across surfaces, the discovery of single molecule rotors and the development of new micromechanical sensors based on nanotechnology, which explore ultimate limits of sensitivity and measurement. › The Nanoneme Syndrome: Blurring of fact and fiction in the construction of a new science, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.1, 724. Dirk Gindt Keywords Swedish sexual politics, cold war masculinity, fashion and homosexuality Dirk Gindt holds a Ph.D. in Performance Studies and has worked as an Assistant Professor at the Centre for Fashion Studies at Stockholm University, where, in autumn 2009, he was awarded a two-year research position as a Postdoctoral Associate. Gindt is co-editor of Fashion: An Interdisciplinary Reflection (Raster, 2009). He has published in Nordic Theatre Studies, The Tennessee Williams Annual Review and has a forthcoming article in Fashion Theory. He is also the editor-in-chief of lambda nordica for which he has edited a special issue on masculinities (13: 4) and a double issue on queer fashion (14: 3–4). His current research projects investigate the original Swedish stage productions of Tennessee Williams’ plays in the 1950s and the collaboration between fashion designers and performance artists. › Coming out of the cabinet: Fashioning the closet with Sweden's most famous diplomat, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 233-254. Matilde Mollá Giner Complutense University of Madrid, Didactics of Plastic Expression, Faculty of Education, Office 1609, c/ Rector Royo Vilanova s/n, Madrid, 28040, Spain Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education The research group ‘Aplicaciones del arte para la inclusión social: arte, terapia y educación para la diversidad’ (Applications of art for social inclusion: art, therapy and education for diversity) is a part of a larger team of teaching staff at the Complutense University of Madrid, which has promoted studies on art, social inclusion and art therapy, to a European MA and Ph.D. The group, composed of Primary and Secondary Schools teachers, professors at the Faculty of Education and researchers on Art Education and Art Therapy, has published a variety of books on art therapy and social inclusion. › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Sybil Goldfiner CEO of Comme il faut, Comme il faut, Tel Aviv, Israel Keywords Sybil Goldfiner, co founder and owner and CEO of the high-end fashion house comme il faut. The brand was founded and launched in 1988 together with Carol Godin and has always embodied an ethical agenda of feminist values. The comme il faut group shares a CSR agenda of environmental responsibility, and social responsibility towards its employees, clients and local community as well as commitment to feminist ideals. › Comme il faut – where ethics is not just a brand image but a brand essence. Reflections of the CEO, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 83-116. Catherine Gombe Kyambogo University, Art & Industrial Design, P. O. Box 84, Kyambogo, Kyambogo, Uganda Keywords design, development education, plaited mats, barkcloth, natural dyes, printmaking, Uganda Dr. Catherine Gombe is Senior Lecturer and Head of the Department of Art and Industrial Design at Kyambogo University, Kampala, Uganda, where she teaches printmaking, drawing and supervises student research for both graduate and undergraduate. Dr. Gombe has a strong belief in education through art and a deep interest in nature and indigenous crafts, understanding them as containing knowledge and skills that contribute significantly to diversifying learning and to the development of art design and technology nationally and internationally. She uses nature as inspiration for her own artistic creations. She is presently involved in research on ‘Lubugo’ (barkcloth), mat-making, and natural dyes in Uganda. › Indigenous plaited patterns on Ugandan mats, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 123-132. Gloria Gómez-Diago Rey Juan Carlos University, Department of Sciences of Communication (II), Spain Keywords second life, design, communication, brainstorming, brainflowing Gloria Gómez-Diago is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sciences of Communication (II) at the Rey Juan Carlos University (Madrid). Her research combines theoretical and practical perspectives and is framed by two objectives: identification of the elements that integrate the several communicative actions that we can accomplish, and the study and analysis of communication theories, methods and techniques of research. Her professional experience is focused in the fields of communication, education and research. She maintains the weblog ‘fromcommunication’, http://fromcommunication.blogspot.com/. › Brainflowing, virtual/physical space and the flow of communication: An explanatory approach to the metaverse through a tool designed for brainstorming, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 51-67. Ana Marta González University of Navarra, Departamento de Filosofía, Departamento de Filosofía, Universidad de Navarra, Pamplona 31080, Spain Keywords self-expression, individualization, civilizing process, social conversation, critical views Ana Marta González is Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Navarra (Spain), where she got her Ph.D. in 1997 with a research on the relationship between morality, reason and nature in Thomas Aquinas. Between 2002 and 2003, she was a Fulbright Scholar at Harvard, where she worked with Christine M. Korsgaard on Kant’s practical philosophy. She has led several research projects exploring the intersection between moral philosophy and social theory, including, ‘Estrategias de distinción social: perspectiva sociohistórica e interpretación filosófica’ (2004–2006); ‘Razón práctica y ciencias sociales en la ilustración escocesa: antecedentes y repercusiones’ (2006–2009); ‘Filosofía moral y ciencias sociales’ (2009–); and ‘Cultura emocional e identidad’ (2010–). › On fashion and fashion discourses, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.1, 65-85. Michael Evan Goodsite Aarhus University, Department of Atmospheric Environment, Fredericksborgvej 399, DK 4000, Roskilde, Denmark Keywords living architecture, green architecture, sustainability, climate adaptation and mitigation, systems architecture Michael Evan Goodsite Ph.D. is the first Professor (Chair) of Atmospheric Chemistry, Climate and Global Processes and Deputy Departmental Director of Research and Graduate Studies at the Department of Atmospheric Environment, National Environmental Research Institute, Aarhus University, Denmark. His expertise is natural scientific research related to the chemistry of the atmosphere and its relation to climate and global processes. His research aims to integrate sensible business strategies as a means of addressing global atmospheric and climate change issues through mitigation and environmental cost and risk analysis at the local governmental level, thus ensuring sustainable and secure adaptation of societies. He has a Ph.D. in Atmospheric Chemistry from the University of Copenhagen, an MBA in Global Management from the Thunderbird School of Global Management, an MSc in Environmental Engineering from the University of Southern Denmark and a BSc in Civil Engineering from the University of Arizona. › The nautilus – evolving architecture and city landscapes for future sustainable development, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 105-115. Janey Gordon University of Bedfordshire, Research Institute for Media, Art & Design, Park Square, Luton, Bedfordshire, LU1 3JU, United Kingdom Janey Gordon is Senior Teaching Fellow in the School of Media, Art and Design at the University of Luton. She is Senior Lecturer in radio broadcasting and has research interests in community radio and mobile communications. She is the author of The RSL, Ultra Local Radio (University of Luton Press, 2000). Keywords practice, media, creative arts, wow factors, QAA benchmarks › The ‘wow’ factors: the assessment of practical media and creative arts subjects, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 61-. Galina Gornostaeva London Metropolitan University, Central House, 59-63 Whitechapel High Street, London, E1 7PF, United Kingdom Keywords film and television industry, suburbs, decentralization, London Galina Gornostaeva is a Research Fellow at the Cities Institute, London Metropolitan University. She has published a number of articles on the film and television industry in London thanks to the recent ESRC grant. Her work relates to the issues of ‘creative class’, cultural clusters and quarters. › The film and television industry in london’s suburbs: lifestyle of the rich or losers’ retreat?, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 47-71. Paul Gough University of the West of England, Bristol School of Art, Media & Design, VCO, The Farmhouse, Frenchay Campus, Bristol, Avon, BS16, United Kingdom Keywords battlefields, Paul Gough is Professor of Fine Arts, and founding director of the UWE research centre PLaCE. His research interests lie in the processes and iconography of commemoration, the visual culture of the Great War, and the representation of peace and conflict in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Research projects can be visited at http://www.vortex.uwe.ac.uk/. On September 2010 he took up the post of Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic) at UWE, Bristol. commemoration, representation, remembrance, memorials › Fault lines: Four short observations on places of peace, trauma and contested remembrance, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 39-48. Fiona Graham Auckland University, Department of English, Symonds Street, Auckland 1001, New Zealand Keywords writing process, dramaturge as midwife, community theatre, metaphor and empowerment Fiona Graham worked for twenty years in British theatre in education and community theatre before moving to Auckland in 2004. She is a freelance playwright and dramaturge who has taught at Auckland University, Goldsmiths College and De Montfort University. Theatre commissions include Our Street (Auckland, 2008), Breaking China (Theatre Centre UK, 2002; Singapore, 2004), Between Friends (Komedia UK, 2000; Portugal, 2001) and Legacy (Massive Theatre, Auckland, 1998). › Dramaturge as midwife: the writing process within a New Zealand community theatre project, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 209216. Steve Grand Keywords simulation, cortex, synthesis, robotics, self-organization Steve Grand is a NESTA Fellow, and holds honorary fellowships in Psychology at Cardiff and Biomimetics at Bath, but is otherwise an independent scientist, artist or engineer, according to interpretation. He is Director of Cyberlife Research Ltd. and was formerly Technical Director of Creature Labs, where he was responsible for the architecture and programming of the artificial life game, Creatures. Currently Grand is developing artificial life applications as well as an intelligent living machine that embodies a set of hypotheses about the neurological mechanisms present in various species of animal. He theorizes that every cortical map must be thinking about something all the time, and if there are no signals demanding its attention then the map will generate some itself. › Effing the ineffable: an engineering approach to consciousness, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.2, 87-102. Rachel C. Granger Univeristy of Coventry, Dept. Geography, Environment and Disaster Management, Priory Street, CV1 Rachel Granger is a Principal Lecturer in the Department for Geography, Environment and Disaster Management and specializes in economic and urban geography, and regeneration. She has published on a range of economic issues relating to New Economic Geography and the creative and knowledge-driven economy. Rachel has worked 5FB, United Kingdom with researchers at the Institute for Creative Enterprise since 2007 on the creative economy, creative cities, digital media and in developing relational mapping approaches to the creative economy. Rachel has worked with Birmingham City University on developing new approaches to examining networks in the creative economy, exploring the role of underground scenes, the impact of social media and communities of practice, and analysis of music and media occupations and networks in the digital economy. Keywords underground, social capital, networks, relational mapping, creative economy › Re-spatializing the creative industries: a relational examination of underground scenes, and professional and organizational lock-in, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 47-60. David Grant Queen's University, School of Languages, Literature and Arts, Belfast, BT7 1NN, United Kingdom David Grant is a former Artistic Director of the Lyric Theatre, Belfast and Programme Director of the Dublin Theatre Festival. He has been a Lecturer in Drama at Queen’s University, Belfast since 2000, where he researches and teaches acting, directing and applied drama. Keywords role play, actor training, applied drama › Truth, Ethics and Efficacy in the Training of Actors for Role Play, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 105-114. Kit Grauer The University of British Columbia, Scarfe 2215, 2125 Main Mall, V6T 1Z4, Canada Kit Grauer is Associate Professor of Art Education and Curriculum Studies at The University of British Columbia. She has been involved in national and international organizations in art education and presented and published widely in this area, winning numerous awards for teaching and research. Keywords embodied heteroglossic spaces, immigration, identity, practice-based research, arts-based research › Research and creation: Socially-engaged art in The City of Richgate Project, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 213-227. › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Jane Graves Jane Graves’ obsession with practice arose initially through ballet training at Sadler’s Wells ballet school, resurfaced in her dyslexia work and in her subsequent practice as a psychoanalytical psychotherapist. She was a Cultural Studies Lecturer at Central Saint Martin’s for nearly thirty years, teaching as a design theoretician. She continues to write Keywords practice, dream-work, image, symbol, disturbance and publish since leaving in 1996. Her book, The Secret Lives of Objects, is funded by Central Saint Martin’s College of Art and Design and published by Trafford. › Making interest matter – an analysis of practice in psychoanalysis and art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 75-82. Jane Graves Keywords forgetting, knowledges, unconscious, freedom, hidden fragments Jane Graves trained as a ballet dancer at Sadler’s Wells ballet school. Subsequently she read English at Oxford and then went on to the London School of Economics. She began work as a Cultural Studies Lecturer in 1968 at Central Saint Martins, teaching psychoanalytical theory and sociology. For her last ten years she organized and taught a cultural studies programme for three Masters in design. During this time she became increasingly involved in the studio and the making process. She then trained and worked as a specialist dyslexia tutor whilst undergoing eight years of psychotherapy training. Since retiring in 1996, she has lived and worked as a psychoanalytical psychotherapist in the East End. › Conversations heard and unheard:creativity in the studio and in writing, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 13-18. Gill Greaves York Teaching Hospital, Wigginton Road, York, YO31 8HE, United Kingdom Gill Greaves is the Art and Design Officer for York Teaching Hospital, where she works with patients producing art as a form of distraction and therapy. She also arranges for local musicians to come and play to the patients. Keywords art and design, art therapy › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Debbie Green University of London, Central School of Speech and Drama, Eton Avenue, London, NW3 3HY, United Kingdom Keywords power, dyskinesia, text, Debbie Green is a part-time senior lecturer in Movement for Actors on the BA (Hons) Acting Pathway at the Central School of Speech and Drama, University of London. She also teaches on the MA Voice Studies course and is author of: 2009, ‘Integrated Movement Practices and Breath’, in Breath in Action, ed. J. Boston and R. Cook London: Jessica Kingsley. photography, theatre, voice › Dance with time: Movement, when all is said and done, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 205-213. Nigel Green University for the Creative ArtsMaidstone, Oakwood Park, ME16 A8G, United Kingdom Keywords photography, creative practice, philosophy In 2008 Nigel Green completed a practice based PhD at UCA Maidstone which looked at the relationship between photography and the representation of modernist architectural space. His photographic work has been exhibited and published widely and in 2003 he completed a commission by Photoworks to document the power station complex at Dungeness in Kent. The book, which accompanied the project, was shortlisted for the 2004 Arles Festival Book Awards. Other major projects include ‘Transmodernity: Calais Reconstruction’ which documented the reconstruction architecture of the town and was published as a book in 2001 by the Calais Museum of Fine Art. › Recent PhD Abstracts, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 241-245. Kevin Green Keywords Kevin Green was born in Montreal, Canada in 1986. He Graduated from Architectural Studies B.Sc. at the Bartlett school of architecture in 2007, and is currently studying his M.A. in Sculpture at the Royal College of Art. He has been working in an informal studio for the past four years developed alongside two other Bartlett graduates, entering architectural competitions across the world. In 2009 they were awarded ële prix de la sculptureí an international competition to complete a large-scale installation in the South of France and have since gone on to win many competitions worldwide. He has been exhibiting his work for the past two years and runs an arts initiative encouraging architectural practices that position themselves on the peripheries of their discipline. › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. David Greig David Greig can be contacted through Mel Kenyon Mel Kenyon, at Casarotto Ramsay & Associates Ltd., Waverley House, 7–12 Noel Street, David Greig is a leading Scottish playwright, born in Edinburgh in 1969 and brought up in Nigeria. His first play was produced in Glasgow in 1992 and he has written many plays since, produced worldwide, including The Architect (1996),Dr. Korczak’s Example (2001), San Diego (2003), Damascus (2007), Dunsinane (2010), and London, Scotland, W1F 8GQ, United Kingdom extensive work with Suspect Culture Theatre Group, which he cofounded. An Imagined Sarha was performed for the first time on 7 May 2010, during the Mayfesto political theatre festival at the Tron Theatre, Glasgow. Keywords theatre, playwright › An Imagined Sarha, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 133-144. Diane Gromala Simon Fraser University, School of Interactive Arts and Technology, 13450-102nd Avenue, 14th Floor, Central City, Surrey, British Columbia, V3T 0A3, Canada Diane Gromala is Associate Director of the School of Interactive Art and Technology at Simon Fraser University. Gromala has always pushed the envelope for art beyond traditional canvas and computer graphics domains into Virtual Reality (VR) and Physiological Computing. Gromala is the co-author, with Jay David Bolter, of Interaction Design, Digital Art and the Myth of Transparency. Cambridge: MIT Press (2003). Keywords body interaction, flow of energy, new consciousness, presence interactive art, phenomenology › Touching light: A new framework for immersion in artistic environments, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 3-14. › The symbiogenic experience: towards a framework for understanding human–machine coupling in the interactive arts, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 11-18. Rafi Grosglik Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, BenGurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva 84105, Israel Rafi Grosglik is a Ph.D. candidate at the department of Sociology & Anthropology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. He holds a Master's degree in Sociology & Anthropology (with distinction). Since 2008 he has been doing research on the cultural field of organic food in Israel. His dissertation deals with cultural globalization and the sociology of Israeli culinary culture. › Global ethical culinary fashion and a local dish: Organic hummus in Israel, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 165-184. Keywords Jeffrey B. Grubbs Roberts Wesleyan College, 2301 Westside Drive, Rochester, NY 14624, United States of America Jeffrey B. Grubbs is an Associate Professor and Division Chair of Visual Arts at Roberts Wesleyan College in Rochester, New York. He completed his education at Indiana University, Miami University, Ohio and finished his doctoral degree in Art Education at the Ohio State University. Jeff is a printmaker and painter. He teaches art education methods courses as well as contemporary art history, foundations of Keywords printmaking, painting, art education two-dimensional design and Art 101 (appreciation). Some of Jeff’s research interests are cognitive theory, art criticism, curriculum design, aesthetics, art education history, media techniques and processes, theories of creativity and teacher belief research. › Adding a chapter to art education history: visual culture curriculum, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 33-45. Kathryn Grushka University of Newcastle, School of Education, HA121, Hunter Building, University Drive, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia Keywords visual education, identity, socio-cultural narratives, tangential visibility Kathryn Meyer Grushka is Senior Lecturer in the School of Education at the University of Newcastle, Australia. Kathryn has a national reputation as a visual and textile artist and visual art and design educator. Her current areas of research are creative and reflective practice in visual art-making, visual culture, identity in visual art education, and visual performative pedagogy. She is also interested in social, cultural and ethical understandings in art-making; visual literacy; iconography in learning; identity and learning; visual narrative and well-being and inquiry based learning and design education. › Tangential visibility: Becoming self through creating socio-cultural portraits, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 297-313. Jorge Gumbe Lugar do Brejo Keywords ritual, Angola, art curriculum, ethnography Jorge Gumbe is a practicing painter, printmaker and art educator from Angola. He teaches Art Studies at the National School of Arts in Luanda, and was the school’s first director from 1989 to 1992. In 2003 he was awarded a masters degree in Art, Craft and Design Education from Roehampton University, London where he is currently a doctoral student. For his Ph.D. he is developing and testing curriculum strategies aimed at contributing to cultural learning and theory and the practice of art education in postcolonial countries. Specifically he is developing, implementing, and evaluating an art curriculum model based on ritual with a group of Angolan primary school teachers using action research. › Researching ritual as content for Angolan art education, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 19-36. Folkert Haanstra Folkert Haanstra is Professor of Arts Education at the Amsterdam Amsterdam School of the Arts, P.O. Box 15079, Amsterdam, 1001 MB, Netherlands School of the Arts. He holds the special chair for Cultural Education and Cultural participation at the Utrecht University. Keywords art education, authentic learning, school art, local art, teacher training › Teachers' and students' perceptions of good art lessons and good art teaching, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 44-55. › Reviews, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 97-101. › The U-curve going Dutch: Cultural differences in judgements of artwork from different age and expertise groups, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 153-169. Riikka Haapalainen University of Helsinki, Fabianinkatu 24, 00100 Helsinki, 09 1911, Finland Keywords contemporary art, Maffesoli, situational aesthetics, museums, Pistoletto Riikka Haapalainen holds an MA in art history and BEd in educational science (adult education). Currently, she is lecturer at the Aalto University's Art Department where she is in charge of the MA programme for Curating, Managing, and Mediating Art. She has previously been the Head of Education in the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma in Helsinki and researcher at the Finnish National Gallery's Art Museum Development Departmet. She is writing her Ph.D. in art history at the University of Helsinki. Her research deals with the social aesthetics of the everyday life and participatory aspects of contemporary art. Haapalainen has published on history of art, art history writing and museum education. › Contemporary art and the role of museums as situational media, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 153-166. Sue Hacking University of Central Lancashire, School of Health, Preston, Lancashire, PR1 2HE, United Kingdom Sue Hacking works for the School of Health, University of Central Lancashire. Her current research topics include the impact of visual and creative methodologies in social science research. She is also interested in the evaluation and knowledge transfer potential for prevention science through community based and distractive interventions. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. Keywords social science, mental health, distractive interventions Edward Hadley Edward Hadley is the author of The Elegies of Ted Hughes, (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010) and founding editor of The Ted Hughes Society Journal. He lectures in English Literature for the Open University and is currently writing his next book, Andrew Motion: A Critical Study, to be published by Liverpool University Press (2014). Keywords › Andrew Motion: Authoring the self, Book 2.0, 1.1, 65-73. Nick Haeffner London Metropolitan University,, Media Arts, 41 Commercial Road, London, E1 1LA, United Kingdom Keywords Alfred Hitchcock, Michael Winterbottom, realism, contemporary photography, curating, art history, pedagogy, new media, critical theory Dr. Nick Haeffner is Senior Lecturer in Communications at London Metropolitan University, where he teaches modules on the history, theory, practice and economics of film and photography. He also teaches art history and critical theory on the MA in Curating the Contemporary run in conjunction with the Whitechapel Gallery. He is the author of Alfred Hitchcock (Pearson 2005); several articles on Hitchcock and several articles relating to media and cultural theory. He co-curated Re-Possessed, a travelling new media exhibition, and was on the editorial board of Vertigo magazine. He is currently working on a monograph about film director Michael Winterbottom and his company, Revolution Films. › What's wrong with the primacy of theory?, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.2, 173-189. Cecilia Häggström University of Gothenburg, School of Design and Craft, Box 131, Goteborg, SE 405 30, Sweden Keywords alternative models of writing, design, design solutions, thinking through writing, storytelling After completing a degree in Design in 1986 at the School of Design and Craft, University of Gothenburg, Häggström studied Theory of Science and Research for a year and a half, followed by a Ph.D. in Theoretical and Applied Aesthetics/Architecture, at Chalmers’ University of Technology, which she completed in 1996. This was followed by a four-year post-doctoral research post at the School of Architecture, Lund University. As vice president of the board (1999– 2002), Häggström was involved in establishing research-education at the Faculty of Fine and Applied Art. In 2001 she began tutoring the first Ph.D. students in Design, and since 2003 has also taught Theory Science and Research, and Academic Writing at Masters level. › The relevance of academic writing in design education: academic writing as a tool for structuring reasons, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 151-160. Chelsea Haines › BOOK REVIEWS, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 121-130. Keywords Catherine Hakim Keywords Dr Catherine Hakim has worked as a sociologist at the London School of Economics. Her book Honey Money: The Power of Erotic Capital was published by Allen Lane in September 2011 and attracted immediate attention around the world. See www.catherinehakim.org and www.eroticcapitalbook.com › BOOK REPORTS, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 249-268. Kai Hakkarainen University of Helsinki, Department of Psychology, Box 9, Siltavuorenpenger 20 D, Helsinki, 14, Finland Keywords design experiment, collaborative designing, textile design project, virtual design studio accessibility, art education Professor Kai Hakkarainen, Ph.D., is an acting Professor of Empirical Education at the Department of Education, University of Helsinki. Simultaneously, he is the director of the Centre for Research on Networked Learning and Knowledge Building (www.helsinki.fi/science/networkedlearning) at the Department of Psychology, University of Helsinki. With his colleagues, he has, for fifteen years, carried out learning research based on psychology and cognitive science at all levels, from elementary to higher education. Many investigations have included a strong theoretical component and have addressed how learning and human intellectual resources can be expanded using collaborative technologies based on the information and communication technologies. During recent years, Hakkarainen’s research activity has expanded toward investigating personal and collective learning processes taking place in knowledge-intensive organizations, including innovative private corporations. › Three design experiments for computer-supported collaborative design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.2, 101-120. › Concept maps in the design of an accessible CinemaSense service, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 27-55. Francis Halsall Francis Halsall is a lecturer in modern and contemporary Art History at University College Cork. He studied Art History at University of National College of Art & Design, Visual Culture, Dublin, Ireland Glasgow (MA and Ph.D.). He is the author of Systems of Art (Peter Lang, 2007) and the co-editor (with Julia Jansen and Tony OConnor) of the collection Rediscovering Aesthetics (forthcoming). He is currently working on a major postdoctoral project on Niklas Luhmann’s theory of art. Keywords non-sites, iconography, deconstruction, multi-sensory perception medium, postmedium › One Sense is Never Enough, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.2, 103-122. › Editorial Introduction Aesthetics and its objects – challenges from art and experience, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 123-126. › No medium just a shell: how works of art configure their medium, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 45-60. Andy Hamilton University of Durham, Department of Philosophy, Durham, DH1 3HP, United Kingdom Keywords aesthetics of nature, Kant, Adorno Andy Hamilton is a lecturer in Philosophy at Durham University. He has published many articles on philosophy of mind and aesthetics. He is completing a book on aesthetics and music for Continuum, and a monograph on philosophy of mind, memory and the body: A study of self-consciousness. He is a long-standing contributor on contemporary music to The Wire and other magazines, and has completed a book with jazz saxophonist Lee Konitz, The Art of the Improviser: Conversations with Lee Konitz on Jazz and Improvisation (forthcoming, University of Michigan Press). › Indeterminacy and reciprocity: contrasts and connections between natural and artistic beauty, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 183-194. Paul Hamilton University of Ulster, Monkstown, Newtownabbey, BT37 0, United Kingdom Keywords computers, printmaking, pedagogy Paul Hamilton teaches on the HND Graphic Design, and HND Photography courses and is Course Leader on the new ‘Top-Up’ BA (Hons.) Creative Imaging degree at Upper Bann Institute of Further and Higher Education, Northern Ireland. His background is in textile design, graphic design, photography and printmaking and he is currently studying part-time for a D.Phil. at the University of Ulster. › Research in progress: the printmaking studio of the future in higher education?, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.1, 67-. Christine Hamilton Christine Hamilton is the Director of the Institute for Creative Coventry University, Institute for Creative Enterprise, Coventry University, CV1 2NE, United Kingdom Enterprise at Coventry University, an institute she established in 2007. Before taking her role at Coventry University, Christine was the founding Director of the Centre for Cultural Policy Research (2001– 2007) at the University of Glasgow. She has published on a range of cultural policy issues notably on the role of the national arts company and on the development of a national cultural strategy in devolved Scotland and on the development of rural arts. Prior to this she worked for 25 years in the cultural sector including Deputy Director, Culture and Leisure, Glasgow City Council; Director of Planning and Development, Scottish Arts Council; and for a range of arts organisations. Christine is a Governor of Glasgow School of Art, a Board member of the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry and a Fellow of the RSA. Keywords underground, social capital, networks, relational mapping, creative economy › Re-spatializing the creative industries: a relational examination of underground scenes, and professional and organizational lock-in, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 47-60. Jillian Hamilton Queensland University of Technology, Creative Industries Faculty, Kelvin Grove, Queensland, 4059, Australia Keywords media, design,art, exegesis, practice-led research Dr. Jillian Hamilton is a Senior Lecturer in Art and Design, Creative Industries Faculty, Queensland University of Technology (QUT). Her current practice-led research involves the convergence of mobile technologies, geo-positioning and three-dimensional mapping. Hamilton’s theoretical writing includes interdisciplinary interpretations of media art, avatars and interaction design, and the methodologies of practice-led research in art and design. She was the editor of ‘Intimate Transactions: Art, Exhibition and Interaction within Distributed Network Environments’ (ACID 2006). She has supervised higherresearch degree students in theoretical studies as well as practice-led research in inter-media art, experimental film, animation, visual communication and interaction design. › A connective model for the practice-led research exegesis: An analysis of content and structure, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 31-44. Martin M. Hanczyc University of Southern Denmark, Department of Physics and Chemistry, Campusvej 55, 5230 Odense M, Denmark Keywords chemical computing, Martin Hanczyc is Associate Professor at the Institute of Physics and Chemistry and the Centre for Fundamental Living Technology (FLinT) in Denmark. He is developing novel synthetic chemical systems based on the properties of living systems. These synthetic systems are termed ‘protocells’ as they are model systems of primitive living cells and chemical examples of ‘artificial’ life. He has previously also held the position of laboratory director at the European Centre for Living Technology in Venice, Italy and was chief chemist at ProtoLife Srl in smart chemical agents, chemotaxis, living technology, artificial life, first cell Venice, Italy. He received a bachelor’s degree in Biology from Pennsylvania State University and a doctorate in Genetics from Yale University. His interest in the synthesis of a protocell stems from his training in population genetics and experimental evolution. › Protocells as smart agents for architectural design, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 117-120. › The search for a first cell under the maximalism design principle, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 153-164. Chris Hand Kingston Business School, Department of Strategy Marketing and Entrepreneurship, Kingston Hill, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, KT2 7LB, United Kingdom Dr. Chris Hand is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Strategy, Marketing and Entrepreneurship, and Course Director for the MSc in Management and Business Studies Research at Kingston Business School. His research interests include cultural economics (in particular the film industry), arts marketing and consumer behaviour. › Modelling patterns of attendance at performing arts events: The case of music in the United Kingdom, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 259-271. Keywords arts marketing, cultural economics, film industry, audience behaviour Cordelia Hanel Studio Hanel, Unit 2 Keywords architecture, interior architecture, archeology, ecology, interior design Cordelia Hänel, M Arch UCL (Dist.), Dipl. Ing. (FH) London based (Interior- ) Architect, as well as co-founder of P.U.R.A (Platform for Urban Research & Architecture), Cordelia Hänel is also working under 'Studio Hänel'- a practice focusing on research in the area of (Interior-) Architecture. After her Masters degree at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL in 2008/2009 Cordelia's main interests lie in areas of archaeology in relation to architecture and New Media Art. She has been awarded several prices including an annual scholarship by the German Academic Exchange Service and a distinction for her Masters at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. Cordelia is a regular guest critique at the Royal College of Art, London as well as Bartlett School of Architecture, London. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. Rikke Hansen Rikke Hansen lectures in Critical Practice at the School of Art, Sir John London Metropolitan University, Sir John Cass Faculty of Art, Media & Design, Central House, 61 Whitechapel High Street, London, E1 7PE, United Kingdom Cass Faculty of Art, Media and Design, London Metropolitan University. Her research interests centre on the interface between animal studies and twentieth-century aesthetics. She is currently pursuing a Humanities and Cultural Studies Ph.D. at the London Consortium with a thesis entitled ‘The Sublime Animal: Contemporary Art and the Animal Aesthetic’, developed in dialogue with a larger, three-year project at Tate Britain on ‘The Sublime Object: Nature, Art and Language’. She lectures on ‘Gender Performatives’, ‘Art and Autobiography’, ‘Animal Performances’, ‘Introduction to Barthes’ and ‘Photography: Where Image Meets Text’. Hansen is a writer and art critic, and a regular contributor to the United Kingdom-based journal Art Monthly, where she writes on issues pertaining to performance, video and installation art. Keywords animalization, taxidermy, skin, animal › Animal skins in contemporary art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.1, 9-16. Sophie Harbour Keywords employability, fine art, higher education Sophie Harbour has an MA Fine Art in Context from The Univerity of the West of England. She has published a variety of papers in the area of graduate employment in art and design. Her current area of interest is the significance and application of a fine art undergraduate curriculum to the current graduate employment market. › Employability issues for fine art educators, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.2, 121-. Kirsten Hardie Arts University College at Bournemouth, School of Visual Arts, Fernbarrow, Wallisdown Road, Poole, Dorset, BH12 5HH, United Kingdom Keywords student-centred, experiential, problem-based, enquiry based learning Kirsten Hardie is Principal Lecturer in Graphic Design History and Cultural and Theoretical Studies at The Arts University College at Bournemouth (AUCB). She is a UK National Teaching Fellow (NTF) - as awarded by the Higher Education Academy (HEA) in 2004. She started teaching in 1987 and has developed an international reputation for innovative approaches to learning and teaching and a passion for design. Specializing in graphic design history and theory, she has extensive teaching experience internationally across a range of levels and disciplines within art, design and media. Her research and scholarly activities extend across a range of diverse fields. Working internationally, cross-discipline, creating and developing learning and teaching case-studies and materials, her activities extend to a significant number of collaborative and advisory roles across HE – including External Examinerships. › On Trial: teaching without talking – teacher as silent witness Research in Progress, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.3, 213-226. Christine Hardy Nottingham Trent University, School of Art and Design, Arkwright Building, Burton St, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, NG1 4BU, United Kingdom Keywords reflection and learning, reflective practice, journal, barriers to reflection, assessment of reflection Christine Hardy is Senior Lecturer in Publishing Management at the Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, England. She is Course Leader for an undergraduate programme in Graphic Communications Management and a postgraduate programme in Publishing. Her first degree is in Psychology, her second an MBA. She combines psychology and business management in her research activities and is currently working towards a Ph.D., registered at Nottingham University, looking at adult reading habits and motivations. Other current areas of research include pedagogy, particularly reflective practice. Prior to becoming a lecturer she worked in occupational psychology for a year and in human resource management/training for various organizations in the United Kingdom, latterly at a management level. › The art of reflection: reflective practice in publishing education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 17-32. Dr. Beth Harland University of Southampton, Graphics, Art and Media, 31c Earlsfield Road, Wandsworth, London, SW18 3DB, United Kingdom Keywords painting, digital imaging, temporality, haptic, modes of address Beth Harland is a London-based artist who studied at the Ruskin, Oxford and Royal College of Art, London and is currently Director of the Graduate School and Reader in Fine Art, Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton. She has exhibited widely and internationally including Gallery 33 Berlin, Whitechapel Gallery London, Gasworks London, John Moores Walker Art Gallery Liverpool, University of Stanislav, California, Five Years London, Cornerhouse Manchester, Dean Clough Halifax, Aspex Portsmouth, The Nunnery London, Arnolfini Bristol, Kolo Gallery Gdansk, Studio Gallery Budapest, Mappin Art Gallery Sheffield, 5020 Galerie, Salzburg , Norwich Gallery, Winchester Gallery. Research includes: PhD. University of Southampton, AHRC award, Abbey Award, British School at Rome, and residency at Milchhof, Berlin. › A Fragment of Time in the Pure State; Painting in Search of Haptic Time, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 37-58. Rob Harle Deakin University Alumni Association, PO Box 20182, Nimbin, New South Wales, NSW 2480, Australia Keywords consciousness, new media, philosophy, comparative religion, digital art Rob Harle is an artist, writer and researcher especially concerned with the nature of consciousness, embodiment and techno-augmentation. His current work, both art practice and academic research explores the nature of the so-called transition from human to posthuman, a phenomenon he calls the techno-metamorphosis of humanity. Past artwork was mainly drawing and sculpture, current work is exclusively digital/computer created images. Writing work includes both film & book reviews, poetry and academic essays. These are published in numerous journals, magazines and books. His formal academic studies comprise: Philosophy of Mind, Comparative Religion, Architecture and Psychotherapy. He is an active member of Leonardo, Metapsychology Online and an editorial member of Journal of Fine & Studio Art. › Biobehavioural basis of art, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.3, 259-268. › Creativity, chance and the role of the unconscious in the creation of original literature and art, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.3, 311-322. Kerry Harman Middlesex University, Institute of Work Based Learning, London, NW4 4BT, United Kingdom Keywords assessment for learning, design pedagogy, the Global Studio, educational discourses, collaborative learning Prior to taking up a research post at Middlesex University Kerry Harman was a Researcher at the Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL) at Northumbria University, United Kingdom. She has over twenty years combined practice-based, research and teaching experience in the overlapping fields of Training and Development, Workplace Learning and Organisation Studies. While working at the CETL, Dr Harman conducted research on Assessment Cultures in Higher Education where she explored the interrelationships between language, disciplinary cultures, academic identities and assessment practices. She also coordinated a module on the MA Design programme at Northumbria University on Intercultural Communication. › Intersections: The utility of an ‘Assessment for Learning’ discourse for Design educators, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 123-134. Graeme Harper Oakland University, Director, The Honors College, Vandenberg Hall, Oakland University, MI 48309, USA Professor Graeme Harper is Associate Editor of the Creative Industries Journal. Now Director of the Honors College at Oakland University, Michigan, he has worked at universities in the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom, where he established the National Institute for Excellence in the Creative Industries. He remains an Honorary Professor in the UK. Also a Professor of Creative Writing, he has Keywords Welsh culture, nationalism, performance, Wales, Australia, ontology published creative and critical work, including On Creative Writing (MLM, 2010), Moon Dance (Parlor, 2010) and Sound and Music in Film and the Visual Media: A Critical Overview (Continuum, 2009). › Creative writing: words as practice-led research, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.2, 161-171. › A summary of The Americans for the Arts Economic Impact of America’s Non-profit Arts and Culture Industry, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 7375. › Creative Platforms: harnessing expertise,ensuring success, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 195-196. › Interview with Ed Wright, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 111-116. › Practice-led research and the future of the creative industries, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 5-17. › Interview with Dan Pinchbeck, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 87-95. › Interview with Elizabeth Grierson, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 97-110. › Great Writing 2010, 1618 June 2010, 13th Annual International Creative Writing Conference, United Kingdom, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 341-345. Anthony Harrild Anglia Ruskin University › 'Do judge a book by its cover', Book 2.0, 1.1, 3-6. Keywords Dew Harrison University of Wolverhampton, School of Art and Design, Molineux Street, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, WV1 1DT, United Kingdom Keywords creative thinking, daydream, liminal state, associative media, virtual-real Dew Harrison is a researcher and practitioner in virtual and computermediated art currently working as Associate Dean in the School of Art and Design at the University of Wolverhampton. With a B.A. in Fine Art, an M.A. in History and Theory of Contemporary Art, an M.Sc. in Computer Science and a Ph.D. from the Planetary Collegium, CAiiA, in Interactive Art, her practice undertakes a critical exploration of Conceptual Art, semantic media and intuitive interfaces where she often work’s collaboratively and considers virtual curation an art practice. She continues to show internationally and has over 50 publications to date spanning digital art, consciousness studies, interactive games, art history and museology. › A merging of mindsets through collision and collusion, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 55-. › Realizing the virtual, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 185-195. David Harte Birmingham City University, Birmingham School of Media, Perry Barr, Birmingham, B42 2SU, United Kingdom Keywords creative industries, audiovisual, West Midlands, policy, strategies David Harte is a Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication at Birmingham City University, where he has developed strong links to the regional development agency running a major creative industries support programme on their behalf and contributing to the development of regional clusters. He has recently completed a secondment with Birmingham City Council as Economic Development Manager for their Digital Birmingham programme. › Issues in Developing an Audio-Visual Cluster in the West Midlands, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 105-112. John Harvey Keywords photography, spiritualism, psychic, consciousness, science, technology John Harvey is an art historian and an art practitioner. His research field is the visual culture of religion. In art practice, John Harvey’s work explores non-iconic attitudes to religious art through an engagement with visual and textual sources, theological and cultural ideas, and systemic processes. His art-historical studies engage the visual imagery of popular piety, spiritual manifestations, and workingclass culture, chiefly in Protestant and sub-Christian traditions. › The Photographic Medium: Representation, Reconstitution, Consciousness, and Collaboration in Early-Twentieth-Century Spiritualism, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.2, 109-. Cindy Hasio Keywords social awareness, transformation, empowerment, community arts Cindy Hasio is a Teaching Fellow and doctoral student at the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas, United States. Her research focuses on community arts, and how it relates to connected knowing and lifelong learning. Her doctoral research describes how veterans empower themselves through the sharing and reflecting upon experiences within an arts and crafts environment in Dallas, Texas. She has been volunteering at the Veteran’s Hospital in Dallas for over two years and is currently volunteering at the Fort Worth Vet Center. She has presented at the National Art Education Association, the Texas Art Education Association and the International Society for Education through Art conferences. She is currently on the National Art Education Association Community Arts committee. › Veterans and an arts and crafts programme: a community of understanding and hope, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 75-84. Peter Hatton University of Kent, School of Art, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NZ, United Kingdom Keywords representation of place, spatial practice, physical environment, layered identity, urban environment, Peter Hatton teaches on the Design and Public Art Course at Chelsea College of Art and Design and also at Richmond College. He has worked with Val Murray since 1987 as members of TEA, all members having studied sculpture or 3D design. Projects have, in the past, included work for Tate Liverpool, The South Bank and artranspennine98. More recently, they have worked in St Petersburg and for CUBE. › What is this place? The work of TEA, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.3, 155-. Karen Hayes › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 187-198. Keywords Richard Heatly Herefordshire College of Technology, Folly Lane, Hereford, Herefordshire, HR1 1LT, United Kingdom Richard Heatly taught theory to design and media students at the University of Wales College, Newport where he was Assistant Head of School at the time when this research was undertaken, and has since taken up the post of Principal at Herefordshire College of Art and Design. Keywords dissertation, practice, art and design, phenomenography, learning › How art, media and design students conceive of the relation between the dissertation and practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 5-16. Ian Henderson Dr. Ian Henderson was foundation editor of Studies in Australasian Cinema (2007-2010) and lectures in Australian literature and film at King's College London. His current film-studies research focuses on the representation of Aboriginal Australians and concepts of Indigenous modernity. Keywords Australian literature, Australian cinema, Aboriginal Australians, indigenous modernity › Case study:Varieties of us: a case study in boundary and landscape in Aotearoa, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 135-152. Neil Henderson Anglia Ruskin University, Department of Communication, Film, and Media, Cambridge Campus, East Road, Cambridge, CB1 1PT, United Kingdom Keywords film, animation, Polaroid, photography Neil Henderson is a Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, at Anglia Ruskin University. He studied at the Kent Institute of Art and Design and the Slade School of Art. His work has been shown nationally and internationally, with screenings at the Diversions Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Festival Centre, Rodina Cinema, St Petersburg, the Onion City Film Festival, Chicago, Kettle's Yard Cambridge, The Whitechapel Gallery London, and Anthology Film Archive, New York. In 2009 he was shortlisted for the Jerwood Drawing prize. › Emptying frames, Animation Practice, Process & Production, 1.1, 77-82. Colette Henry Centre for Veterinary & Bioveterinary Enterprise, The Royal Veterinary College, University of London, Hawkshead Lane, North Mymms, Hatfield, Herts, AL9 7TA, United Kingdom Keywords creative industries, gender, entrepreneurship, fashion, publishing Colette Henry, Ph.D., is the Norbrook Professor of Business & Enterprise, at the Centre for Veterinary & Bio-veterinary Enterprise, The Royal Veterinary College, University of London. Prior to this, she was Head of the Department of Business Studies and Director of the Centre for Entrepreneurship Research at Dundalk Institute of Technology, Ireland. She has published widely on the topic of entrepreneurship education and training; programme effectiveness; women’s entrepreneurship and the creative industries. Colette is the founding editor of Emerald’s International Journal of Gender and Entrepreneurship (IJGE), an active member of the US-originated DIANA International Research Project, and President of ISBE(Institute for Entrepreneurship and Small Business). › Women and the creative industries: exploring the popular appeal, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 143-160. Norbert Herber Indiana University, Bloomington, Norbert Herber is a Lecturer at Indiana University Bloomington in the Department of Telecommunications. He is a musician and a sound artist whose research explores the relationship between people and Radio-TV Center, 1229 E. 7th St, Bloomington, IN, 47405, United States of America sound within mediated environments. Norbert’s artistic work can be described as amergent music – an innovative generative style that uses artificial life systems to sustain continuous, real-time modification and adaptation. Using this approach he is focused on creating sound and music in digital environments for art, entertainment and communications. Norbert is a Ph.D. candidate in the Planetary Collegium through the University of Plymouth, UK where he studies under the supervision of John Matthias, Roy Ascott and Brian Eno. His works have been performed/exhibited in Europe, Asia, South America and in the United States. Current projects can be heard online at http://www.x-net.com. Keywords interactivity, mobile media, psychogeography, rhythmanalysis, Amergent music › Dérive entre Mille Sons: a psychogeographic approach to mobile music and mediated interaction, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.1, 3-12. Fernando Hernandez University of Barcelona, Centre for the Study of Change in Culture and Education, Adolf Florensa s/n 08028, Barcelona, Spain Keywords body representation, visual culture, education, interdisciplinary Fernando Hernández is Professor of Visual Arts Education and Visual Culture Studies in the Art Education Division of the Fine Arts Faculty of the University of Barcelona. He has co-coordinated the Experimental Program of Secondary Art Teacher Education there for fifteen years. He also coordinates an Inter-university doctoral programme called ‘Visual Arts and Education: A constructivist approach’, and directs the Masters Course Studies in Visual Culture. Since 2001 he has been co-coordinator of the Centre of Studies for Change in Culture and Education based at the University. He understands art education as a form of cultural knowledge in which the development of critical understanding plays a key role. › Beyond Lucian Freud: Exploring body representations in children's culture, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 105-118. Anita Ng Heung Sang Flat F, 11/F, Block 8, Castello, 69, Siu Lek Yuen Road, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong Keywords community-based art education, pre-service teachers, ceramics Dr. Anita Ng Heung Sang completed her B.Ed. (Hons.) and M.Ed. at the University of Liverpool, and her Ph.D. at the University of East Anglia in 2007. She is currently Assistant Professor in the Cultural and Creative Arts Department of the Hong Kong Institute of Education. Before joining the Institute, she taught visual arts at primary and secondary schools in Hong Kong for over ten years. Between 1989 and 1993, she worked as an art inspector for the Hong Kong Education Department. Her book The Development of Hong Kong Art Education in Sixty Years, 1939–1999, was published in 2000. › Success through collaboration: a community-based model for pre-service teachers, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 187-200. Andy Hewitt University of Wolverhampton, School of Art and Design, Monlineux Street, Wolverhampton, WV1 1SB, United Kingdom Keywords art, social and cultural theory, criticism, art education, popular culture Andy Hewitt (BA, MA) is an artist and educator currently teaching fine art at the University of Wolverhampton. He is about to complete his Ph.D. at Chelsea College of Art and Design entitled ‘Art, participation and counterpublics in hegemonic cultural policy’. He is co-editor of the Art and Public Sphere. Hewitt works in collaboration with Dave Beech and Mel Jordan as the Freee art collective. Freee recent exhibitions include Vectors of the Possible, BAK, Utrecht, Touched, Liverpool Biennial, When Guests Become Host, CulturgestPorto, Portugal, The Peckham Pledge, Opening Exhibition, Peckham Space, London, and DORM, the Model, Sligo, Ireland. › Privatizing the public: Three rhetorics of art’s public good in ‘Third Way’ cultural policy, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 19-36. Ian Heywood Lancaster University, Lancaster Centre for the Contemporary Arts (LICA), The Roundhouse, Lancaster, LA1 4YW, United Kingdom Keywords making, materials and processes, conversation, poetic singularity, reflection and practice Ian Heywood taught for many years on the BA Fine Art course at Leeds Metropolitan University. He is now Research Fellow at the Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts, Lancaster University. He has written and published widely in the fields of art, social and cultural theory, and criticism, including Social Theories of Art: A Critique, and Interpreting Visual Culture. His most recent essay is on the painting of Paula Kane (in Paula Kane: Studio Wall, International Centre for Fine Art Research, London University of the Arts, 2009). He is also co-editing (with Barry Sandywell) a Handbook of Visual Culture, published by Berg in 2011. › Making and the teaching studio, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.3, 195-204. Richard Hickman University of Cambridge, University of Cambridge Faculty of Education, 184 Hills Rd., Cambridge, CB2 8PQ, United Kingdom Richard Hickman is Reader in Art Education in the University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education where he is course leader for PGCE Art & Design. His teaching experience includes thirteen years as a teacher of art and design and as a lecturer in art and design education since 1985. Richard is the author of Why We Make Art and Why it is Taught (Intellect, 2005); he edited Research in Art Education (Intellect, 2008); Art Education 11–18 (Continuum, 2004) and Critical Studies in Keywords art education, design Art & Design Education (Intellect, 2005). › Engagement in the arts and self-efficacy of adolescent women, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 9-19. Ted Hiebert University of Washington Bothell, Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, Box 358530, 18115 Campus Way NE, Bothell, WA, 98011, United States of America Keywords psychic photography, hallucination, impossibility, performance, postmodernism Ted Hiebert is a Canadian visual artist and theorist. His large-scale photographic works have been shown across Canada in public galleries and artist-run centres and in group exhibitions internationally. His theoretical writings have appeared in journals such as CTheory, Performance Research, Technoetic Arts, The Psychoanalytic Review, among others, as well as in catalogues and exhibition monographs. Hiebert is a member of the Editorial Board of CTheory journal and is Assistant Professor in the Department of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington Bothell. › Hallucinating Ted Serios: the impossibility of failed performativity, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.3, 135-154. Peter Higgs Queensland Institute of Technology, Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, Z1 - 515 Musk Avenue, Kelvin Grove, QLD 4059, Australia Keywords mapping, international comparative mapping, Australia, United Kingdom, employment statistics Peter Higgs is Senior Research Fellow, Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, Queensland University of Technology. He is manager of the centre’s mapping projects and has co-authored several of the key reports which have informed national, state and local creative industries policy development in Australia. › Creative Industries Mapping: Where have we come from and where are we going?, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 7-30. Robert Hillier Norwich University College of the Arts, School of Design, 3-7 Redwell St, Norwich, Norfolk, NR2 4SN, United Kingdom Keywords sylexiad, dyslexic, developmental typeface testing, Dr. Robert Hillier is the MA Design Course Leader at Norwich University College of the Arts where he has designed and developed the Sylexiad range of fonts. He has presented his research findings at the ‘Fast Type Slow Type’ Conference in Birmingham (2006) and at design institutions throughout the United Kingdom and Europe. Sylexiad has been included as part of the ‘NEVERODDOREVEN’ exhibition at The Serpentine Gallery, London (2007) and has been featured in design publications such as Ultrabold, United Kingdom legibility, dine (Spring, 2007), Novum, Germany (April, 2008) and Étapes, France (May, 2008). He has won many awards within the field of information book design and has exhibited work in the United Kingdom, United States, Germany and South Korea. › Sylexiad. A typeface for the adult dyslexic reader, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 275-291. Mirja Hiltunen University of Lapland, Faculty of Art & Design, Department of Art Education, Rovaniemi, PL 122, 96101, Finland Keywords education, performative art, community, empowerment Mirja Hiltunen (Doctor of Arts, M.Ed.) is a University Lecturer in Art Education in the Faculty of Art and design at the University of Lapland. She has devised a performative art strategy as part of her work in art teacher education and has been leading community-based art workshops and projects in Lapland for over ten years. She has recently completed her Ph.D. on community-based art-education in the northern sociocultural context. Her study combines concrete cultural activities, development of these activities through art education projects, and theoretical examination of the subject area. The placespecificity, performativity and social dimensions of art are of particular interest to her, and she has published numerous papers in this area. › The Fire Fox: a multi-sensory approach to art education in Lapland, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 161-178. Claire Hind York St John University, Faculty of Arts, Lord Mayors Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords dark play, games, adaptation, performance, writing, adaptation Claire Hind is a senior lecturer at York St John University where she specializes in conceptual performance practice, the ensemble and performance writing. She has a Ph.D. in practice led research from the University of Leeds and was supervised by Professor Mick Wallis and Dr. Anna Fenemore. Her work investigates the playful, ironic and psychoanalytical processes of making live and mediated performance within enclosed intimate spaces and works through the attitudes, encounters repetitions and drives of rehearsal. Claire has directed performance workshops in St. Petersburg, developed for over nine years cross-cultural performance projects at the Sibiu International Theatre Festival Romania, has worked frequently in the United States as an artist and lecturer and most recently co-curated the international Writing Encounters symposium at York St John University. › Editorial: Writing encounters within performance and pedagogical practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 5-13. › Editorial: Space and place: writing encounters self, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 133-138. › Reviews:A performance installation featured at the Writing Encounters symposium at York St John University, September 2008, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 251-253. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 355-356. H. L. Hix University of Wyoming, English Department 3353, Laramie, WY, 82071, United States of America H. L. Hix teaches at the University of Wyoming. His recent poetry books include a verse biography of the artist Petra Soesemann, called Incident Light (Etruscan Press, 2009), and a 'selected poems' called First Fire, Then Birds (Etruscan, 2010). His website is www.hlhix.com. Keywords discourse, rational, commercial, authoritarian, humanity › Design as rational discourse, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 123-127. Hilda Ho Murray Royal Hospital, Department of Forensic Psychiatry, Muirhall Road, Perth, PH2 7BH, United Kingdom Keywords mentally disordered offenders, forensic psychiatry, mental health, creativity, drama, theatre Dr. Hilda Ho, MBChB, MRCPsych, MPhil, is the Regional Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist for the north of Scotland. Her current post involves the planning of a new medium-secure unit for the north of Scotland. Dr. Hilda won the RCPsych in Scotland Research Prize 2010 with her paper 'Violence risk assessment: the use of the PCL-SV, HCR20 and VRAG to predict violence in mentally disordered offenders discharged from a medium secure unit in Scotland'. She was presented with her prize by the Chairman of the RCPsych in Scotland, Dr. Peter Rice at the Apex Hotel, Edinburgh. › A descriptive analysis of a pilot drama project in a forensic psychiatric setting, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 267-280. Darryl Hocking Auckland University of Technology AUT, School of Languages, Faculty of Arts, Private Bag 92006, Auckland, 1020, New Zealand Keywords discourse analysis, academic literacies, genre analysis, genre theory, professional communication, art and design Darryl Hocking is a senior lecturer in the School of Languages and Social Sciences at AUT University, New Zealand. His research interests include academic literacies and the analysis of communicative practices in art and design settings. His current research focus involves an exploration of the linguistic and rhetorical characteristics of the 'brief' genre, its conditions of production and reception, and how these impact on and discursively facilitate student creative action. › Synergy in art and language: positioning the language specialist in education, creative briefs, creativity, mixed-methodology, multiperspectives, communicative interaction contemporary fine art study, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 149-162. Lin Holdridge Keywords Ph.D., research methodology, Marcel Duchamp, Pierre Bonnard, art education Lin Holdridge has produced a research report on the higher degree research culture in art and design and the performing arts at the University of Plymouth and in surrounding regional institutions. She is currently engaged upon collaborative research projects in the field of creative practice research and is based at the University of Plymouth. › The Enactment of Thinking: creative practice research degrees, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 11-11. › The enactment of thinking: the creative practice Ph.D., Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 197-. Andrea Holland Norwich University College of the Arts, Francis House, 3-7 Redwell Street, Norwich, NR2 4SN, United Kingdom Keywords collaboration, creativity, language, the visual, innovation Andrea Holland is the course leader at Norwich University College of the Arts for MA: Writing the Visual, while also teaching undergraduate Creative Writing at UEA. She lived in the United States for fourteen years where she earned a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing at the University of Massachusetts. Her collection of poetry, Borrowed, was co-winner of the Poetry Business contest. She has published broadly in the United Kingdom and the United States and is also a freelance reader and writer. She currently lives in Norwich with her two sons. › The good collusion defeats the Lone Ranger, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 117-121. Edward Hollis Edinburgh College of Art, Interior Design, 74 Lauriston Place, Edinburgh, EH3 9DF, United Kingdom Edward Hollis studied Architecture at the Universities of Cambridge and Edinburgh before joining a practice, working first on ruins and follies in the coastal lagoons of Sri Lanka and then on Victorian villas, old breweries and town halls in Scotland. He now teaches Interior Design at Edinburgh College of Art. Keywords architecture, art education, creative practice › Tell tail tales: Mark Leckey and Edward Hollis in conversation, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 279-291. Marjo van Hoorn Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, P.O. Box 61, Utrecht, 3500 AB, Netherlands Keywords art education, culture Marjo van Hoorn is a senior staff member in Research and Policy at Cultuurnetwerk Nederland, the national centre of expertise for Arts Education in the Netherlands. Her current work includes research on national arts education policy and directing the monitoring and evaluation of Cultuurnetwerk Nederlands’ own activities. › The U-curve going Dutch: Cultural differences in judgements of artwork from different age and expertise groups, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 153-169. Barbara Howey Columbia University, United Kingdom Keywords art, creative practice, cultural memory, mixed media, textile art Barbara Howey is Course Leader for the MA Art, Design and Education, and MA Coordinator. Her research has focused on issues of personal and cultural memory. She has pursued this through exhibitions, conference papers and publications. The form of the creative work has been mostly in painting but she has collaborated with a weaver to produce a jacquard weave and have made short video pieces. Her current research at Columbia University is researching into institutional memory. › Self/Painting Practice/Social Practice, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.3, 136-149. Alison Hsiang-Yi Liu National Taiwan Normal University, Art Education, Arts Department, 19, Da-Tong West Road,, Taoyuan, Taoyuan, 33065, Taiwan Keywords online community, blogging, museum websites, visitor studies Alison works in the Museum of World Religions as an Exhibition Designer as well as Assistant Curator. She holds a doctorate from the Department of Art Education, National Taiwan Normal University, and is still enrolled in an online MA program in Museum Studies at Johns Hopkins University, USA. She holds her first MA in Visual Art and Creative Arts in Education from the University of Exeter, UK. Prior to her current academic pursuits, Alison worked as a primary school teacher for ten years, with an enthusiasm for arts teaching and curriculum design. She has been involved in museum-based local community practice, worked as a docent in an art museum biennale, and assisted a national research initiative applying museum digital collections into arts classrooms. For her Ph.D. she has drawn on this interdisciplinary background in art and museum education to study the potential of the Web. › Using online communities to attract museum visitors, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 259-274. Zhifan Hu Education Science College, Shanghai Normal University, No.100 Gui Lin road, Shanghai, 200234, China Keywords visual culture, Chinese teenagers, art education, images Zhifan Hu is Professor of Art Education at Shanghai Normal University. His major research interests are in art education and history of Chinese art. He has edited and co-edited books and papers on the following art education topics: the curriculum and teaching in the arts (2003); prospects for art education (2002); understanding art in context (2004); the evolution of art teaching materials in primary and secondary schools in China since 1949 (2004); art as cultural studies (2003); and art education and globalization (2002). He has also published books and papers on the history of Chinese art. › Art education in Chinese primary and secondary schools: Meeting the challenge of Visual Culture, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.1, 17-26. Rob Huddleston Keywords innovation, creative, design, technology, lasers Rob Huddleston, is Senior Lecturer and Director of Collaborations at the University of Southampton, Winchester School of Art. With an early background in fine art, Rob is actively involved in interdisciplinary design research and teaching. He is currently working with textile designer Cheryl Welsh and University of Southampton researchers in optoelectronics on the next stage of a project with the textile producer Jakob Schlaepfer, Switzerland. He is interested in innovations in design and manufacturing utilizing historical references such as Japanese printmaking and combinations of drawing, new materials and laser technologies. In 2002 Rob conducted AHRC funded research at Tama Art University, Japan with the aim of exploring possible connections between the materiality of traditionalJapanese prints and digital textile printing. It was this experience that led him to start workingwith Cheryl Welsh, and later Jakob Schlaepfer, on laserrelated design ideas. › Jakob Schlaepfer: A case study in laser innovation and the unexpected, Craft Research, 1.1, 125-132. Lindsay Hughes Arts Council Wales, Visual Art, 155 Somerset Road, Bristol, Avon, BS4 2JA, United Kingdom Keywords context, viewer, contemporary, experience Lindsay Hughes is currently Senior Visual Arts Officer for the Arts Council Wales and is based in Bristol. She is also a freelance curator and writer. She is completing a Ph. D., researching the relationship between the viewer and site-based artwork, in particular focusing on the notion of ‘wonder’. › Do we need new spaces for exhibiting contemporary art? A critique of curatorial practice in relation to the viewer's engagement with contemporary art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.1, 29-38. Jung A. Huh Yonsei University #626, Institute of Media Arts, 134 Shinchon-dong, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul 120–749, Korea Sout Keywords mapping, space, structure, pattern, communication Jung A. Huh is a professor at the Institute of Media Arts at Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea. She is also the supervising manager for the Humanities Korea Project 'Imagination and Technology' and organized the International Media Art Exhibition (2004) as executive producer. She is a consultant for the 'Asian Culture Hub City Project' in the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism as well as for the 'Transdisciplinary Robot Forum' in the Ministry of Knowledge Economy. › Mandala as telematic design, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 19-30. Andrew Hunt Focal Point Gallery, Southend Central Library, Victoria Avenue, Southendon-Sea, SS2 6EX, United Kingdom Keywords curating, art practice Andrew Hunt is director of Focal Point Gallery, Southend-on-Sea. He was previously curator of International Project Space, Birmingham, UK and assistant curator at Norwich Gallery, UK. He regularly organizes independent projects. Freelance exhibitions include The Affirmation, Chelsea Space, (2007), Writing in Strobe, Dicksmith Gallery (2006) and Like Beads on an Abacus Designed to Calculate Infinity, Rockwell (2004). Publishing activities include the imprint Slimvolume, produced on a yearly basis since 2001. He is also reviews editor at Untitled, a regular contributor to Frieze, Art Monthly and a number of other journals. › Minor Curating?, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 153-161. D. J. Huppatz Swinburne University, Faculty of Design, 144 High Street, Prahran, Melbourne, Vic, 3181, Australia Keywords interior design, Lascaux, historiography, narrative, design history D. J. Huppatz is a Lecturer in the Faculty of Design at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia. His recent publications include ‘Jean Prouvé’s Maison Tropicale: The Poetics of the Colonial Object’, Design Issues (26:4, Autumn 2010); ‘Globalizing Corporate Identity in Hong Kong’, in Clark, H. and D. Brody, eds., Design Studies: A Reader (Oxford and New York: Berg, 2009), and ‘Fashion Branding: Staging Identities’, in Riello, G. and P. McNeil, eds., The Fashion History Reader (London and New York, Routledge, 2010). He writes a regular blog, Critical Cities, focused on design, architecture and contemporary culture: http://djhuppatz.blogspot.com. › The cave: Writing design history, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 135-148. Laura Hurd Clarke University of British Columbia, School of Human Kinetics, Vancouver, Canada Keywords femininity, fashion, beauty, work, immigration, aging Laura Hurd Clarke, MSW, Ph.D., is Associate Professor (Sociology of Health and Aging) in the School of Human Kinetics, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. The overall objective of her research is to critically examine how social norms concerning gender, health, and later life mediate individuals’ experiences of aging, the body, health, and illness. › Russian immigrant women and the negotiation of social class and feminine identity through fashion, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 181-202. Zuzana Husárová Comenius University, Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Education, Šoltésovej 4, Bratislava, 811 08, Slovakia Keywords literary science, digital fiction, Zuzana Husárová is a Slovak academic, writer and scholar specializing in various aspects of electronic literature. She holds a Ph.D. in Literary Science from the Institute of World Literature at the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava, where she defended her thesis Writing in Interactive Media. Digital Fiction in 2009. She obtained her Mgr. (MA) from English Language and Literature at University of SS. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava, Slovakia. She is teaching at Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia and at Masarykova University in Brno, Czech Republic and is a member of Slovak REMAKE team. › Following Paths of Electronic Literature, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 25-36. Ren-Lai Hwang Wenzao Ursuline College of Languages, Department of Communication Arts, 900 Mintsu 1st Road, Kaohsiung, 80793, Taiwan Keywords Buddhism, education, religion, whole-person Ren-Lai Hwang was appointed Professor of Art Education, Department of Communication Arts, Wenzao Ursuline College of Languages, Taiwan in 2005. Prior to that he was Professor of Art Education in the Department of Visual Arts Education, National Pingtung Teachers College, Taiwan. He was Visiting Professor, University of South Australia, Australia in 1996. He obtained his Ed.D. in Art Education from the University of Georgia, United States. He has published at least 50 books/reports/articles on art education and held four solo exhibitions of watercolor and oil paintings in Taiwan. › Integrating Buddhist doctrine into arts education, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 93-104. Yasmin Ibrahim Queen Mary, University of London, School of Business and Management, Mile End, London, E1 4NS, United Kingdom Keywords visual communications, politics, intercultural communication, new media, digital economies, political communication Dr. Yasmin Ibrahim is Reader in International Business and Communications at Queen Mary, University of London. Her ongoing research on new media technologies explores the cultural dimensions and social implication of the diffusion of ICTs in different contexts. Beyond new media and digital technologies she writes on political communication and political mobilisation from cultural perspectives. Her other research interests include globalization, visual culture and memory studies. › The non-stop ‘capture’: the politicsof looking in postmodernity, The Poster, 1.2, 167-185. Takashi Ikegami University of Tokyo, School of Arts and Sciences, Komaba 3-8-1, Tokyo, 153-8902, Japan Keywords chemical computing, smart chemical agents, chemotaxis, living technology, artificial life, first cell Takashi Ikegami is a professor in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Tokyo where he specializes in complex systems and artificial life. Takashi takes a computational/philosophical approach to designing artificial life, exploring issues at the margins of his discipline. He is also an arts collaborator with Keichiro Shibuya (ATAK) on making three-dimensional sound installations. › Protocells as smart agents for architectural design, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 117-120. › The search for a first cell under the maximalism design principle, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 153-164. Yassaman Imani University of Hertfordshire, Business School, College Lane, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, AL10 9AB, United Kingdom Keywords arts, design, knowledge creation, knowledge management, tacit knowledge Yassaman Imani holds a Ph.D. from the Univeristy of London and is Head of Strategy and Management Research Unit at Univeristy of Hertfordshire Business School. She lectures on strategy and knowledge management and has published on organizational culture, art and knowledge management. Her current research interests include managerial perceptions of learning and knowledge sharing in organizations, knowledge perspective on strategy, the tacit dimension of knowledge, secondary qualitative reviews and the theroy-practice divide in strategic management. Her consultancy interests include strategic knowledge management, organizational change and developing knowledge-based strategies in organizations. › Knowledge creation, business and art: exploring the contradictions and commonalities, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 141-154. Sharon Irish University of Illinois, School of Architecture, 611 Taft Drive, 117 Buell Hall, M-C 621, Champaign, Illinois, 61820, United States of America Keywords Puerto Rico, consumerism, oppression, commercial space, neo- or post-colonialism, Sharon Irish is Interim Director of the Community Informatics Initiative and a Lecturer in the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, United States. She is the author of the art monograph, Suzanne Lacy: Spaces Between (University of Minnesota Press, 2010), as well as publications on artists Nek Chand Saini, Anish Kapoor, Stephen Willats and the architect Cass Gilbert. Her current research involves two main directions: critical spatial practices in the United States, and second order cybernetics in 1970s art in England and the United States. › Along Paseo Boricua: The Art of Josué Pellot Gonzalez, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 115-127. Rita L. Irwin The University of British Columbia, Scarfe Teacher Education Office, 2125 Main, Mall Canada, V6T 1Z4, Canada Keywords identity, community, transnational cities, research/creation methodology, public space Rita Irwin is Professor of Art Education and Curriculum Studies, and Associate Dean of Teacher Education in the Faculty of Education at The University of British Columbia. Although she may be best known for her work in developing a form of arts-based educational research called a/r/tography, she is also well known for her leadership roles in professional organizations. Most notably, she is the current president of the International Society for Education through Art. › Research and creation: Socially-engaged art in The City of Richgate Project, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 213-227. › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Makoto Ishikawa Kyoto University of education, Art education, graduate School of education, Kyoto University of Education, 611 Fukakusa Fujinomori, Author is Professor of Art Education at the Graduate School of Education, Kyoto University of Education, Japan. He researches art appreciation for lifelong learning. His research focuses on advancing the collaboration between schools and museums. In 2008, he conducted the trial exhibition, Between Kaku (Writing) & Kaku (Drawing): Children and the MOMAK Collection, at the National Museum of Fushimiku, Kyoto 612-8522, Japan Modern Art, Kyoto in collaboration with the museum, his seminar students and schoolteachers. His ongoing project is to create opportunities for children to appreciate contemporary art and calligraphy. Keywords gallery education, art appreciation, collaboration between school and museum, museum collection, cross-cultural › Through the eyes of a stray dog: encounters with the Other, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 111-128. › Young people's encounters with museum collections: Expanding the range of contexts for art appreciation, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 73-89. Kazuhiro Ishizaki University of Tsukuba, Art and Design, Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, 1-11 Tennodai, Tsukuba-shi, 305-8577, Japan Keywords understanding art, repertoires, developmental theory, art appreciation, appreciation skills Dr. Kazuhiro Ishizaki is Associate Professor of Art Education in Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences at the University of Tsukuba, Japan. He is past Coordinator of the Invited Seminar of the 32nd InSEA World Congress in Osaka, Japan. His research interests include learning sciences in visual arts and curriculum development in art appreciation. › Considering the framework of art appreciation repertoires, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 327-341. Marlene Ivey NSCAD University, Design Department, 5163 Duke Street, Halifax, B3J 3J6, Canada Keywords designer’s thinking, mindfulness, rhetoric, visual thinking, dialogue Marlene Ivey joined the University of Dundee in 1994, after working in the public health sector developing and implementing new systems and services for General Practice Fundholding. Founder of creativekit.co.uk, she is a researcher in the School of Design and was Course Director for the Master of Design, a multidisciplinary and multicultural taught postgraduate course between 2001–2007. › Sustaining Ambiguity and Fostering Openness in the (Design) Learning Environment, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.3, 155167. Luke Jaaniste Queensland University of Technology, Creative Industries Faculty, Kelvin Grove, Queensland, Dr. Luke Jaaniste is a Research Fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, QUT, and is a practicing visual and sound artist. After completing a practice-led Ph.D. in 2006, he has researched creative practice and its links to various institutional contexts including higher research, cultural and 4059, Australia innovation policy, and formal pedagogy. He has been involved in teaching postgraduate research methods units at QUT, and has supervised practice-led research higher degrees in the fields of fashion, documentary film and drama education. Keywords media, design, art, exegesis, practice-led research › A connective model for the practice-led research exegesis: An analysis of content and structure, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 31-44. Michael I. Jackson Reverend Michael Jackson qualified as a solicitor but then left legal practice to become director of a charity. He concurrently studied for the ministry and was ordained priest. He is a member of the CCOA Research Group. Keywords charity, ministry, art education › Engagement in the arts and well-being and health in later adulthood: An empirical study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 25-36. Georgina Jackson The National College of Art and Design, Graduate School of Creative Arts and Media Georgina Jackson is a curator and a research scholar at the Graduate School of Creative Arts and Media, Dublin. She is currently participating in a two-year curatorial residency at the Mattress Factory Art Museum, Pittsburgh. › REVIEWS, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 85-. Keywords curating, art practice Mogens Jacobsen Keywords mapping, collaborative creative processes, trans-disciplinary domains, renegotiating competences Mogens Jacobsen is an independent media artist, HCI professional and commentator. Jacobsen was a founding member of the Danish net-art group Artnode.org. Since 2001 his focus has been on physical telematic objects and social spaces. He exhibits frequently in museums and media festivals worldwide. He has contributed to several publications, including Get Real – Art + Real time (New York: George Braziller Publishers, 2005). He co-edited (with Morten Søndergaard) the book RE_ACTION – The Digital Archive Experience (Aalborg University Press, 2009). › MAPPING the domains of media art practice: A trans-disciplinary enquiry into collaborative creative processes, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 77-84. Margarete Jahrmann University of Arts Zurich, Department of Design, Ausstellungsstrasse 60, 8005 Zurich, Switzerland Keywords arts research, science critic, game culture, ludic interfaces, player consciousness, Internet of things Margarete Jahrmann is an artist, doctor of Philosophy, and Professor for Game Design at the University of Arts Zurich. In Vienna at the University of Arts die Angewandte Vienna she is lecturer in media arts and individual project leader of the European Union funded Humanities Research project on creative FLOW and 'Prosumer' cultures (subproject of TEF- Technology, Exchange and Flow) with the aim of an international exhibition in 2012 in Vienna on Pervasive Prosumer Plays. As an internationally renowned artist she exhibited and presented her work worldwide, as for example in 2010 at Wits Academy, Johannesburg, South Africa, FACT Centre Liverpool, Space Invaders, at Digital Arts weeks Xian, China; in the Netherlands Media Arts Institute NIMK, Amsterdam. A selection of further shows include 2009 Tales of Play, Alta Tecnología Andina Lima and Enter_Act, Kunstmuseum Aaros, 2008 Arco/ Laboral Gijon, SESC/ File Sau Paolo, 2007 DIGRA Tokyo. › Morales du Joujou: Ludic wonder objects, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 149-162. Alison James London College of Fashion University of the Arts London, 20 John Princes St, London, W1G 0BJ, United Kingdom Keywords emotions, progress files, key skills, writing, narrative Alison James is currently Learning and Teaching Coordinator at the Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College, where her responsibilities include supporting curriculum innovation, staff development in teaching and learning, learning support and English language provision. She is involved in several nationally funded projects on improving provision for disabled students, supporting parttime tutors in art and design and writing practices. She has previously coordinated a four-year TLTP3 project. She is a member of the art and design reference group of the ADC LTSN. Her research interests are auto/biography and narratives of learning. › Autobiography and narrative in personal development planning in the creative arts, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 103118. › Reflection revisited: perceptions of reflective practice in fashion learning and teaching, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.3, 179-196. › Reflections on emotional journeys: a new perspective for reading fashion students' PPD statements, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 209-219. David E. James Professor David E. James is on the faculty of the School of Cinematic University of Southern California Arts at the University of Southern California. His teaching focuses on avant-garde cinema, culture in Los Angeles, East Asian cinema, cinema and music, and workingclass culture. He has published widely in these fields, including Allegories of Cinema: American Film in the Sixties (1989), Power Misses: Essays Across (Un)Popular Culture (1996) and The Most Typical Avant-Garde: History and Geography of Minor Cinemas in Los Angeles (2005). Together with Michele Pierson and Paul Arthur, he edited Optic Antics: The Cinema of Ken Jacobs (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011). Keywords › Letter to Paul Arthur (Letter with Footnotes), Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 27-35. Harry Jamieson Keywords complexity, relationships, skill, sensitivity, perception Harry Jamieson has been concerned with aspects of the visual since his early career in advertising and subseqently in art education. After a period as a research scientist in the M.R.C., where his interest lay in perceptual skills, he was appointed to the staff of the University of Liverpool where he helped to found the Department of Communication Studies. He is the author of a number of articles, and a book titled Communication and Persuasion. He is currently engaged in work on the salience of form in aesthetics. › Forming art: making and responding, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.1, 7584. Julia Jansen University College Cork, Department of Philosophy, 4 Elderwood, College Road, Cork, United Kingdom Keywords philosophy, feminist theory, women's studies, aesthetics, phenomenology Julia Jansen has a Ph.D. in Philosophy and has worked as a lecturer in the Department of Philosophy at University College Cork since 2002. Her research interests include aesthetics, Kantian philosophy, phenomenology and feminist philosophy. She has taught feminist theories of knowledge, science and body on the MA in Women’s Studies. › Editorial Introduction Aesthetics and its objects – challenges from art and experience, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 123-126. Milan Jaros Milan Jaros is Professor of Theoretical Physics and Director of the Centre for Research in Knowledge Science and Society at the Newcastle University, KNOSSOS, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, NE1 7RU, United Kingdom University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, United Kingdom. He has published over 300 scientific articles and several books. His recent work has been concerned with theories of man-made systems and ontoepistemic and educational issues concerning the interface between the generation and transmission of knowledge. Keywords materia poetica, ontopoetics, narratability, post-mechanical age, pata-physics › Materia poetica: models of corporeality and onto-poetic pata-physics of the post-mechanical age, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.1, 3-12. Michael Jarvis Northumbria University, School of Health, Social work and Education, Coach Lane Campus, Coach Lane, Benton, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, NE7 7XA, United Kingdom Michael Jarvis is an artist, writer and lecturer. He works at Northumbria University in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne where he contributes to undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in Teacher Education and Fine Art. He has recently completed a Ph.D. in Fine Art at Lancaster University. The research is concerned with the practice of painting in relation to various announcements of its ‘death’ and demise since 1840. Keywords expertise, implicit, intuition, process, procedure › Articulating the tacit dimension in artmaking, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 201-214. › Francis Bacon and the practice of painting, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.3, 181-193. Marta Jecu › Exhibition Reviews, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 101-116. Keywords Marie Jefsioutine Birmingham City University, Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, Corporation Street, Gosta Green, Birmingham, West Midlands, B4 7DX, United Kingdom Keywords negotiation, work-based Marie Jefsioutine is Senior Research Fellow in Digital Media at the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design. She is involved in usercentred design and usability research. She has a background in psychology, human-computer interaction and educational media, and has worked in interaction design for over ten years, previously at the BBC, the Open University and Goldsmiths College. She has designed a number of CD-ROMs and websites, including the Virtual Gallery of Contemporary Jewellery, now on display in the Victoria and Albert learning, learning contracts, electronic learning contracts, art and design Museum, London. Marie is a member of the Design Research Society, the BCS HCI group and the Museums Computer Group, and publishes regularly in the fields of design and human computer interaction. › Reflections on using online contracts for work-based learning and teaching in art and design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 5570. Bob Jerrard Birmingham City University, Institute of Art & Design Keywords work-based learning, learning contracts, art and design participatory research, design Dr. Bob Jerrard is Emeritus Professor of Design Studies, a Fellow of the Design Research Society and was until recently Director of the Research Centre for Design and the Creative Industries at Birmingham City University, Institute of Art and Design. He directed the major AHRC research project concerning Risk, Risk Perception and Design; he has published widely on theoretical and social aspects of design and technology and has supervised nearly twenty doctoral studies in a variety of areas of design research and examined more than 40 others. He has also directed major research into Fashion Culture and Consumption, Work-based Learning in Art and Design and Knowledge Transfer between Higher Education and Small Design Firms. He is a member of AHRC’s Peer Review College and a research consultant for a number of international publishing groups, editorial boards and several UK and overseas universities. › Reflections on using online contracts for work-based learning and teaching in art and design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 5570. › Researching creative companies: lessons learned from a risk in design project, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 161-178. Albert Jewell Reverend Dr. Albert Jewell is a Methodist minister, who recently completed a Ph.D. at the University of Wales on the topic of well-being in older Methodists. He is a member of the CCOA Research group. Keywords Methodism, art therapy, art education › Engagement in the arts and well-being and health in later adulthood: An empirical study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 25-36. Mark Johnson Mark L. Johnson is Knight Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences in University of Oregon, Department of Philosophy, Eugene, OR, 974031295, United States of America the Department of Philosophy, University of Oregon. He has written extensively on metaphor, embodiment and imagination, and moral theory. His books include: Metaphors We Live By (co-author George Lakoff, University of Chicago, 1980); The Body in the Mind: The Bodily Basis of Meaning, Imagination, and Reason, University Challenge to Western Thought, (co-author George Lakoff, Basic Books, 1999). Keywords pragmatism, embodiment, imagination, cognitive science, metaphor › ‘The stone that was cast out shall become the cornerstone’: the bodily aesthetics of human meaning, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 89-104. Ruth Jones Foundation Al Andalus, Rabat, Morocco, Tregyddulan, St Nicholas, Goodwick, Pembrokeshire, SA64 0LX, United Kingdom Keywords becoming-animal, embodiment, Luce Irigaray, Lucy Gunning, Deleuze/Guattariritual Ruth Jones is an artist and curator based in West Wales. She has exhibited in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Poland, United States, Spain and Quebec. She completed a practice-led D. Phil at the University of Ulster in 2002. In 2006 she was awarded an AHRC Fellowship in Creative and Performing Arts at the University of West England, Bristol, exploring the relationships between ritual, place and community in lens-based and public art. Recent projects include sleepers (2006), a film and public art project; (2008), a video installation about Strumble Head lighthouse, and Cloddfa (2010) a video installation about Porthgain quarry. Jones was a co-director of the Belfast-based artist-run gallery Catalyst Arts between 1997–1999. › Becoming-hysterical – becoming-animal – becoming-woman in The Horse Impressionists, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.2, 123-138. › Inventing rituals; inhabiting places – ritual and community in public art, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 147-167. Stephen Jones Keywords consciousness, interaction, feedback, self-organization, ethics Stephen Jones is an Australian video artist of long standing. During the 1980s and early 1990s he was the video-maker for the electronic music band Severed Heads. He has been involved with the philosophical aspects of the nature of consciousness for almost longer than his involvement in video and has produced The Brain Project web site since August 1996 http://www.culture.com.au/brain_proj/ and also works in the theory of Artificial Life and self-organizing systems. As an artist he now builds physical immersion installations based on the incunabula of computing. As an electronic engineer and he works on equipment ranging from analogue video synthesizers to digital television facilities as well as developing interactive sensor systems for artists’ installation projects in Australia and elsewhere. He is currently researching the history of the computer arts in Australia. › Resolving classical experience and the quantum world, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.2, 143-. › On the evolution of artificial consciousness. Re-inventing the wheel, Re: Inventing the wheel, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.1, 45-. Zachary Jones Arizona State University, Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, PO Box 871505, Tempe, AZ, 852871505, United States of America Keywords biophotonics, genomics, modelling, simulation, systems theory, electrochemistry, living architecture, HCI, mythological synesthesia, ICRL, vortex mechanics, water, light, mathematics, relationships, perception Zachary Jones is an artist and researcher whose work focuses on rendering the poetics of subtle patterns and phenomena that span fields of inquiry. He is responsible for the creation of the 1/4 mile long Dixmont Time Capsule (Pittsburgh), enactment of a Tzolkin lecture series, organization of a Metaphysical Cafe (series) from 2000 to 2002, and consultation with Frick Environmental Center for the creation of an education and outreach system for ecological research, as well as other commissioned and invited site works. Jones received his BFA in Fine Arts from Carnegie Mellon University in 2000, with an undelivered double-major in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI – Interface Design). He has received funding for the independent research he performs since 2000. Jones is a graduate researcher in the Arts, Media and Engineering Programme at Arizona State University. › Biophotonics in the rendering of a general systems language, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 25-34. Hannah Jones Goldsmiths University of London, Department of Design, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Hannah Jones is an Associate Tutor on the MA Design Futures programme in the Department of Design at Goldsmiths, University of London. Hannah is also a researcher on the Arts and Humanities Research Council funded 2006/8 project 'Benchmarking Synergy Levels Within Metadesign: Devising International Standards That Encourage A More Joined-Up Approach to the Way We Live'. Keywords bisociation, awkwardness, metadesign, tetrahedral relations, relevance › Bisociation within keyword-mapping:an aid to writing purposefully in design, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 19-32. Mel Jordan Loughborough University, School of Art and Design, Epinal Way, Mel Jordan is an artist whose practise is defined by its political and social engagement through specific sites; Mel teaches Fine Art at Loughborough University. Loughborough, Leicestershire, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom › EDITORIAL, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 3-6. Keywords art, politics, art and social engagement, fine art Jaspar Joseph-Lester › Non-relational regimes of urban modernization, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 163-175. Keywords urban modernization, video, urban planning, society, urban regeneration › Round table discussion: The affects of the abstract image in film and video art, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 79-87. Sophie Jung Rietveld Academie, Photography, Kandererstrasse 34, Basel, 4057, Switzerland › The Beach as a Space of Defamiliarisation, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 245-257. Keywords photography, media art, video Eduardo Kac The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chair Art and Technology Department, 112 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60603, United States of America Keywords bio-poetry, experimental poetry, bio-art, visual poetry Eduardo Kac, Professor of Art and Technology Studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, is an artist and writer who invented holographic and digital poetry. His poetic works and theoretical essays have been exhibited and published internationally. He created his first poem online in 1985 (with the French minitel network), and since the early 1980s has built a body of work in media poetry. Well known for his bio art, including 'GFP Bunny' (the green-glowing rabbit Alba, 2000), Kac has also created biopoems (poems written with or within living beings). › Biopoetry, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.1, 13-18. Themina Kader University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, 800 Algoma Blvd, Oshkosh, WI, 54901, United States of America Keywords curriculum, multicultural, journals, United States of America Themina Kader is Assistant Professor of Art Education at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Her primary research interest is in the field of material culture studies in art education, and its practical application to professional development of art teachers. Her own diverse background (Indian/Muslim), heritage and long experience of teaching art in Kenyan schools provides the impetus for her other professional interest, multicultural art education. Her academic and pedagogic endeavours conflate with her own artworks, which she has exhibited extensively in Kenya, England, Germany and the United States. › SchoolArts: DBAE and multicultural art education in the United States of America, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 65-84. Seija Kairavuori University of Helsinki, Department of Teacher education, University of Helsinki, P.O.Box 8 (Siltavuorenpenger 10) FI-00014, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland Seija Kairavuori, Ph.D, Department of Teacher education, Section of Classroom Teacher Education, university lecturer in Visual Arts Education. › The identities of an arts educator: Comparing discourses in three teacher education programmes in Finland, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 7-21. Keywords Faith Kane Loughborough University, School of the Arts, Epinal Way, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom Keywords textiles, sustainability Faith Kane trained in constructed textiles. Having obtained her Ph.D. (Designing Nonwovens: Industrial and Craft Perspectives) in 2008 she now lectures in Textiles at The School of the Arts, Loughborough University where she is chair of the Textiles Research Group. Her own research focuses on the use of new and industrial technologies in creative textile practice. Notions of sustainability, craft and drawing inform her work. › EXHIBITION REVIEWS, Craft Research, 2.1, 161-178. Young Imm Kang Song Lesley University, 29 Everett Street, Young Imm Kang Song, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Creative Arts in Learning division, Graduate School of Arts and Social Sciences, at Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. Her teaching and research focus on public art, environmental art, multicultural education and museum education. Cambridge, MA, 2138, United States of America › Media art remix: a tool for social action, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 229-240. Keywords social action, contemporary art, environmental education, environmental art, public art Ami Kantawala Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10023, United States of America Dr. Ami Kantawala is currently Lecturer and Program Manager in Arts Administration at Teachers College, Columbia University in New York, and also an adjunct at Boston University’s Online Masters Program in Art Education. › NAEA 2011 Conference review, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 81-83. Keywords art education Katerina Karoussos University of Plymouth, Planetary Collegium, Drake Circus, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords new media, Byzantine, mural painting Katerina Karoussos is an artist and a researcher. Her research is based on the convergence of old and new media and especially between Byzantine and new media visual practices. From 1994 to 2003 she was the director and a co-founder of the Hellenic Center of Fine and Applied Arts. From 2004 to 2010 she was working at The Athens School of Fine Arts as a free lancer at the Fresco studio. She holds a Master of Arts from Middlesex University. From 2009, Karoussos has been a member of Planetary Collegium (CAiiA) as a Ph.D. Candidate under the supervision of Prof. Roy Ascott. She has participated in many international conferences (ISEA, Aber, Dimea, Consciousness Reframed Series). Apart from her work as a Byzantine mural painter at Orthodox churches, her work has been exhibited in various international media exhibitions (Athens, Japan, Madrid, New York, Frankfurt, Montenegro, Cuba, etc.) › Homeopathy: All inclusive, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 9.1, 65-82. › Ekfrasis of the selves, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 207-222. Lisa Kay Temple University, Assistant Lisa Kay is an artist/researcher, art educator and art therapist. She is an Assistant Professor at Temple University, Tyler School of Art and Fulbright Scholar to Hungary, 2011–2012. Her research is situated at the intersection of art education and art therapy. Professor, Art and Art Education, Tyler School of Art, B090J, Temple University, 2001 N. 13th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122, United States of America › Objects of amplified context: an interview with artist-teacher Pepón Osorio, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 21-32. Keywords art education, art therapy Max B. Kazemzadeh Gallaudet University, Art Department, Washburn Arts Building, Washington, DC 20002, United States of America Keywords computer vision, intent, machine learning, neural networks, gesture prediction Max Kazemzadeh is an electronic and emergent media artist and tenuretrack and an Assistant Professorship of Art and Media Technology at Gallaudet University <http://art.gallaudet.edu/>, the only all deaf university in the United States. Kazemzadeh is also a Ph.D. candidate within the Planetary Collegium. His work over the last ten years focuses on how constructed, semi-conscious interfaces influence human interaction, and he is presently investigating gesture prediction as a possible means to more directly magnify human intent within interactive experiences. Kazemzadeh has served on panels, curated exhibitions, organized conferences, given workshops, received grants, written articles, given performances, and exhibited internationally. › Psychic systems and metaphysical machines: experiencing behavioural prediction with neural networks, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 189-198. Michael Keane Queensland University of Technology, Creative Industries Precinct, The Works Z1-515, Musk Avenue, Kelvin Grove 4059, Australia Keywords cultural policy, creative cluster, animation, creative industries Associate Professor Michael Keane is a Principal Research Fellow at the ARC Centre for Creative Industries and Innovation (CCI) at the Queensland University of Technology in Australia. He is coordinator of Asian Creative Transformations, a research lab in the CCI. Dr Michael Keane’s research interests include creative industries internationalization and innovation in China; audio-visual industry policy and development in China, South Korea, and Taiwan; and television formats and independent media production in Asia. Author of Created in China: the Great New Leap Forward (2007), his latest book is China's New Creative Clusters (Routledge 2011). He is author or coeditor of 10 books and over 80 refereed articles. › Understanding the creative economy: A tale of two cities' clusters, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 211-226. Cath Keay Newcastle University, Kings Walk, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom Keywords visual art, photography Kath Ceay is a doctoral candidate at Newcastle University. Her current work involves three large terracotta word sculptures that have been placed in the sea underneath the pier at Blyth, to be colonised by barnacles, mussels and sea squirts. After this colonisation has taken place, and the original sculptures almost obliterated by sea life, they will be transferred, still living, to tanks for exhibition. › Colonie Estive, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 259-266. Alexander Kelly Third Angel, 3 Brookfield Yard, Sheffield, S7 1DY, United Kingdom Keywords Third Angel, devising, The Lad Lit Project, autobiography, biography Alexander Kelly is Co-Artistic Director of Sheffield-based performance company Third Angel, with which he devises, directs, writes, designs and performs. The company makes a range of work incorporating live performance, installation, film, video and photography that tours throughout the United Kingdom, mainland Europe and beyond. Thematically and formally the company's work explores and responds to the times and places in which we live, combining documentary research, fiction and autobiography. As part of the collaboration ‘Christopher Hall and Alexander Kelly’, Alex makes film, video and performance pieces of a somewhat more blokey nature than he does with Third Angel. Alex is an experienced educator, and has taught at numerous universities across the United Kingdom. He has also taught for Third Angel at the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon. He is Associate Senior Lecturer in Performance Practice at Leeds Metropolitan University. › GHOSTWRITING FOR PERFORMANCE: Third Angel's The Lad Lit Project, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 69-90. Christian Kerrigan Chelsea College of Art, University of the Arts, Interior & Spatial Design, London, United Kingdom Keywords biology, protocells, timebased architecture, nanotechnology, mythology The 200 Year Continuum is the title given to Christian Kerrigan’s progressive anthology of works, questioning and responding to society’s relationship with, and understanding of, emerging technologies and ecology. In his art he uses digital technology to make objects, installations, and drawings which draw out an array of ideas about nature, technology and mortality. Kerrigan is currently Associate Lecturer in Drawing for Spatial Design at Chelsea College of Art, and is the V&A’s first digital Artist in Residence. His work has been published alongside artists such as Joseph Beuys, Jeanne Claude & Christo and Olafur Eliasson in 'Art in Action, Nature, Creativity and Our Collective Future' by Natural World Museum & UNEP. › The 200-Year Continuum, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 121-132. Joachim Kettel University of Education Karlsruhe, Visual Arts and Didactics, Bismarckstr. 10, 76133 Karlsruhe, Germany Keywords secondary education, identity, case study, Uganda, modern art Dr. Joachim Kettel is an artist, art educator, and Professor of Visual Arts and Didactics at the University of Education, Karlsruhe. He has been a member of Deutscher Künstlerbund, Berlin since 1989. He was co-founder of the European Council of Artists, based in Copenhagen, Denmark. Since 1994 he has been involved in the development and organization of international art projects and congresses. His research interests are aesthetics and arts, art and artistic education, systems theory and constructivism. Recent publications include SelbstFREMDheit. Elemente einer anderen kunstpädagogik and Künstlerische bildung nach Pisa - Neue wege zwischen kunst und bildung. › Titanstraße: a bridge between cultures: a text photo story, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 115-126. › Francis Musango: his contribution to art and art education in Uganda, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 127-142. Hasan-Uddin Khan Roger Williams University Keywords Hasan-Uddin Khan is an architect and writer who has worked and lived all over the globe. He was Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Mimar: Architecture in Development and coordinated His Highness the Aga Khan's worldwide architectural activities between 1984 and 1994. He has been Visiting Professor at MIT and Berkeley; and joined Roger Williams University in 1999 as Distinguished Professor of Architecture and Historic Preservation. He lectures widely, and is editor/author of nine books and over sixty published articles. › Editorial: Towards a New Paradigm for the Architecture and Arts of Islam, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 5-22. Mike King London Metropolitan University, 166220 Holloway Roa, London, N7 8DB, United States of America Mike King is Reader in Computer Art and Animation at London Metropolitan University. He is a director of the Centre for Postsecular Studies which pursues interdisciplinary research in culture and spirit, a director of the Scientific and Medical network (science and spirituality), and is on the steering group for the University for Spirit Forum. Keywords post-secular, shamanism, transcendence, Anish Kapoor, Bill Viola › Art and the postsecular, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.1, 3-18. Anthony D. King Binghamton University (retired) Keywords Anthony D. King, Emeritus Professor of Art History and Sociology at Binghamton University, State University of New York, now lives in the United Kingdom. He has published on the impact of colonialism and globalization on building and urban form, including Spaces of Global Cultures: Architecture, Urbanism, Identity (2004) and, most recently, ‘Imperialism and World Cities’ in Ben Derudder, Michael Hoylake, Peter Taylor and Frank Wilcox (eds.), International Handbook of Globalization and World Cities (London: Edward Elgar, 2011). With Thomas A. Markus he is co-editor of the Routledge Architext series on architecture and social/cultural theory. › Book Reviews, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 151-168. Clare Kitson Keywords television, animation, broadcasting Clare Kitson scheduled animation programmes at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in the early 1970s and was a programmer at the National Film Theatre in the 1980s. From 1989 to 1999 she commissioned Channel 4’s animation. Her highly-praised book Yuri Norstein and Tale of Tales: An animator’s journey (John Libbey Publishing) appeared in 2005. Clare Kitson’s latest book, British animation: The Channel 4 factor is soon to be published by Parliament Hill Publishing. › British animation and Channel 4: The role of broadcasting in nurturing new talent and creativity in the animation industry, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 207-220. Jack Klaff Intelligence Squared, Intelligence Squared, 6th Floor, Newcombe House, 45 Notting Hill Gate, London, W11 3LQ, United Kingdom Jack Klaff is an author, freelance writer, actor, director and academic. His original training was in Law and Economics. Dismayed by the way economics was taught, he wrote an explanatory book for students, which is still circulating. He then trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. Klaff has also received two Sony Silver certificates for radio acting, a Tinniswood nomination for radio scripts, two Fringe Firsts at the Edinburgh Festival for his one-man shows, the Jack Hargreaves Keywords freelance writer, actor, director, author Award from the BBC Script Unit for innovative use of the medium of television, and a Herald Archangel in 2010. He has been a visiting speaker, tutor, workshop leader or ‘professor’ at a wide range of institutions within the United Kingdom and around the world; such engagements have included four Visiting Professorships at Princeton University. › Arts and human rights: From my notebooks, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 93-109. Robert C. Kloosterman University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research, Nieuwe Prinsengracht 130, Amsterdam, 101 8VZ, Netherlands Keywords markets, commodification, innovation, creativity, cultural industries Robert Kloosterman is Professor in Economic Geography at the University of Amsterdam and Programme Leader of the research group Geographies of Globalisation at the Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research. His research interests lie in socio-economic trajectories of cities, local embeddedness and global networks of production and consumption, and the impact of institutional differences on economic activities. › Keeping the market at bay: exploring the loci of innovation in the cultural industries, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 61-77. Christopher Klopper Griffith University, School of Education and Professional Studies, Gold Coast Campus, Queensland, 4222, Australia Christopher Klopper is a senior lecturer in the School of Education and Professional Studies at Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia. Christopher publishes in the field of pre-service creative arts education, more specifically relating to music education; intentional provision of music in early childhood settings; and trans-national intercultural musical communication. Keywords collective knowledge sharing of professional practice, practitioner enquiry, classroom-based research, arts education › Illuminating the gap: An overview of classroom-based arts education research in Australia, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 293-308. Aki Koike Dentsu Inc. 1-8-1, Higashi-shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105-7001, Japan Aki Koike is currently working as an account executive for a fullservice advertising agency, Dentsu Inc. She has studied in Tokyo and Berlin, and graduated with an MA in Cultural and Creative Industries from King’s College London. Keywords animation, Japan, creative industry › Working conditions of animators: The real face of the Japanese animation industry, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 261-271. Katarzyna Kosmala University of the West of Scotland, University of the West of Scotland, Faculty of Business and Creative Industries, Paisley PA1 2BE Paisley Keywords Dr Katarzyna Kosmala is Reader in Visual Culture at the Centre for Contemporary European Studies, University of the West of Scotland and Visiting Research Fellow at GEXcel, Institute of Thematic Gender Studies, Linköping University and örebro University, Sweden. She is also a curator and freelance art writer. She writes in English on aspects of construction and representation of gender and identity politics in contemporary (visual) culture, predominantly in the context of Central Eastern Europe. She has published in Third Text, N.Paradoxa, Culture and Organization, the International Journal of the Arts in Society, Opcje, Obieg, Sekcja Magazyn Artystyczny and Arts Margins. She is currently involved in the AHRC-funded project 'Translating East European & Russian cultures: Exchange and communication within a multidisciplinary and multicultural area studies context' (in collaboration with the University of Glasgow). She is also working on book entitled Imagining Men, Imagining Masculinities (Routledge). › Temporality and alteration of social boundaries in the making of an art installation, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 53-69. Mitchell Kossak Lesley University, 29 Everett Street, Cambridge, MA, 2138, United States of America Keywords mental health, therapeutic massage, expressive arts therapies Mitchell Kossak is Assistant Professor and Division Director, Division of Expressive Therapies at Lesley University, United States. He is also the co-chair of The Institute For Body, Mind and Spirituality. He has presented his work and research at conferences nationally and internationally. He is a licensed mental health counselor, and nationally certified in therapeutic massage and bodywork. His clinical work combines expressive arts therapies with body-centered approaches with a variety of populations. His doctoral studies was in Interdisciplinary Studies with a concentration in Psychology and a specialization in Transpersonal Psychology and Expressive Arts Therapies. His current research focuses on art based improvisational structures that can lead toward and enhance therapeutic attunement. › Reviews, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 223-231. › Editorial, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 133-137. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 187-198. › EDITORIAL, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 107-111. Adam Kossoff Keywords video, moving image, space, installation art, technics Adam Kossoff is an artist, film-maker and writer. He teaches at the School of Art and Design, University of Wolverhampton. His work, both gallery-based and single screen, addresses the relationship of the moving image to differing spatial and technological contexts. His most recent film, a documentary essay, is Made in Wolverhampton (2011). › Technics and otherness: William Raban's About Now MMX, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 125-128. Ourania Kouvou National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Department of Early Childhood Education, 13a Navarinou Street, Athens, 106 80, Greece Keywords art education, visual arts, children's drawings, art as cognition Ourania Kouvou lectures in Art Education in the Education Department of Athens University and Art History at the American College, Greece. She has published papers on the history of art education in various journals with a particular emphasis on curriculum models and has co-authored art textbooks for the Greek Lyceum and High School published by the Ministry of Education. She was awarded a research fellowship in art education at Princeton University (1999) and has presented papers at international art education conferences in New York, London, Dublin and Rethimnon (Crete). › Drawing or writing the circle: an investigation into the cognitive potential of art, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.3, 183-193. Anja Kraus Pädagogische Hochschule Ludwigsburg, Fakultät für Erziehungs- und Gesellschaftswissenschaften, Reuteallee 46, Ludwigsburg, 71634, Germany Anja Kraus, MA, Dr. Phil., is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Educational Science, Padagogosche Hochscule Ludwigsburg. Her research interests include: theories of bodily learning and corporality in schools, integration of artistic concepts into pedagogy and research into classroom teaching. › (Doing) art as an interdisciplinary didactic principle, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 275-284. Keywords artworks, learning environments, displacement, situated learning, competencies Gunter Kreutz Oldenburg University, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, Gunter Kreutz is Professor of Systematic Musicology, Oldenburg University, Oldenburg, Germany. Gunter Kreutz studied (historical) musicology, media studies and literature at the University of Marburg, and (systematic) musicology and Communication Scientific basis of Ammerländer Heerstraße 114-118, Oldenburg, D-26129, Germany speech and music at the Technical University of Berlin. After a year abroad studying at the San Francisco State University, United States, he earned Master of Arts degree from the Technical University of Berlin. In 2004 he was appointed University Lecturer in Music Education at the Goethe University in Frankfurt, with a focus on systematic musicology. From April 2006 to April 2008 Kreutz worked as a Research Fellow at the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester, United Kingdom. In February 2008 he was offered a professorship of Systematic Musicology at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. His research interests lie in music (neuro) cognitive and emotional (social) psychology of music, performance, music and health research. Keywords choral singing, psychological, well-being, WHOQOL-BREF, cross-national survey › Choral singing and psychological wellbeing: Quantitative and qualitative findings from English choirs in a cross-national survey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 19-34. Michael Kroelinger University of Nevada Las Vegas, School of Architecture, Paul B. Sogg Architecture Building, 4505 Maryland Parkway; Box 454018, Las Vegas, NV, 89154-4018, United States of America Keywords Doctoral education, doctoral programme structure, doctoral programme planning Michael D. Kroelinger, Ph.D., AIA, FIIDA, LC is a Professor and is the Director of the School of Architecture at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. He received an interdisciplinary Ph.D. from the University of Tennessee; the M.Arch. in desert architecture from the University of Arizona; the MSc from the University of Tennessee; and the BSc from the University of Alabama. He has taught at the University of North Carolina, Colorado State University, the University of Tennessee, and Arizona State University prior to joining ULV in January 2003. In 2003, Kroelinger became a Professor Emeritus at Arizona State University prior to joining ULV in January 2003. › Issues for initiating interdisciplinary doctoral programmes, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.1, 183-207. Ted Krueger Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, School of Architecture, Green Building 106, 110th, Troy, New York, NY 10180, United States of America Keywords embodiment, perception, prosthetics, senses, sensory substitution, extreme environments, architecture Ted Krueger is the Associate Dean and Associate Professor of Architecture at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute where he is the Director of the Ph.D. programme in the Architectural Sciences. Krueger is currently undertaking a Ph.D. in Architecture from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. His research interests concern human–environment interaction, the architecture of extreme environments and perceptual prosthetics. He has exhibited, published and lectured on an international basis for twenty years. › Nonsense, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.3, 183-192. Sheng Kuan Chung University of Houston, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, 256 Farish Hall, Houston, Texas, TX 77204-0947, United States of America Keywords media violence, art education, visual culture Sheng Kuan Chung is Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director of Art Education at the University of Houston, Texas. He holds a B.Ed. from National Hsinchu Teachers College in Taiwan, an MA from New York University, and a doctorate from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Sheng has authored over 30 papers published in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Taiwan. His research interests include: social reconstructionist art education, multiculturalism, critical visual/media literacy, social issues, and Asian aesthetics. He has served as an art judge for the National Scholastic Art Competition and a grant reviewer for the Texas Commission on the Arts. His artworks have been shown in over twenty juried exhibitions. He is currently on the editorial board for Art Education, the journal of the National Art Education Association in the United States. › An exploration of media violence in a junior-high school art classroom, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 57-68. Iryna Kuksa Staffordshire University, Centre for Media Arts and Technologies, Apt 98, Latitude, 155 Bromsgrove Street, Birmingham, B5 6AB, United Kingdom Keywords practice-based research, art, design, technology, new media, Second Life, cultural policy, education Iryna Kuska is a scholar interested in practice-based research. In her work she focuses on the dialogue between art, design, education and new media technologies. She explores the role of multimedia within the field of theatre studies and cultural heritage research, investigating how novel methodologies, including 3D reconstruction of historical artefacts and events, can be applied to pedagogical and creative practices. She is especially interested in examining various IT applications that transformed the way we experience, learn and cocreate our culture. In order to illustrate how computer-generated environments and virtual worlds like Second Life could change the way we perceive and deliver cultural values, she researches a suite of rapidly-developing communication and computer-visualization techniques, which enable reciprocal exchange between viewers and artefacts. Her research is inherently interdisciplinary, linking the fields of design, theatre studies, multimedia, cultural policy and education. › Virtual reality in theatre education and design practice – new developments and applications, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 73-89. Ajay Kumar Goldsmiths College - University of Ajay Kumar is a lecturer at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He is also an award-winning and critically acclaimed practitioner. His field of research concerns an interrelation between art and ontology. Specifically he is investigating themes apropos the nature of being London, Lewisham Way New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom sought, based on the concept of dependent origination,within the dynamic interrelation of body-space-nature-art-science-technology. Keywords cultural plurality, interdisciplinarity, interactivity, self and peer analysis › Zen and the art of peer and selfassessment in interdisciplinary, multimedia, site-specific arts practice: a transcultural approach, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.3, 131-142. Gregorij Kurillo University of California, Berkeley, 736 Sutardja Dai Hall #1758, Berkeley, CA 94720-1758, United States of America Keywords metaverse, virtual collaborative systems, cyberarchaeology Gregorij Kurillo received a BSc and Ph.D. degrees from the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, in 2001 and 2006 respectively. He was a research assistant at the Laboratory of Robotics and Biomedical Engineering at the same institution from 2002 to 2006 researching the application of robotic grasping principles to human grasping analysis in virtual environments. He has also participated in two European Union funded projects (iMatch and Alladin), which focused on a virtual reality simulation for the training of wheelchair users and the development of a force- measuring platform for assessment of post-stroke patients. Dr. Kurillo was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Berkeley from 2006–2009. During his postdoctoral appointment he has worked on improving the existing multi-camera system for tele-immersion. › Cyber-archaeology and metaverse collaborative systems, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 7-19. Marius Kwint University of Portsmouth, School of Art, Design, and Media, Eldon Building, Winston Churchill Avenue, Portsmouth, PO1 2DJ, United Kingdom Keywords media, culture studies, pop culture, British studies, design, art, contemporary art Marius Kwint has been a Departmental Lecturer since 1999. Previously he taught media and cultural studies at Southampton Institute, before becoming Senior Research Fellow in History of Design at the Victoria and Albert Museum and Royal College of Art. His background interests are in British popular culture, material culture and design from the eighteenth century to the present day. He edited the book Material Memories: Design and Evocation (Oxford 1999); other publications include articles on his doctoral topic of eighteenth-century English circuses and on the history of the souvenir, and catalogue essays for several exhibitions of contemporary art. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 71-. George Kyeyune Makerere University, School of Art, PO Box 7062, Kampala, Uganda Keywords Uganda, modern art, art education, Musango George Kyeyune is a graduate artist with degrees from the Margaret Trowell School of Fine Arts (now the Margaret Trowell School of Industrial and Fine Arts), Makerere University, Uganda and the Maharaja Sayajiraho University of Baroda, India. In 1990 he took up a teaching position in Sculpture at Makarere Art School where he is now Associate Professor of Sculpture. In 1999 he received a Commonwealth scholarship for doctoral study in the history of African art at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. His studies focus specifically on changes and developments in Uganda’s visual art in the twentieth century. He is a member of the Ngoma International Artists Workshop. › Francis Musango: his contribution to art and art education in Uganda, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 127-142. Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen is a craft-based designer and a doctoral student in the Department of Home Economics and Craft Science. She is writing her Ph.D. concerning early phases of the design process. Her research includes the nature of design activity, the nature of ideation, internal and external representations, the nature of mental images and the role of social interaction. University of Helsinki, Center for Research on Activity, Development and Learning, PO Box 9, Siltavuorenpenger 1 A, Helsinki, FI00014, Finland Keywords craft, craft-based design, art, design activity, social interaction › Sources of inspiration and mental image in textile design process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 105-119. Vasiliki Labitsi University of the Aegean, Preschool Education, Propondithos 16, Oropos Attikis, 19015, Greece Keywords children's drawing, preschool and primary education, art education, visual narrative, children's books, illustration, Greece Vasiliki Labitsi is an educational consultant for the Greek Ministry of Education as well as being a children's book illustrator and teaching art education in the Education Department at Athens University. She has undergraduate degrees in Primary Education and Sociology, Master's degrees in Art Education and Children's Literature and has also studied illustration. She has recently completed a Ph.D. in Art Education at Roehampton University. She has illustrated children's books for several Greek publishing houses and her illustrations have been exhibited in Greece and Europe. She has also worked as assistant editor of the International Journal of Education Through Art. › ‘Climbing to reach the sunset’: an inquiry into the representation of narrative structures in Greek children's drawings, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.3, 185-193. Henna Lahti University of Helsinki, Department of Philosophy, P.O. Box 9, Siltavuorenpenger 20 D), Helsinki, 14, Finland Keywords design education, design experiment, collaborative designing, textile design project, virtual design studio Henna Lahti is a doctoral student in the Graduate School of Multidisciplinary Research on Learning Environments, based in Department of Home Economics and Craft Science at the University of Helsinki in Finland. She is finishing her Ph.D. concerning computersupported collaborative design. › Three design experiments for computer-supported collaborative design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.2, 101-120. Elaine Lally University of Western Sydney, Media Studies, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia Keywords seniors, well-being, singing, evidence, creativity Dr. Elaine Lally is Associate Professor, Creative Digital Studies, at the University of Technology, Sydney. Her research focuses on cultural aspects of information technology and on arts and cultural policy, especially in local government. Dr. Lally is the author of At Home with Computers (Berg 2002), and her recent research includes Australian Research Council funded projects, contract research and consultancies for Arts NSW and the Australia Council for the Arts. › ‘The power to heal us with a smile and a song’: Senior Well-being, Musicbased Participatory Arts and the Value of Qualitative Evidence, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.1, 25-44. Nancy Lampert Virginia Commonwealth University, Department of Art Education, PO Box 843084, Richmond, VA, 23284, United States of America Dr. Nancy Lampert is an assistant professor in the Department of Art Education, in the School of the Arts at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia. Her research on critical thinking has been published in numerous journals, and she has also presented her research regionally, nationally and internationally. Keywords art education, critical thinking › A study of an after-school art programme and critical thinking, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 55-67. Anne Lanceley University College London, UCL Institute for Women’s Health, Medical School Building, 74 Huntley Street, London, WC1E 6AU, United Anne Lanceley is a senior lecturer and Nurse Specialist at UCL Institute for Women’s Health. She combines a clinical role supporting women with gynaecological cancer with running a research programme in symptom management, recovery after treatment and risk reduction for survivors. Kingdom › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords gynaecology, art therapy, nursing, curating Bastian Lange Leibniz-Institute for Regional Geography, Schongauerstrasse 9, Leipzig, D-04329, Germany Keywords creative industries, knowledge industries, milieu- and scene research, entrepreneurship, theories of spaces, governance Since 2006 Bastian Lange (Dr. Phil.), Dipl.-Geograph has been PostDoc Researcher and Project manager at the Leibniz-Institute for Regional Geography in Leipzig. Current Projects include EU-Projecte ACRE 2006-2010 (Accommodating Creative Knowledge – Competitiveness of European Metropolitan Regions within the Enlarged Union) as well as Project manager for Conducting the 1. Report on Creative Industries for the State of Saxony. He is Research Associate at the Georg-Simmel-Center for Metropolitan Research at the Humboldt University Berlin and Head of the research group 'Governance of Creative Industries'. His fields of research cover creative and knowledge industries, milieu- and scene research, entrepreneurship and theories of spaces and governance. › Accessing markets in creative industries – professionalization and socialspatial strategies of culturepreneurs in Berlin, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 115-135. Anna Laskari National Technical University of Athens, School of Architecture, Averof 15, Athens, 104 33, Greece Keywords flock behaviour, participatory environment, database cinema, emergence, non-linear narrative Anna Laskari, architect, is a graduate (2004) of the School of Architecture of the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA). Laskari also holds a postgraduate degree (Distinction 2006) from the NTUA postgraduate programme ‘Architecture Space Design’ and an M.Sc. (Distinction 2007) in ‘Adaptive Architecture and Computation’ from the Bartlett School of Graduate Studies, University College London. She has lectured as a Teaching Assistant at NTUA and has worked as a Design Systems Analyst for Foster and Partners. Currently she works with paan architects, based in Athens. › Live puzzle: kaleidoscopic narratives through spatio-temporal montage, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 199-206. Iro Laskari Hellenic Open University, Iro Laskari is an Artist and Graphic designer. Since 2006, she has been teaching at the School of Applied Arts of the Greek Open University. She is a graduate of the Department of Graphic Design of the Department of Graphic Design of the Technological Educational Institute, Lemesou 32, Papagou, 156 69, Greece Technological Educational Institute (T.E.I.) of Athens (2000). Laskari was awarded a Maîtrise (2001) and a Diplôme d’Etudes Approfondies (DEA) (2002) from Université Paris 8, as well as the Post-Diplôme of Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs, in Paris (2002), on the subject of Interactive Research. She has a Ph.D. in ‘Generative Audiovisual Narratives’ from the Department of Communication and Media Studies of the University of Athens (2008). Keywords flock behaviour, participatory environment, database cinema, emergence, non-linear narrative › Live puzzle: kaleidoscopic narratives through spatio-temporal montage, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 199-206. Ethan W. Lasser › BOOK REVIEWS, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 121-130. Keywords Barbara Lasserre University of Technology, Sydney, ELSSA Centre, P.O. Box 123 Broadway, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia Keywords design education, design, analogy, cognitive metaphor, discourse Barbara Lasserre is an applied linguist who is a lecturer in academic language and learning at the University of Technology Sydney. Over the past thirteen years she has worked extensively with Design and Architecture students and she has a longstanding research interest in the use of metaphor in these disciplines, as vehicles for conveying not only attitude and physical characteristics, but also the beliefs and values held by the educators. › Theory and practice: reconciling design-as analogies with real talk in design education, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 17-29. Riikka Latva-Somppi Aalto University School of Art and Design, Glass studio, Hämeentie 135 C, PO Box 31000, Helsinki, FIN00076, Finland Keywords visual art, glass, history Riikka Latva-Somppi is a visual and glass artist (MA). She works at the intersection of fine art and craft and has exhibited widely nationally and internationally. Her public work Satakieli/Nightingale was awarded The Certificate of Environmental Art 2009 by The Foundation of Environmental Art (Finland). She has worked as a part-time lecturer as well as in various positions of trust and evaluation at Aalto University, School of Art and Design, Helsinki, for the past fifteen years. She is the chairwoman of Artists-O and a board member of The Society for New Craft (Finland). www.latvasomppi.com › Crafting narratives: Using historical context as a refl ective tool, Craft Research, 2.1, 37-60. K. W. Lau The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Institute of Textiles & Clothing, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Dr. Kung Wong Lau (Robert) is a visiting assistant professor at the Institute of Textiles and Clothing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. He is interested in creativity training, design thinking and environmental stimulation in creativity. He pays particular attention on the relationships between shard virtual reality and creativity training for higher design education. Keywords creativity, design education, creative-thinking techniques, creative pedagogy › Rethinking the creativity training in design education: a study of creativethinking tools for facilitating creativity development of design students, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 71-84. Adam Lauder York University, Research in eLibrarianship, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, MJ3-1P3, Canada Keywords modern art, new media, curating, Canada Adam Lauder is W.P. Scott Chair for Research in e-Librarianship at York University in Toronto, where he is developing an electronic catalogue raisonné of the work of Iain Baxter. Lauder is also the author of a chapter on the N.E. Thing Co. in Byproduct: On the Excess of Embedded Art Practices as well as an article on Iain Baxter in the 2010 volume of the Canadian Journalof Art History. He is curator of an exhibition devoted to Canadian modernist and advertising executive Bertram Brooker (1888–1955), It’s Alive! Bertram Brooker and Vitalism as well as the author of a chapter on Brooker in The Logic of Nature, The Romance of Space. His interview with Montreal curator Vincent Bonin appears in the December 2010 issue of magazine. Lauder is also a regular contributor to theHunter and Cook › Circumvention anxieties: Contemporary economies of dis/belief, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.3, 283-297. Rosanna Law AECOM Keywords Rosanna Law is a Director/Senior Associate of urban design at AECOM Design + Planning, London. An architect-urbanist by training, Rosanna Law sees the crafting of places and spatial planning as an integral part of social policies. Her design leadership for the Msheireb Heart of Doha Masterplan has set a new benchmark for urban planning in the region. Global urban issues such as climate change, cultural diversity and rapid urbanization are consciously addressed through her masterplanning strategies in the United Kingdom, Russia and the Middle East. › Msheireb Heart of Doha: An Alternative Approach to Urbanism in the Gulf Region, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 131-147. Samantha Lawrie Auburn University, Department of Art, 108 Biggin Hall, Alabama, AL 36849, United States of America Keywords education, historygraphic design, embodiment, meaning, language Samantha Lawrie is Assistant Professor of Graphic Design in the Department of Art at Auburn University where she teaches courses in typography, photography, publication design and large-format design for undergraduate graphic design majors. She is an award-winning photographer, installation artist and designer. Her work has been featured in numerous regional, national, and international exhibitions, including the Texas National and the Center Awards at the Center for Photographic Arts. › We have a lot to talk about: dialogue journals in graphic design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 81-88. › Graphic design: can it be something more? Report on research in progress, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 201-207. Mark Leahy University College Falmouth, Performance, 28 Christina Park, Totnes, Devon, tq9 5ur, United Kingdom Keywords reading, artist's book, glossary, performance, book arts Mark Leahy is a writer, artist and curator. He operates between textual practice, performance and visual arts. Recent publications include critical essays on a bookwork by performance company These Horses, an essay on the audience as readers of digital text installations, and an essay on the relation to the visual arts in the work of poet John James. He has written texts to accompany installed and performance works by Katy Connor, Teresa Grimaldi, and his curated projects include the exhibition Public Pages for the conference Poetry and Public Language at University of Plymouth (2007). His poetry sequence 'Swatches' was published by Acts of Language (December 2009), and individual text pieces have appeared in magazines and journals. He has presented live works in Live Art Falmouth (June 2008) and Performance Market (Plymouth, January 2010). › Glossing Speakers, or bookmaking for amateurs, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 55-67. Lucia Leão Sao Paulo Catholic University (PUCSP), Brazil, Communication and Semiotics, R. Dr José Rodrigues Alves Sobrinho 150 ap 21 Monet, Sao Paulo, 05466-040, Brazil Keywords Lucia Leao is Professor of Communication and Semiotics at the Sao Paulo Catholic University (PUCSP), Brazil, where she carries out research in Creative Processes, Aesthetics, Media Arts, Film Studies, Cultural and Media Studies, Performing Arts and Visual Arts. She has a Ph.D. in Communication and Semiotics: Information Technology and a Ph.D. in Arts. Leão is author, among others, of The labyrinth of hypermedia: architecture and navigation on cyberspace (1999), The labyrinth aesthetics (2002), Interlab: labyrinths of contemporary thought (2002) Derivas: cartografias do ciberespaço (2004) and O chip e o caleidoscópio: reflexões sobre as novas mídias (2005). David Leaver Business School, Division of Marketing and Retail, Aytoun Street, Manchester, M1 3GH, United Kingdom Keywords postmodernism, consumer behaviour, tribal marketing, heritage marketing, music destination marketing David Leaver is a Senior Lecturer in Marketing and Retailing at the Manchester Metropolitan University Business School, where he teaches Brand Management. His professional background has involved several years of working in both the private and public sectors in North America, Africa andthe Middle East. He has published on a variety of topics in a range of journals, as well as contributing to edited books. › Together Through Life an exploration of popular music heritage and the quest for re-enchantment, Creative Industries Journal, 3.2, 107-124. Mark Leckey United Kingdom Keywords installation, AngloAmerican subculture, pop culture Mark Leckey is an artist who works in a wide range of media and across an array of platforms. He has made a number of seminal works that traverse the rich terrain of Anglo-American subculture using mashups of found film and video footage, sound systems, sculpture, Felix the Cat and comic among other curios. He has also been a member of a number of bands including donAtteller and Jack too Jack. He won the Turner Prize in 2008 having been nominated for his lecture/sculpture/film/performance Industrial Light and Magic (2008). Leckey was Professor of Film at the Städelschule, Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany until recently. › Tell tail tales: Mark Leckey and Edward Hollis in conversation, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 279-291. Jungwon Lee Florida State University Keywords museum experience, museum learning, visitor experience, museum environment, Japanese collection Dr. Jungwon Lee holds an MA in Art History and an MA in History and was awarded Ph.D. degree in Art Education at the Florida State University. She has conducted research on various aspects of art, art museum education including constructivism at art museums and engagement of community members through interactive museum exhibitions. › The museum experience in the environment of the Japanese collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 343-359. P. Y. Lee United Kingdom Keywords creativity, design education, creative-thinking techniques, creative pedagogy P. Y. Lee (Vincie) is currently pursuing her Ph.D. at the University of Edinburgh. She obtained her MSc and BA (Hons) from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. She is Lecturer in the Hong Kong Community College, Hong Kong Polytechnic University and she has been appointed as the Programme Leader of the Associate Degree (Advertising Design) programme. Vincie has gained substantial experience in programme management and she played an active role in curriculum planning and programme development for local and overseas universities. Vincie also possesses solid industrial experience in design and advertising. She has over ten years of working experience in major multinational 4As advertising agencies. She has obtained many local and regional awards based on her excellent performances in the advertising industry. Her research interests include creativity and thinking methods, advertising creative management and new media advertising effects. › Rethinking the creativity training in design education: a study of creativethinking tools for facilitating creativity development of design students, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 71-84. Nicolette Lee United Kingdom Keywords graphic design practice, design process, design activities, activity theory Nicolette Lee is the Academic Coordinator (Experiential Learning) at Swinburne University of Technology, and a Lecturer at the Faculty of Design. A major part of this role is management of the ‘Final Year Experience Project’, and working with the faculties to implement major project units for all undergraduate students. This position is a secondment from her academic position within the Faculty of Design. Her background is in design management, and research interests include practice-based design education, project-based practice and learning spaces. Over the past decade, she has taught and moderated extensively in the visual arts in Australia and the United Kingdom. Her research centres on project methods in higher education contexts. › Graphic designers' activities during the conceptual design phase of clientinitiated projects Report of research in progress, reflection on the research process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 85-92. Jason Lee University of Derby, Head of Film and Media Studies with Creative and Professional Writing, Kedleston Road, Derby, DE22 1GB, United Kingdom Keywords transferable skills, film, film industry, production manager, employability Dr. Jason Lee is Reader and Head of Film and Media with Professional and Creative Writing at the University of Derby. His research intersts include transdisciplinarity (social sciences, humanities, and creative arts), especially creative media, transgression, cultural theory and he is editor of the international journal and book series Transgressive Culture (Gylphi). He is currently working on a book on culture and addiction, with Cambria and a book on screenwriting with Continuum, New York, he Psychology of Screenwriting. › Anything to declare? Desire and employability in the film industry: film production coordinator Judy Britten talks to Jason Lee, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 291-296. Hye-Kyung Lee King’s College London, Culture, Media & Creative Industries (CMCI), School of Arts & Humanities, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS, United Kingdom Hye-Kyung joined King’s in September 2004 after obtaining a Ph.D. from the University of Warwick. She studied Chinese language and literature at Seoul National University, South Korea, and afterwards worked at the Korea Foundation’s international cultural exchange department where she organised various exhibitions, performances and festivals in Korea and overseas. Keywords animation, creative industry, anime, fandom › Cultural consumer and copyright: A case study of anime fansubbing, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 237-252. › Introduction: Animation industry at a crossroads, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 183-187. Pascal Lefevre Vital Decosterstraat 66 A bus 4, 3000, Leuven, Belgium Keywords print culture, artists’ books, picture books, novelty books, marked typography Pascal Lefèvre first studied social sciences and American studies at the university of Leuven (K. U.Leuven). While working as a researcher at the Belgian national broadcasting corporation (BRTN), he started publishing and organizing conferences. From 1996 till 1999 he was attached (part time) as a scientific advisor to the Belgian Centre of Comic Strip Art in Brussels. Since 1998 he has been lecturing on comics and visual media at various Flemish university colleges of art (in Antwerp, Brussels and Genk). In October 2003 he completed his Ph.D. in social sciences (Communications) at the university of Leuven. Since 2008 he has been an affiliated researcher at the University of Leuven. He has published widely in academic journals and books, for a list of his publications (in eight languages) see his webpage: http://sites.google.com/site/lefevrepascal/. Currently he is researching (early) visual narratives and cross media. › Intertwining verbal and visual elements in printed narratives for adults, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 35-52. Phil Legard Leeds Metropolitan University, UK, Innovation North: Faculty of Arts, Environment and Technology, Room 108, Priestley Hall, Headingley Campus, Beckett Park, Leeds, LS6 3QS, United Kingdom Phil Legard is a part-time lecturer at Leeds Metropolitan University’s Innovation North Faculty of Information and Technology and works across a broad spectrum of creative technologies: in particular with music and graphics that explore an imaginative response to natural environments. As a programmer and developer he has worked closely with Nigel Morgan on his series of active notation scores, as well as assisting the composer in establishing a comprehensive digital archive of his work. Keywords temporality, materiality, web-based artefacts, open source software, Active Notation › Music and textiles interact, Craft Research, 1.1, 39-61. José María Mesías Lema University of Coruña, Faculty of Education, Campus Elviña, A Coruña, 15071, Spain Keywords art, education, photography José María Mesías Lema is professor of Arts Education in the Faculty of Education at the University of Coruña, Spain and is a Ph.D. candidate in Visual Arts and Education (University of Granada). His research is focused on the educational photoactivism, as a methodology of art-based educational research, which explores the activist and transforming potential of contemporary narrative photography in the professional training and development of teachers. › Questions before words An Educational Space, a Stimulating Space, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 7-26. John A. Lent Temple University Philidelphia, School of Communication and Theatre, Philidelphia, Pennsylvania, John A. Lent has been teaching at the college/university level since 1960, including stints as the organizer of the first journalism courses at De La Salle College in Manila; founder and coordinator of Universiti Sains Malaysia communications program; Rogers Distinguished Chair at University of Western Ontario; visiting professor at Shanghai United States of America University, Communication University of China, Jilin College of the Arts Animation School, and Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. Prof. Lent pioneered in the study of mass communication and popular culture in Asia (since 1964) and Caribbean (since 1968), comic art and animation, and development communication. Keywords pioneers, comics, Europe, China › The winding, pot-holed road of comic art scholarship, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 7-33. Elisa Lessa Universidad de Minho, Portugal Keywords Bigheads, arts education, culture, interdisciplinary, Portuguese patrimony Elisa Lessa is Associate Professor of Music History, as well as Chair of the Music Department at Universidade do Minho. Prior academic offices held at Universidade do Minho include Curso de Estudos Superiores Especializados em Educação Musical (Chair, 1999–2000); Departamento Expressões Artísticas e Educação Física (Chair, 2000– 2004); Mestrado em Estudos da Criança – Especialização de Educação Musical (Chair, from 2003); and Centro de Investigação em Estudos da Criança – CESC-UM (Chair of Artistic Studies). She was appointed Head of the Associação Portuguesa de Educação Musical – APEM (2004–2007), and is a member of ADISPOR – Portuguese Ministry of Education (2005). Her current research, publication and research supervision interests are historical musicology, especially Portuguese religious music and music pedagogy. › Male & Female BIGHEADS: Different ways of looking, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 285-296. Ellen K. Levy Visiting Scholar NYU, United Kingdom Keywords inattention blindness, bottom-up, top-down, distractor, three-card Monte Ellen K. Levy, a New York-based artist and teacher, is past president of the College Art Association (2004–2006). Levy has exhibited her work widely, in the United States, Europe, and Israel in galleries, alternative spaces, and art museums, as well as museums of science and technology (e.g., the New York Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Sciences). In 1985 Levy received an art commission from NASA. She is recipient of an AICA award (1995–1996) and was a Distinguished Visiting Fellow of Arts and Science at Skidmore College in 1999, a position funded by the Luce Foundation. Her artwork was included in Petroliana at the 2nd Moscow Biennale (2007), Weather Report: Art & Climate Change at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (cur, L. Lippard), and Gregor Mendel: Planting the Seeds of Genetics at the Field Museum, Chicago (adv. M. Kemp). › Designing the art of attention, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 93-99. A. David Lewis Keywords narrative polyphony, narratology, J. Espen Aarseth, Alan Moore, Chris Ware A. David Lewis is a Boston educator earning degrees from Brandeis University, Georgetown University, and Boston University. In his academic capacity, he lectures nationally on comics studies, serves as an editorial board member for the International Journal of Comic Art, founded the Religion and Graphica Collection at Boston University, and co-edited Graven Images: Religion in Comic Books and Graphic Novels for Continuum International Publishing. Lewis also selfpublished the awardwinning Mortal Coils series, and The Lone and Level Sands and Some New Kind of Slaughter graphic novels, the latter both produced by Archaia. › The shape of comic book reading, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 71-81. Bex Lewis University of Winchester, Learning & Teaching Development Unit, MB116, Sparkford Road, Winchester, SO22 4NR, United Kingdom Keywords history, education, media studies, digital media, World War II, propoganda Bex Lewis gained her first degree in History and Education Studies at King Alfred’s College. She was awarded her Ph.D., entitled ‘The planning, design and reception of British Home Front propaganda posters of the Second World War’, in 2004. Bex Lewis has wide ranging interests and expertise, having taught in the subject areas of History, Media Studies, Design for Digital Media, and is the University of Winchester’s Blended Learning Fellow. Dr. Bex Lewis is the leading expert on Second World War propaganda posters. › The Ministry of FoodThe Imperial War Museum,12 February 2010–3 January 2011, The Poster, 1.2, 215-224. Lei-Lei Li College of Mass Communication, Center of Media and Social Change, Nanshan District, Guangdong Province, Shenzhen, China Keywords animation, China, creative industry, geography Lei-lei Li is a professor at College of Mass Communication and Center of Media and Social Change at Shenzhen University. She has published a variety of articles on cultural and creative industries in China. Most of these articles are written in Chinese, including some literature review articles, are mainly based on her Natural Science Foundation of China-funded project and Guangdong government-funded project on creative clusters and cultural economic geography studies. › Understanding Chinese animation industry: The nexus of media, geography and policy, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 189-205. Weitao Li Keywords Weitao Li is a designer, who has recently graduated from the Bartlett School of Architecture with merit in Master Architectural Design course. Before he came to London, Weitao is an architect with Undergraduate Degree of China Central Academy of Fine Arts and extensive practical work experience. He is now continuing enjoying his architecture journey in London, China and all over the world. › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. Emanuel Licha École nationale supérieure d’architecture de Paris La Villette and Goldsmiths College, University of London › Mirages: An optical machine in the desert, Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 33-40. Keywords Sarah Lightman University of Glasgow, School of the Arts, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, United Kingdom Keywords art practice, curating, comics, animation Sarah Lightman is an artist and curator currently researching a Ph.D. in ‘Autobiographical Comics and Graphic Novels’ at The University of Glasgow. She has written on autobiographical comics and visual diaries for Studies in Comics and The International Journal of Comic Art. She is cocurating ‘Graphic Details: Confessional Comics by Jewish Women’, which opens at The Cartoon Art Museum, San Francisco in October 2010. Sarah also chaired the conference Women in Comics II at Leeds Art Gallery, in November 2010. › Reviews-Diary Drawings by Bobby Baker, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 159-168. › Gabrielle Bell on Clogging and why comics make everything smooth and refined, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 369-378. Angélica Lima Cruz Minho University, Instituto de Estudos da Crianca. Department of Visual Arts, Av. Central 100, Braga, 4710-057, Portugal Keywords curriculum, gender, life story, Bigheads, art education Angélica Lima Cruz is a Lecturer in the Department of Visual Arts, Instituto de Estudos da Criança (Children’s Studies Institute), Minho University, Portugal. She obtained her Ph.D. from the University of Surrey, Roehampton (now Roehampton University). She has published articles in several national and international journals and has collaborated on research projects studying issues regarding gender and art. She has taught courses connected to Art Anthropology, Art and Education, Aesthetic Education in Daily Life, Artistic Patrimony and Cultural Identity, Research Methodology, as well as Art Workshops. › Visual Essay, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.3, 237-248. › Male & Female BIGHEADS: Different ways of looking, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 285-296. Yvonne Lincoln Roehampton University, School of Education, Roehampton University, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PU, United Kingdom Keywords education, student services Yvonne Lincoln is head of the guidance and advisory services for students at Roehampton University, line managing staff responsible for funding, mental health and well-being, Nursery provision, financial advice (Money Doctors) and the Student Welfare Officers, as part of her role as Deputy Director of Student Services. In the School of Education she is acting programme convenor for the Foundation Degree, Supporting Learning and Teaching, and for a portfolio of HE programmes covering various aspects of education in schools. She has 30 years experience of teaching and management in schools. She is presently writing her dissertation for her Ed.D. on the student experience in HE. › Learning support: Student perceptions and preferences, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 135-149. Tilmann Lindberg Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Softwaresystemtechnik GmbH, Design Thinking Research, Prof-DrHelmert-Str. 2–3, Potsdam, 14482, Germany Keywords design discourses, metadiscipline, creative collaboration, wicked problems, design cognition Tilmann Lindberg participates as a Ph.D. student in the HPI-Stanford Design Thinking Research Program and works as a research assistant to the Chair for Organization and Human Resource Management at the University of Potsdam. He received a degree in Business Administration (Dipl.-Kfm.) from the University of Potsdam (Germany) and a degree in Music (MA) from the University of Sussex (United Kingdom). He has been conducting an empirical research project on organizational creativity and design thinking in the IT industry. › Evolving discourses on design thinking: how design cognition inspires metadisciplinary creative collaboration, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 31-37. Peeter Linnap Tartu Art College › mages and fear: Repressed pictures as tools for analysing society, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.3, 211-229. Keywords image theory, photography, Estonia, social values, fear › BOOK REVIEWS, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 9197. Mara Martnez Lirola University of Alicante, Department of English Studies, Ap-99, E-03080 Alicante, Spain Keywords context, Systemic Functional Grammar (SFG), visual grammar, multimodal texts María Martínez Lirola is Professor of the Department of English at the University of Alicante, Spain. Her main areas of research are Systemic Functional Linguistics, Second Language Methodology and Critical Discourse Analysis. She has published more than 40 papers and seven books. Her more recent publication is Main Processes of Thematization and Postponement in English (Peter Lang, 2009). She has been a visiting scholar at the University of Anahuac Mayad (Mérida, Mexico, 2008), at the University of Kwazulu-Natal (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, 2006), and at Macquarie University (Sydney, Australia, 2005). She has presented papers in international congresses all over the world. › Positive aspects of women of different cultures: an analysis of two multimodal covers, The Poster, 1.1, 77-93. Shu-Ying Liu Hsinchu University of Education, 7F, 20, Sec.1, Nan-Chang Road, Taipei City, 100, Taiwan Keywords dance, education, kindergarten, professional development, art Shu-Ying Liu is an Associate Professor of early-childhood education and choreographer. She previously danced with Cloud Gate Dance Theatre, subsequently gaining her MFA at UCLA and Ph.D. at Roehampton University. She teaches internationally, has written and translated handbooks, and developed curricula, for early-childhood and elementary school Taiwanese teachers. › Visual Essay, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.3, 249-258. Yang Liu United States of America Keywords visualization, myths, cross-culturalism, interdisciplinarity, meander art Since 1994 Yang Liu has worked as a professor at universities in Dalian and Changchun in China, as well as a television anchor. She has also been involved for many years in fashion design, calligraphy, drawing, painting, and art research. Presently she is an independent artist working in Belmont, Massachusetts in the United States. She has had exhibitions of her paintings in the United States and China, and her work has been reported in the media. She has also presented her research and artworks at various conferences in Germany, Italy, Cuba, England, and the United States. › Cross-culturalism in painting: visualization via meanders, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.3, 205-214. Julia Lockheart Goldsmiths, University of London, Centre for English Language and Academic Writing/Design Department, Lewisham Way, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Keywords reflective practice, dyslexia, mature students, international students, learning styles Julia Lockheart is Senior Lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London, Director of the Writing-PAD project and Co-editor with Professor John Wood, of the Journal of Writing in Creative Practice. Julia has studied both Fine Art and TESOL to MA level and is also qualified to teach adults with SpLDs (Dyslexia). In September 2009 she began her Ph.D. research in the Design department at Goldsmiths, University of London, on developing tools for co-writing in design teams. She has presented and published both nationally and internationally. › Writing Purposefully in Art and Design (Writing PAD), Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 89-102. › Editorial – The ethical purpose of writing in creative practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 5-12. › Editorial, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 113-116. › Review, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 195-196. › Editorial, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 201-204. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 356-358. › How can we use writing as a tool for collaboration across disciplines at Ph.D. level?: Co-writing fictional versions of the truth about someone else, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 299-315. › Challenging the Curriculum: Exploring the Discipline Boundaries in Art, Design and Media, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 193-196. Yorgos Loizos Yorgos Loizos is a designer and artist. He received his MArch with Distinction from the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL in 2009, and previously studied at École Spéciale d'Architecture, and the Edinburgh Keywords art, design, photography, interactivity, art installations College of Art. His work has been shown in London, Paris, Edinburgh and Athens. He has taught as a teaching assistant for Sir Peter Cook at the École Spéciale d'Architecture and currently he is a visiting critic at Bartlett and Greenwich University. Based in London, he continues to explore contemporary architecture. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. › Olympia: Alchemical designs of spatial decadence, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 203-225. Yve Lomax Goldsmiths College, University of London, Art Department, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Keywords art, writing, education Yve Lomax is a writer and visual artist. She is author of Writing the Image: An Adventure with Art and Theory (2000); Sounding the Event: Escapades in Dialogue with Matters of Art, Nature and Time (2005); Passionate Being: Language, Singularity and Perseverance (forthcoming 2009). She is Professor of Art Writing in the Art Department, Goldsmiths College and Research Tutor for Photography and Fine Art at the Royal College of Art. › Besides/In a paradigmatic way, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 205-212. Anne Lord James Cook University, Visual Art Visual Media, School of Creative Arts, Douglas, Townsville, Q 4811, Australia Keywords visual arts, concept development, practice-based research, visual storytelling, new media, pedagogy Anne Lord works as a visual arts Lecturer in the School of Creative Arts and maintains practice as a visual artist. Her Ph.D. and subsequent work contribute to pedagogy and visual arts as research. Lord’s Ph.D. topic ‘art and ephemera’ involves art that does not have to last and has significant connections with environmental concerns and a capacity for individuals to respond to current issues through concepts and art. Current research and art practice is about links across environment and recent cyclonic impact on trees. The collected pieces from destroyed trees contribute to images as wood engravings. › Creative visual art storytelling and concept development, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 227-256. Katharine Low Central School of Speech and Drama, Katharine Low is a practice-based Ph.D. student in the Drama department at the University of Manchester, supervised by James Thompson and Jenny Hughes. Through her research project, ‘our place, University of London, Eton Avenue, London, NW3 3HY, United Kingdom Keywords theatre and performance, applied theatre, sexual health, South Africa, HIV/AIDS our stage’ (OPOS), she is exploring the role of applied theatre in sexual and reproductive health communication in the Nyanga township in South Africa, focusing in particular on concepts of spatiality, risktaking and resistance. › Creating a space for the individual: Different theatre and performance-based approaches to sexual health communication in South Africa, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 111-126. Virginia Lowe Keywords picture books, illustration, style, case study, young children Virginia Lowe has taught people to write/illustrate for children for fifteen years through her business Create a Kids' Book. She and her team assess manuscripts, run workshops, e-courses, and mentor. Her book, Stories, Pictures and Reality: Two Children Tell, about two children's responses to books from birth, was published by Routledge. It is based on her Ph.D. thesis, which is based on a reading journal she kept of her son and daughter, from birth to adolescence. Virginia has lectured in children's literature and English at university and published numerous academic articles and book chapters. She has been a municipal children's librarian and a school librarian, judge for the Children's Book Council of Australia's Book of the Year Awards, and convenor of the Crichton Award for first time illustrators. › 'It's got the same clouds': young children's concepts of illustrator and artistic style, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 119-138. Michael J. Lowis Keywords music, emotion, peak experiences, spiritual, experiment Dr. Michael Lowis is a chartered psychologist, and currently Visiting Fellow, Occupational Sciences, The University of Northampton. His research interests include the psychology of music, the psychology of humour, and life satisfaction in the later years. He is the author of over 70 academic papers and conference presentations, and is called upon by the media from time to time for specialist opinion. He is also an amateur musician. › Emotional responses to music listening: A review of some previous research and an original, five-phase study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 8192. › Engagement in the arts and well-being and health in later adulthood: An empirical study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 25-36. Lilly (Li-Fen) Lu Northern Illinois University, Art Education Program, School of Art, Northern Illinois University, IL 60115, United States of America Keywords digital visual culture, visualization, Second Life, virtual learning environment, 3D virtual world Lilly Lu is an assistant professor of art education at Northern Illinois University. With a background in Instructional Technology, her research/specialty areas include digital visual culture, virtual world pedagogy, gaming, and integrating new media/technology into art education. She has been working on the research grant ‘Art Café@Second Life’ awarded by National Art Education Association in USA in 2008 to develop the virtual pedagogies and investigate ‘virtual’ visual culture for 21st-century art education. › Demystifying three-dimensional virtual worlds for art education, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 279-292. Philippa Lyon University of Brighton, Centre for Research and Development, Faculty of Arts & Architecture, Grand Parade, Brighton, BN2 0JY, United Kingdom Keywords design learning and teaching, ‘outsider’ research, visual and verbal language Philippa Lyon taught a range of literature courses at the universities of Sussex and Brighton alongside roles in university administration and management, before moving into research. Her Ph.D. is a literary and cultural analysis of Second World War poetry anthologies and she has published a guide on twentieth-century war poetry criticism. As Research Fellow in the Faculty of Arts she co-edited the book produced to mark the 150th anniversary of the Brighton School of Art. She is currently completing a book to encapsulate and analyse the significance of design learning and teaching research projects funded by the Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning through Design. › Writing about design pedagogy and designing pedagogical writing, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 151-156. Kieran Lyons University of Wales, Newport, Department of Fine Art, School of Art Media and Design, Caerleon Campus, PO Box 179, South Wales, NP183YG, United Kingdom Keywords military failure, field telephones, ‘Jura-Paris road’, proprioception, French corporals Kieran Lyons’ Ph.D. thesis was awarded in August 2007. The research topic considered the implications of militarism in France on Marcel Duchamp in the ten years between 1905 – 1915. He has delivered papers and essays on this and related subjects since 2000, perhaps most significantly with the online publication in ‘Tate Papers’. Recently, a monograph on his installation work made in New Zealand in1976 has appeared in ‘Reading Room’. Between 1976 and 2009 he has worked in Britain as a performance and installation artist and since the Ph.D. has re-engaged with a different practice producing precise technical drawings, in digital and mechanical form where the rapidly drawn cancelling marks made by ticket inspectors, on his train-tickets, are transferred into outsized statements in his studio - these owe their existence to the research towards his Ph.D. and hope to reflect the influence of its subject. › Fat and failure: Marcel Duchamp's military imagination, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.1, 31-48. Patricia Macdonald University of Edinburgh, School of Arts, Culture, and Environment, Old College, South Bridge, Edinburgh, EH8 9YL, United Kingdom Keywords photography, ways of seeing, modernism, paradigm shift, world-view Patricia Macdonald, BSc Ph.D. FRSE FRSA FSA(Scot) HonFRSGS HonFICS is a distinguished artist-photographer and environmental researcher, writer and interpreter. She is an Honorary Fellow in the School of Arts, Culture and Environment, University of Edinburgh. She is working at the interface of art and science, employing aerial photography in collaboration with Professor Angus Macdonald, also of the University of Edinburgh, and specializing in the exploration of concepts of viewpoint and ecological/social/cultural interrelationships, particularly as these are manifest in cultural landscape. › Emergent landscapes, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 83-96. Claire MacDonald University of the Arts, London, Southampton Row, London, WC1B 4AP, United Kingdom Keywords voice, process, poetry, performance, pedagogy Dr. Claire MacDonald is the Director of the International Centre for Fine Art Research at the University of the Arts, London. A founder of two British visual theatre companies, she writes for performance, has recently completed a novel, is a founding editor of Performance Research and a contributing editor to PAJ, a journal of performance and art, in New York. In 2006 she initiated ‘The Space Between Words’, a writing network for performance writing, and in September 2008 she co-curated, with Claire Hind, the international writing symposium ‘Writing Encounters’ at York St. John University. › How to do things with words: textual typologies and doctoral writing, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 91-103. › Reviews, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 127-128. Kathy Mackey Queensland Academies Keywords visual literacy, photography, secondary education, gaze Kathy Mackey investigates practice-led models as to how arts and new media organisations work in collaboration with senior schooling communities to build a culture of creative leadership among its students. Her workplaces involve selective creative- and science-based academies in Queensland, which offer the International Baccalaureate curriculum. She explores how the IB Diploma Program is supported and extended by working with arts and new media organisations and government initiatives. Collaborations such as these allow students and staff to create new ways of learning relevant to the twenty-first century which enable communities of learners to challenge intellectual perceptions of creativity, academic excellence and leadership. The Queensland Government has established a new mode of schooling within International Baccalaureate frameworks that focus on sciences (including Health Sciences), mathematics, technology and creative industries practice and innovation. › The gaze and image manipulation: Philosophies, pedagogies and arts practice, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.1, 61-. Mary Maclean Keywords Augé, documentation, photography, process Mary Maclean is currently Lecturer in the Fine Art Department at the University of Reading. Mary Maclean studied at the Royal College of Art, the Rijk Academy Amsterdam and Glasgow School of Art. She was Visiting Fellow in Painting at Winchester School of Art. Awards include a Pollock Krasner Foundation Award and the Abbey Award in Painting at the British School at Rome. Solo shows include: Before, The Room, London (2007); Almost Nothing, Neutral Space, Brighton (2006); Somewhere ... fast, Belfast Exposed, Belfast (2004); and Still Moves, East 73rdgallery, London (2002). › Considering If…Then…Else…, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 257-. Katy Macleod Plymouth University, School of Art and Media, Drake Circus, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords Ph.D., research methodology, Marcel Duchamp, Pierre Bonnard, art education, Katy Macleod runs the joint honours Art History/Fine Art course and coordinates the Critical Studies programme in the BA Fine Art course at the University of Plymouth. She is currently undertaking a study of practice-based M.Phil.s and Ph.D.s in Fine Art and has published several papers on the subject. She has a long-term commitment to curriculum development based in investigations of the theory/practice relationship. › The Enactment of Thinking: creative practice research degrees, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 11-11. › The enactment of thinking: the creative practice Ph.D., Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 197-. Hans Maes History and Philosphy of Art, University of Kent, Jarman Building, School of Arts, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom Hans Maes is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Leuven, Belgium, and conducted postdoctoral research at the University of Helsinki, Finland, and University of Maryland, United States. His main research interests are aesthetics, philosophy of photography and film, moral psychology. Keywords art, interpretation, intentionalism, jokes, cartoon, Livingston, erotic art, beauty › Challenging partial intentionalism, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.1, 8594. Jonas Major AHO School of Architecture and Design, OSLO Keywords architecture, design Jonas Major studied at The Oslo School of Architecture and Design and at The Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment, University College London. After finishing his studies in 2009 he has worked in several Oslo based practices, on his own research based architectural projects, and has taught architectural design as well as hosting a weekly symposium series at the Oslo School of Architecture. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. Maarit Mäkelä Aalto University School of Art and Design, Department of Design, Research, Hämeentie 135 C, PO Box 31000, Helsinki, FIN-00076, Finland Keywords material-based art, research practice, femininity, gender, history Maarit Mäkelä is docent of artistic research and material based art at Aalto University, School of Art and Design, Helsinki, where she also works as a coordinator of the Design Connections Doctoral School. She has published her articles in different arenas and is co-editor of the anthology ‘The Art of Research. Research Practices in Art and Design’. Mäkelä also works as an artist in the junction of ceramics and fine art. She has had several solo exhibitions in Finland and has taken part in frequent group exhibitions in Finland and abroad. Her works deal with femininity. She has discussed this theme broader in her doctoral dissertation ‘Memories on clay: representations of subjective creation process and gender’. › Crafting narratives: Using historical context as a refl ective tool, Craft Research, 2.1, 37-60. Suhail Malik Suhail Malik is Reader in Critical Studies in the Department of Art, Goldsmiths, London, where he was also Director of The Political Currency of Art Research Group between 2006-09. Malik has written Goldsmiths College, University of London, Art Department, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom on the market and critical conditions of contemporary art, political economy and theory, art education, several catalogue essays, and is currently working on a philosophy of American power. Keywords contemporary art, critical theory, political theory, morality, America › Critique as alibi: moral differentiation in the art market, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 283-295. Julian Malins Robert Gordon University, IDEAS Research Institute, Garthdee Road, Aberdeen, AB10 7QD, United Kingdom Keywords personal development planning (PDP), reflection, online web-based tools, constructivist approach, managed learning environment, design thinking Professor Julian Malins is currently Professor of Design and a principal member of the IDEAS Research Institute and Director of the Centre for Design & Innovation (www.c4di.org.uk). His publications cover a broad range of topics including approaches to research in art and design, virtual learning environments, computer supported collaborative design, and design thinking. › Evaluating GraysNet: an online PDP tool for use in an art and design context, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 31-48. Laura Malosetti Costa Instituto de Altos Estudios Sociales, Universidad Nacional de San martin, IDAES - UNSAM, Parana 145 - 5º piso, Buenas Aires, CP 1017, Argentina Keywords culture, memory, Argentina, history, Latin American art Laura Malosetti Costa is Professor and researcher in Art History and Cultural History at the University of Buenos Aires, CONICET (National Council for Scientific and Technological Research) and IDAES (Post Graduate Institute for Social Studies) National University of Gral. San Martín. She is the author of a number of books and articles, including Los primeros modernos: Arte y sociedad en Buenos Aires a fines del siglo XIX (Buenos Aires – Mexico, FCE 2001 and 2003), awarded by the Association for Latin American Art in 2003, Arte de Posguerra: Jorge Romero Brest y la revista Ver y Estimar (coeditor with Andrea Giunta, 2005) and Pío Collivadino (Buenis Aires, El Ateneo, 2006). › Politics, desire and memory in the construction of landscape in the Argentine pampas, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 107-. Sunil Manghani York St John University, Faculty of Sunil Manghani is Reader in Critical & Cultural Theory at York St John University, United Kingdom. His publications appear in Theory, Culture & Society, Film International, Invisible Culture, Journal of Arts, Lord Mayor's Walk, York, North Yorkshire, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Visual Art Practice and Culture, Theory and Critique. He is co-editor of Images: A Reader (Sage, 2006), an anthology of writings on the image from Plato to the present. He is currently working on an Image Studies textbook, as well pursuing a research interest in aspects of neutrality. Keywords critical theory, cultural studies, image media neutral, new media, visual culture › In the Study of the Letters in Red…, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.1, 1928. › MyResearch.com: speculations on bridging research and teaching in the arts, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.2, 85-98. › Confessions of a virtual scholar, or, writing as worldly performance, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 173-192. Rita Marcalo Instant Dissidence, N/A Keywords dance, epilepsy, disability, phenomenology. nudity, mobile technology, automotive mechanics, outdoor performance, technology, science, memory, documentation Dr. Rita Marcalo is a conceptual choreographer and practice-based researcher. After performing internationally she founded Instant Dissidence (http://www.instantdissidence.co.uk) and in 2006 completed an AHRB-funded practice-based Ph.D. Marcalo has published in: Diario de Aveiro (2010), Yorkshire Post (2010), Journal of Writing in Creative Practice (2009), Animated Magazine (2007), Society for Dance Research Newsletter (2002) and Research in Dance Education (2002). She also features in the books Performing Nature, Explorations in Ecology and the Arts (2006) by Gabriella Giannachi and Nigel Stewart, The Dust Archive and A History of Leeds Met Studio Theatre (2008) by Alexander Kelly and Annie Lloyd. In 2011 Portuguese television screened a documentary featuring Marcalo’s work › Failing to do without: writing as classical documentation of post-classical choreographic documentation, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 105-116. Ricardo Marín Viadel Universidad de Granada, Facultad de Bellas Artes, Granada, 18071, Spain Keywords educational research, teacher training, photography, drawing, painting, arts-based educational research Ricardo Marín Viadel has a Bachelor degree in Fine Arts (Painting) and Ph.D. in Philosophy and Education. He was a professor at the University of Valencia from 1980–81, at the University of Barcelona from 1981–84, the Computense University of Madrid from 1984–88 and now works at the University of Granada (Spain). His recent books and exhibition catalogues include Utopías ácidas/Acidic utopias (2000); Equipo Crónica: pintura, cultura, sociedad/Cronica Group: painting, culture, society (2003); Didáctica de la Educación Artística/Teaching Art Education (2003); Investigación en Educación Artística/Research in Art Education (2005); Colección de Arte Contemporáneo de la Universidad de Granada/Modern Art Collection of the University of Granada (2007); Drawings of the Time.(2010); › Photo essays and photographs in visual arts-based educational research, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 7-23. Francesco Mariotti Switzerland Keywords art, technology, art installation Francesco Mariotti was born in Switzerland in 1943. He has worked with art and technology in many countries, but especially between Switzerland and Peru. He lived in Lima 1953–61. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris and the University for Screen Arts, Hamburg. He has lectured at the Lima Art Academy, Peru, and was formerly, Secretary-General of the Locarno Video Festival. › The Garden of Kaametza and Narowé. Installation, Trancoso, 2006, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 115-116. Lily Markiewicz Keywords trauma, witnessing, dwelling, feeling at home, housing oneself Lily Markiewicz uses photography, film/video and recorded sound to evoke sensations of pictorial and emotional ambiguities. Often focusing on deliberately low-key subject matter, her images and installations are both an offer and a refusal at the same time; something is revealed and much is concealed. It is this very paradox that is the object of her investigations. She regularly exhibits and lives in London where she works as a freelance editor and consultant. › Some thoughts on feeling at home, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 2128. Leigh Markopoulos Keywords Leigh Markopoulos is Associate Professor and Chair of the Curatorial Practice MA Program at the California College of the Arts, San Francisco. Formerly Director of Rena Bransten Gallery, Markopoulos held positions at the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts and the Serpentine Gallery, London. She has curated over fifty exhibitions, including most recently Love is a Stranger (2010) at Creative Growth, Oakland, and Complicity: Contemporary Photography and the Matter of Sculpture (2009) at Rena Bransten Gallery. She is a regular reviewer for Art Practical and has contributed texts for many artists' publications, including most recently for Johan Grimonprez (2011). › The Accidental Exhibition: Chance as Curatorial Critique and Opportunity, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 7-24. Paul Martin Keywords meaning-making, transformative learning, perception Paul Martin is a practising artist and founder member of the Brighton 5 Ways artist group. His first degree was in environmental Art and Design and he continued to take a BA in Social Sciences and Humanities with the Open University and a PGCEA in teaching adults at Surrey University. His Masters and Doctorate, both at Surrey, focused on aspects of adults’ learning in the field of Art and Design. Although having taught a range of subjects including Yoga and Management Development, his main focus has been in Art and Design. Paul has taught Art in Continuing Education, FE and HE from beginners to degree level and has developed, written, validated and been course leader of an Art and Design access programme and BA in Fine Art Painting at Northbrook College. › Challenging the Perceptions of Adult Learners in Fine Art, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.2, 96-107. Hélène Martin-Brelot LISST-CIEU - Université Toulouse Le Mirail, CNRS, 5 allées Antonio Machado, 31058 Toulouse cedex, France Keywords hard and soft location factors, creative industries, managers, policies Hélène Martin-Brelot is a research fellow in urban geography at the Interdisciplinary Centre for Urban Studies (LISST-Cieu), University of Toulouse. Her Ph.D. in geography (January 2006) dealt with Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and their potential role in a sustainable development strategy. As an experiment she created 22 monthly magazines of 20 minutes each (called Rhizome) about environment concerns for a local TV station near Versailles. She recently compared the spatial dynamics of Île-deFrance, London, Berlin and Luxemburg regarding the aim of sustainable development. › The spatial orientations and the behaviours of managers in the audio-visual, web design and consultancy sectors in a knowledge intensive city: Toulouse, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 91-103. Rachel Mason Roehampton University, Southlands Rachel Mason is Professor in Art Education at Roehampton University. Professor Mason has an international reputation for her work in art education and multiculturalism, and is the co-ordinator of art education College, 80 Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5SL, United Kingdom Keywords art education, multiculturalism research in the Centre for International Research on Creativity and Learning in Education (CIRCLE) at Roehampton where she directs a number of funded research projects. Rachel is Editor of The International Journal of Education through Art and consultant for the Research and Development Centre in Fine Arts Education in Asia at Capital Normal University Beijing. › Creative education through arts and crafts, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 3-8. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 75-76. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.3, 167-169. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 87-90. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 3-6. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 115-117. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 227-229. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 3-5. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 107-110. › Editorial, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 3-5. Anne Massey Kingston University, School of Art and Design History, Knights Park, Kingston Upon Thames, Surrey, KT1 2QJ, United Kingdom Keywords creativity, psychological profiling, design, management Anne Massey studied at the University of Northumbria (then Newcastle Polytechnic) achieving a 2.1 in BA (Hons.) History of Modern Art, Design and Film in 1980 and a Ph.D. on ‘The Independent Group: Towards a Redefinition’ in 1985. In 2000 she was an awarded an MBA by the Open University. She has published numerous reviews, articles, chapters in edited collections and contributions to exhibition catalogues and has written four, single-author books. She was the founding Dean of the Media Arts Faculty at the Southampton Institute and the Director of the School of Design at the Arts Institute in Bournemouth. She is now Senior Lecturer in the School of Art, Design & Music at Kingston University and is currently working on a book about the interior design of ocean liners for Spon press. › Developing creativity for the world of work: a case study, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 17-30. A.B.D Nadja Masura University of Maryland, Department of Theatre, College Park, MD, 20742, Nadja Masura is a digital artist and performer from Northern California. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Maryland and former Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities Fellow in Theatre and Digital Technology. She is currently United States of America working on her dissertation titled 'Digital Theatre: Expanding Body, Place and Community' which explores the ways in which theatre utilizing digital technology (such as animation, video, motion capture/sensing, internet broadcast) alongside the 'live' co-present actor expands our ideas of body, place, and community through the blurring of theatrical roles and social concepts. She has presented at ASTR, ATHE and IFTR, and performed online at Siggraph and Supercomputing. Believing praxis is an important part of developing scholarship, Nadja has been actively creating digital performance both on locally and online. For the past three years she participated in the ArtGrid online community; locally coordinating, creating media, and performing the Interplay Series. Keywords audience, connection, Interplay, multi-site performance, participants, › Altered states: Multi-site performance high, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.3, 221-232. Stanley Mathews Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Department of Art and Architecture, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York, 14456, United States of America Keywords Cedric Price, Fun Palace, Joan Littlewood, architecture, improvisation cybernetics Stanley Mathews is an atypical architectural historian. Mathews holds three advanced degrees: he received his Ph.D. in the History and Theory of Architecture from Columbia University in 2003, as well as a Master of Fine Arts degree and a Master of Architecture. Mathews is a professor of art and architecture at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York. In addition, he is a practicing architect and has built projects totaling more than 30 million dollars. His varied background has given him a unique point of view on the history and practice of architecture. For the past several years he has worked extensively on Cedric Price. He has written articles for and the Journal of Architectural Education, and has delivered four recent papers at international conferences on Price and his work. › The Fun Palace: Cedric Price’s experiment in architecture and technology, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.2, 73-92. Chris Mathieu Institute of Organisation and Industrial Sociology, Copenhagen Business School, Kilevej 14 A, Frederiksberg, DK-2000, Denmark Keywords gender, values, ethics, moral argumentation, sociology of Labour, qualitative assessments, differentiation, integration, sociology Chris Mathieu has a Ph.D. in sociology from Lund University and is currently associate professor at Copenhagen Business School. His current research focuses on creative collaboration and labour and occupational mobility issues in the Danish film industry. His primary research areas are gender; values, ethics and moral argumentation; sociology of Labour; qualitative assessments; differentiation and integration; sociology of organizations; cultural industries/film industry; sociology of religion/religious organizations; and culture, structure and agency. of organizations, Danish film industry, sociology of religion › Is this what we should be comparing when comparing film production regimes? A systematic typological scheme and application, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 171-192. Ernest Mathijs Univresity of British Columbia, Department of Theatre and Film, 6354 Crescent Road, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z2, Canada Keywords teaching film, media literacy, vernacular concepts, moral controversies Ernest Mathijs is Associate Professor in Film Studies at the University of British Columbia, Canada. His books include Cult Cinema, The Cult Film Reader (co-editor), three books on the reception of The Lord of the Rings, and The Cinema of David Cronenberg: From Baron of Blood to Cultural Hero. His research focuses on the reception of alternative and ‘problematic’ media (horror film, reality-TV, regional cinema, and cultural resistance). › Understanding vernacular experiences of film in an academic environment, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 49-. Patrick Maynard Department of Philosophy, University of Western Ontario, Ontario, Canada Keywords philosophy, photography Patrick Maynard is a graduate of the University of Chicago and Cornell University, has US and Canadian citizenship, and presently lives in England. He taught Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario and has had appointments at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, the University of California-Berkeley and Simon Fraser University. In addition to many papers in philosophy, he has published extensively on photography (The Engine of Visualization, Cornell University Press, 1997) and drawing (Drawing Distinctions, Cornell University Press, 2005). › Working light, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 29-34. Sherry Mayo Westchester Community College, Department of Art, 200 School House Road, Loft #1A, Peekskill, NY 10566, United States of America Keywords art technology, higher education, digital imaging Sherry Mayo, MFA, Ed.DCT is the Director of the Center for the Digital Arts, Westchester Community College. Her research areas include arts technology integration in higher education and combining both traditional and digital materials into studio practice. As a practitioner, she is thoroughly engaged with painting, drawing and digital imaging. In addition, Mayo has intensive studio experience with digital video. Scholarly interests include arts technology integration in arts education, digital aesthetics, the cultural impact of digital technologies, consciousness, cosmology and the post-human. Recent exhibitions include ‘Private i’ (Skylight Gallery, New York); ‘Far & Wide: 2nd Annual Woodstock Regional’, juried by Patricia Phagen, where she received the Juror’s Choice Award for drawing (WAAM, http://www.woodstockart.org/museum/current_exhibit.htm, Woodstock, NY); ‘Love Beyond Borders’ (Brighton, UK). › CAA 2011, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 89-92. Marian Mazzone College of Charleston, Department of Art History, Charleston, SC 294240001, United States of America Marian Mazzone is an associate professor and chair of the art history department at the College of Charleston. She teaches modern and contemporary art history, and hascurated several exhibitions of contemporary art. Her areas of research and publication include Eastern European art, and Russian and Chinese art of the 20th century forward. Keywords Ken Friedman, fluxus, intermedia, Prague, Eastern Europe , › ‘Keeping together’ Prague and San Francisco: networking in 1960s art, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.3, 275-292. Euan McArthur University of Dundee, Duncan of Jordanstone School of Design, Fine Art Department, Dundee, DD1 4HN, United Kingdom Euan McArthur graduated in Drawing and Painting from Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen. He subsequently went into exhibition curation, as Director of Artspace Galleries, Aberdeen and as Exhibitions Organizer at Third Eye Centre, Glasgow before becoming Course Director in History and Theory of Art in the School of Fine Art, Dundee. He is currently Head of the School of Fine Art. Keywords research-based practice, AHRB, RAE › DEBATE: Research in the creative and performing arts: A response to the AHRB Paper ‘The RAE and Research in the Creative and Performing Arts. Review of Research Assessment’, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.1, 75-. Mike McAuley Massey University, Institute of Communication Design, College of Creative Arts, Massey University, Museum Building, Buckle Street, Wellington, New Zealand Keywords art education, design practice, illustration, music, nexus principle Mike McAuley has over 26 years experience as both a design practitioner and an educator. His teaching career began as a peripatetic art teacher in primary and special school education in the Tayside region. Mike then became an art and design teacher in various high schools in Dundee. In 1990 he gave up his teaching practice to focus on developing his career full-time as a professional illustrator in Perth, Australia. In 1995 he took up the position of Subject Director in Illustration at Massey University. While he still maintains his professional practice, his focus has been towards scholarly publication through writing. As a counterbalance to his academic leanings, Mike is also a professional musician, and he performs regularly throughout New Zealand. › A design education perspective on the process of interpreting words into pictures, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 111-133. David McConville The Elumenati, Noospheric Research Division, 414 Hayward Road, Ashville, North Carolina, NC 28806, United States of America Keywords dome, immersion, cosmology, visual language, expanded cinema David McConville is a media artist and researcher specializing in the development of dome-based display technologies. He is co-founder of The Elumenati, a full service design and engineering firm specializing in the development and deployment of immersive visualization environments and experiences. The Elumenati provides systems integration, real-time software design, immersive content research, custom fabrication, and optical engineering for clientele ranging from art festivals to space agencies. David holds a BS in Music and Audio Engineering from UNC-Asheville, where he researched 3D audio and MIDI systems under Dr. Robert Moog. › Cosmological Cinema: Pedagogy, Propaganda, and Perturbation in Early Dome Theaters, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.2, 6986. Nicole McDaniel Texas A&M University, Mailstop 4227, Blocker Building, Texas A& M University, College Station, TX 77843, United States of America Nicole McDaniel is a Post-Doctoral Lecturer at Texas A&M University, where she specializes in life writing studies and ethnic American literature. She is currently revising her dissertation, ‘Seriality in Contemporary American Memoir: 1957–2007’, as a scholarly monograph. Keywords memory, seriality, memoir, Art Spiegelman › Self-reflexive graphic narrative: Seriality and Art Spiegelman's Portrait of the Artist as a Young &, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 197-211. Liz McDowell Northumbria University, Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 8ST, United Kingdom Dr. Liz McDowell is Professor in Academic Practice at Northumbria University and Director of the National Centre for Excellence in Assessment for Learning. Her main research interests are on the impacts of learning environments on student learning. Many of her publications focus on the relationships between assessment and learning and the model of assessment for learning used at Northumbria derives from this work. Liz has a major role in promoting innovation Keywords Assessment for Learning, design pedagogy, Global Studio, educational discourses, collaborative learning and enhancement in teaching, learning and assessment practices, and in staff learning both for new academic staff and the continuing professional development of established staff. This work brings together research, innovation and development. › Intersections: The utility of an ‘Assessment for Learning’ discourse for Design educators, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 123-134. Andrew McGettigan › , Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 159-183. Keywords Kate McGowan Keywords time, desire, being, trace, simulation Kate McGowan is Senior Lecturer in English and Cultural Studies at Manchester Metropolitan University. Special areas of interest include: modernism, postmodernism, deconstruction, psychoanalysis and the concept of the inhuman. She is currently an executive Director of The English Association and serves on both the Executive and Publications Committees of that organization. Since joining Manchester Metropolitan University, she has also spent time as a visiting scholar at the University of Puerto Rico in the Caribbean. Her own research is currently focused on conceptual questions of the inhuman as well as its representation in popular media, film, literature and contemporary cultural discourse. However, she has written on subjects as diverse as Queer Cinema and Theory, Aboriginal Writing and National Cultures, Deconstruction and Postmodernism, Virginia Woolf and the English poet John Milton. › Oedipal androids: desire and the human in the third millennium, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.1, 39-54. Jim McGuigan Loughborough University, Department of Social Sciences Jim McGuigan is Professor of Cultural Analysis, Loughborough University, UK. His latest books are Cool Capitalism (Pluto 2009) and Cultural Analysis (Sage 2010). Keywords culture, politics, capitalism › From cultural populism to cool capitalism, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 718. Chris McKillop Robin Gordon University, Gray's School of Art, Schoolhill, Abderdeen, AB10 1FR, United Kingdom Keywords reflection, online webbased tools, constructivist approach, managed learning environment, assessment, student experience Chris McKillop is currently a Ph.D. research student at Gray’s School of Art where she is investigating the role of narrative in learning through using storytelling to facilitate the reflective process. Her research aims to give a deeper understanding of how students’ perceive and use the assessment process in art and design; to develop storytelling as a reflective method; and to investigate the extent to which this process can be mediated in an online environment. She has degrees in Artificial Intelligence and Human Computer Interaction and designs and evaluates online learning environments. › Evaluating GraysNet: an online PDP tool for use in an art and design context, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 31-48. › Drawing on assessment: using visual representations to understand students' experiences of assessment in art and design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 131-144. Dr Graham McLaren Bath Spa University, Bath School of Art and Design, Sion Hill, Lansdown, Bath, BA1 5SF, United Kingdom Keywords design, history, ceramics, glass, craft, education Graham McLaren is Head of the Department of Design and Critical Studies at Bath School of Art and Design. He is a design historian with a particular interest in craft, specifically the history of ceramics and glass. He has published widely on aspects of these materials, and has lectured on the subject nationally and internationally. He is currently completing a major text, The Culture of Ceramics, for Manchester University Press. › BOOK REVIEW, Craft Research, 2.1, 179-184. Fred McVittie University College, Falmouth, Department of Performance, Woodlane Campus, Woodlane, Falmouth, TR11 4RH, United Kingdom Fred McVittie is Programme Leader of the BA Contemporary Arts degree at Manchester Metropolitan University. His research interests straddle the fields of performance, creativity, and consciousness, focusing particularly on the relationships between metaphors used to understand and practice within these domains of knowledge. His current research is into the use of science-based metaphors within arts training. Keywords training, embodied cognition, acting, artificial intelligence (AI), metaphor › Top-down and bottom-up approaches to actor training, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 155-. Rosie Meade University College Cork, School of Applied Social Studies, William Thompson House, Donovan's Road, Cork, Ireland Keywords community development, Irish social movements, alternative media, cultural politics of resistance, globalization Rosie Meade is a lecturer in the School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork. Her research interests include the politics of community development, Irish social movements, alternative media, the cultural politics of resistance and issues related to globalization. She is also a board member and joint reviews editor at the Community Development Journal. In 2007 she and Mae Shaw edited a special issue of the Community Development Journal that explored issues of cultural democracy and the potential of the arts to re-animate community development practice. In 2009 she edited with Elizabeth Kiely and Catherine Forde, Youth and Community Work in Ireland: Critical Perspectives. › Community development and the arts: Sustaining the democratic imagination in lean and mean times, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.1, 65-80. Stuart Medley School of Communications & Arts, Edith Cowan University, Bradford Street, Mt Lawley, WA 6050, Australia Keywords silhouettes, perceptual constancy, visual closure, visual system, realism Stuart Medley’s comics have been published in Deanne Cheuk’s and magazines. In addition, Medley was the editor of SiC BAG comics, now in the Michael Hill Collection at the Australian National Library. He currently lectures in graphic design in Australia and New Zealand. He has spoken at various conferences including TypoGraphic2005, Lebanon, and the NewViews2 2008 conference at the LCC in London. His writing about design has been published by the Australasian Medical Journal. Medley’s work on information design was selected as research excellence by the Australian Council of University Art and Design Schools, 2009. He is the designer for Hidden Shoal Recordings, a critically acclaimed record label with a roster of international artists. He has a Ph.D based on the paradox that less realism allows more accurate communication. › Discerning pictures: how we look at and understand images in comics, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 53-70. Christoph Meinel Prof. Dr. Christoph Meinel is CEO and President of Hasso Plattner Institute for IT-Systems Engineering (HPI) and Professor of Internet Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Softwaresystemtechnik GmbH, ProfDr-Helmert-Str. 2–3, Potsdam, 14482, Germany Technologies and Systems at the University of Potsdam. He is also a visiting professor at the School of Computer Science of the Technical University of Beijing and at the Luxembourg Institute of Advanced Studies in Information Technology at the University of Luxembourg. Under his leadership, the HPI School ofDesign Thinking opened in 2007. Since 2008, he is co-program director of the HPI-Stanford Design Thinking Research Program. Also, he is author and co-author of eight books, one about Design Thinking. A mathematician by training, Christoph Meinel received his graduate degree, doctorate, and postdoctoral degree (Habilitation) from Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany. Keywords design discourses, metadiscipline, creative collaboration, wicked problems, design cognition › Evolving discourses on design thinking: how design cognition inspires metadisciplinary creative collaboration, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 31-37. Gavin Melles Swinburne University of Technology, Faculty of Design, Building PA, 144 High Street, Prahran Campus, Victoria, 3181, Australia Keywords design process, design activities, activity theory academic literacy, design research Dr. Gavin Melles is lecturer in the Faculty of Design, Swinburne University (Australia). He teaches academic writing to staff and students, supervises research students in design and engineering. He is on the editorial board of several journals and involved in a number of research projects with European partners. His background is in anthropological linguistics (Masters by Research) and Education (Doctor of Education). His research publications are in the areas of pedagogy in discipline specific areas, research methodologies, and educational research more broadly. › Visually mediating knowledge construction in project-based doctoral design research, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.2, 99-112. › Producing fact, affect and identity in architecture critiques – a discourse analysis of student and faculty discourse interaction, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 159-171. › Graphic designers' activities during the conceptual design phase of clientinitiated projects Report of research in progress, reflection on the research process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 85-92. › The relevance and consequences of academic literacies for pedagogy and research in practice-based postgraduate design, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 261-273. › Editorial, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 95-96. › Everyday Practice as Design, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 149-159. Talan Memmott Blekinge Institute of Technology, Campus Gräsvik (Valhallav. 1), Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, 371 79 Karlskrona, Sweden Keywords digital media, electronic literature, digital art, literary hypermedia Talan Memmott is Assistant Professor of Digital Media and Culture in the Digital Culture and Communications programme at Blekinge Institute of Technology, and an internationally known practitioner of electronic literature and digital art with a practice ranging from experimental video to digital performance applications and literary hypermedia. His work is widely available on the Internet, and has been included in electronic anthologies, has featured at festivals and conferences, and has been the subject of numerous critical texts. His current research interests include digital poetics, practice-based research methods, and digital media pedagogy in the humanities. Memmott holds an M.F.A. in Literary Arts/Electronic Literature from Brown University and is completing a Ph.D. in Interaction Design at Malmö University. › Codework: Phenomenology of an anti-genre, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 93-105. María Mencía Kingston University, School of Arts and Social Sciences, Surrey Keywords new media, poetry, literature, sound-generated poems, net.art María Mencía is an artist and senior lecturer in Media and Culture and Digital Media at the School of Arts and Social Sciences at Kingston University. She holds a practice-led doctorate in Digital Poetics and Digital Art. Her practice-led research in language-driven new media art/ poetry/ literature includes interactive installations, net.art, soundgenerated poems and interactive generative narratives. She has been awarded various research grants to collaborate at international universities such as New York University, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and The University of Sydney, and has presented and exhibited internationally at festivals such as the International Symposium on Electronic Art (ISEA), onedotzero, Electronic Language InternationalFestival (FILE), International Contemporary Art Fair (ARCO), Computers in Art and Design Education (CADE) and TATE Modern. › From the page to the screen to augmented reality: New modes of languagedriven technology-mediated research, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 3-7. › Connected memories: Contextualizing creative research practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 37-51. Maria Mendona Kenyon College, Music and Anthropology Departments, Storer Maria Mendona is Assistant Professor in Asian Music and Culture in the Music and Anthropology Departments at Kenyon College. Her research interests include Indonesian music (particularly gamelan traditions of Java and Sunda), globalization of culture, and music and Hall, Gambier, Ohio, 43022, United States of America prisons. She has worked as an ethnomusicologist in a variety of settings in the United States and the United Kingdom, including Ethnomusicology Editor for the 2001 edition of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, as well as advising and leading projects involving gamelan performance and education for a range of British arts institutions, including the South Bank Centre, St David’s Hall, Cardiff, and the Hallé Orchestra. Keywords education, gamelan, rehabilitation, music, prison › Prison, music and the rehabilitation revolution: The case of Good Vibrations, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 295-307. Usha Menon University College London, UCL Elizabeth Garrett Institute for Women’s Health, Maple House, 149 Tottenham Court Road, London, WC1T 7DN, United Kingdom Usha Menon is Professor of Gynaecological Cancer and Head of the Gynaecological Cancer Research Centre at UCL Institute for Women’s Health, and Consultant Gynaecologist for UCLH NHS Trust, London. She is principal investigator on the UK ovarian cancer screening trials. › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords art therapy, gynaecology, well-being measures Kerstin Mey University of Ulster, School of Art and Design, Monkstown, Newtownabbey, BT37 0, United Kingdom Keywords art theory, sense perception, sight, aesthetic experience, aesthetic understanding Kerstin Mey, Ph.D., MA, holds a Chair in Fine Art and leads the research zone ‘Art and its Locations’ in Interface: Centre for Research in Art, Technologies and Design, in the School of Art and Design, University of Ulster. She is managing editor of transcript, a series of books on contemporary visual culture published by Manchester University Press in association with the School of Fine Art, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, University of Dundee. › On-Site/In-Sight, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 67-82. Christian Mieves United Kingdom Keywords art, beach, space Christian Mieves is an artist and academic based in the North East of England. He co-organized the 2009 Revisiting the Beach conference at Newcastle University (http://conferences.ncl.ac.uk/beachconference/). He holds a Ph.D. in Fine Art and an MFA from Newcastle University (UK), both funded by the AHRC (Arts and Humanities ResearchCouncil). His paintings have been shown at exhibitions in Germany, Mexico, Spain and the United Kingdom. He has written on issues of exoticism, cannibalism, heterotopias and the beach in the work of Dana Schutz and the trope of fragmentation in Luc Tuymans. He is currently working on a large project on the subject of ‘erosion’ in contemporary art. › Introduction, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 199-209. › Traces and Erosion: A Case Study of the Beach in Contemporary Art Making, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 273-290. Adetty Pérez Miles The Pennsylvania State University, School of Visual Arts, 207 Arts Cottage, University Park, Pennsylvania, PA 16802-2905, United States of America Adetty Pérez Miles is a doctoral candidate in art education and women’s studies at The Pennsylvania State University. Her research focuses on critical feminist and postcolonial inquiry in visual culture, specifically Latin American film, performance, and installation art. Pérez Miles teaches Introduction to Visual Arts, Diversity, Pedagogy, and Visual Culture, The Visual Arts in the Elementary School, and Introduction to Women’s Studies at Penn State University. Keywords Juárez murders, postcolonial encounters, Lourdes Portillo, critical pedagogy, art education › Lourdes Portillo's Señorita Extraviada: hegemonic power, gender and murder (feminicidio) in the Mexican-US frontera, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.1, 5-16. Malcolm Miles University of Plymouth, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords cultural theory, art education, urbanism, contemporary art, global space, politics Malcolm Miles is Professor of Cultural Theory in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Plymouth, United Kingdom. He co-chairs the Culture-Theory-Space research group (located in the School of Architecture); supervises doctoral research between critical theory and contemporary culture and urbanism; contributes to doctoral workshops on research methods in the arts; and carries out research for publication. His main research interest is in the development of critical theories of culture and society since the mid twentieth century, in relation to contemporary art and urban change. Within this are questions around the extent to which the utopian content of modernism can be salvaged; the need to develop critical theory in a period of global cultures; and the cross-currents of a post-socialist Eastern Europe. He retains a long-term interest in questions of pictorial space and the insights on art offered by psychoanalytic as well as political approaches. › Viral Art – strategies for a new democracy, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.2, 71-79. › Breaking the Circles of Uncertainty, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 18- 25. Kathy Miraglia Keywords integration, expeditionary learning, environment, sustainability Kathy Marzilli Miraglia is an Associate Professor of Art Education at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and Chairperson of the Department of Art Education. She has published in Visual Arts Research, Educational Leadership online, and Art Education. She has delivered numerous papers and presentations at international, national and state conferences. Her research focuses on interdisciplinary studies, integrated curriculum and teacher education and preparation. She is also an exhibiting artist. Her figurative paintings and drawings focus on women's stories. › Lessons learned from the landscape: an integrated approach, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 169-185. Eva Miranda University of Paris 1 PantheonSorbonne, UFR 04, 47 rue des Berges, Paris, 75015, France Keywords drawing process, graphic components, trans-cultural commonalities, cognition Eva Rolim Miranda is a graphic designer, interested in research into visual culture and communication through images. She is associate researcher of the InformationDesign Research Group in Brazil and also the Centre de Recherche Images, Cultures et Cognitions (CRICC). She has a Masters degree in Information Design from the Federal University of Pernambuco and is currently in her second year of doctoral studies at the Université Panthéon Sorbonne - Paris 1. › Children's processes of drawing from memory: a trans-cultural study in France and Brazil, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 5773. Adrielle Mitchell Nazareth College, English, English Department, 4245 East Ave, Rochester, NY, 14618, United States of America Keywords figurative realm, nonlinear reading, iconic solidarity, selfrepresentation, graphic memoirs, comics studies, graphic novels, image Adrielle Anna Mitchell is an Associate Professor of English at Nazareth College, Rochester, NY, United States, where she regularly offers a course in ‘International Graphic Narrative’. A Modernist by training (1995 Ph.D. dissertation at the University of California, Santa Cruz: ‘The Plain Reader be Damned: Confusion as Method in the Works of Djuna Barnes’), and a generalist by preference (with interests in the areas of experimental literature, cultural and gender studies, text and image, non-fiction graphic narratives and memory studies), she has turned her scholarly attention exclusively to comics studies since 2006. and text Recent publications in the field include ‘Spectral Memory, Sexuality and Inversion: An Arthrological Study of Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (ImageText)’; ‘Graphic Journeys: Figuring Americans Abroad in Thompson’s Carnet de Voyage and Abel’s La Perdida’ ( The CEA Critic). › Distributed identity: networking image fragments in graphic memoirs, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 257-279. Roanna Mitchell Drama department at the University of Kent Roanna Mitchell is Ph.D. candidate and Associate Lecturer in the Drama department at the University of Kent, and Artistic Director of Endangered Species. Keywords › CONFERENCE REPORT, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 223230. Kazuji Mogi Gunma University, Faculty of education, 4-2 Aramaki-Machi, MaeBashi-Shi, Gunma, 371-8510, Japan Keywords Japanese art history, media, workshops, social constructivism, situated learning Kazuji Mogi is Associate Professor of Art Education in the Faculty of Education at Gunma University, Japan. He received an MA in Arts from the University of Tsukuba and a Ph.D in Design from Kyushu, Institute of Design. His research investigates the foundations of education in art, design and craft. Recently he has studied the workshop as a collaborative learning system for a new way of art learning for the information age. He presented papers on 'Basic knowledge in art education' and 'The implications of mediatechnology-based workshops for art education for all' at the 32nd International InSEA Congress, Viseu, Portugal in 2006. › The Narikiri Emaki (picture scroll) project, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 7-27. Javier Abad Molina Universidad Automa de Madrid, c/ Virtudes nº3, 2ºB, 28010 Madrid, Spain Keywords public art, collaboration, Javier Abad is a visual artist and art education lecturer at University College La Salle at the Autonomous University of Madrid. He collaborates with the Yehudi Menuhin Foundation in Spain and is a member of Enter-Arte, grupo de los Movimientos de Renovación Pedagógica de Acción Educativa. He is also a member of the Organization of Latin American States and of Equipo de Formación Regional de la Comunidad de Madrid. At the present time he is education, sense of place completing a doctoral thesis investigating processes of participation and inclusion and exploring relationships between the distribution of academic space, symbolic games and relational aesthetics. › Escribir el Lugar: collaborative projects in public spaces, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 195-206. Francesco Monico Nouvo Accademia di Belle Arti (NABA), Vi C. Darwin 20, Milan, 20143, Italy Keywords syncretic, virtual reality, Gnostic, Matrix, technological adaptation Francesco Monico started as second director, programme assistant, director and author for Italian broadcast companies. He is working on some of the few innovative Italian TV projects, such as new kinds of media magazines and TV channels. He has taught Mass Media Theory since 1996, and was invited with a grant to study media at the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology in Toronto. He is currently a professor and Head of the Media Design Faculty at the Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti di Milan. He is a member of the Scientific Committee of the Science and Technology Museum Leonardo da Vinci in Milan. His research is focused on the artist’s role in the information society, and he is developing a cultural studies survey of relationships between media, technology and culture. › White rabbit on the moon, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 141-150. › TAFKAV a Technoetic Installation, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.3, 249-274. Lucy Montgomery Queensland University of Technology Keywords intellectual property, creative industries, economic evolution, China Lucy Montgomery is a post-doctoral research fellow in the ARC Federation Fellowship programme at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, Queensland University of Technology and an honorary visiting research fellow at City University London. › Does weaker copyright mean stronger creative industries? Some lessons from China, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 245-261. Jenny Moon Bournemouth Media school, Centre Jenny Moon is a senior lecturer at Bournemouth University. She has worked in education health and professional development in higher education for most of her career. In recent years, her focus has been on for Excellence in Media Practice,, United Kingdom pedagogy, with a focus on how humans learn (reflective learning, critical thinking, the learning of non-traditional students etc). She worked for five years on educational development at the University of Exeter and now has a part time post at Bournemouth University in the Centre for Excellence in Media Practice. Keywords learning, reflection, critical thinking, methods for supporting learning, professional development › The use of graduated scenarios to facilitate the learning of complex and difficult-to- describe concepts, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 57-70. Kathryn Moore Birmingham City University, School of Architecture and Design, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom Kathryn Moore is Professor of Landscape Architecture at the School of Landscape and Architecture, Faculty of Built Environment, University of Central England and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture, University of Manitoba, Canada. She is currently President of the Landscape Institute and has published widely on design education and the reconceptualization of visual skill. Keywords visual thinking, art education, design education, sense perception, intelligence › Visual thinking: hidden truth or hidden agenda?, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.2, 177-196. Francesco Morace Future Concept Lab, Milan Keywords creativity, craft, consumauthors, everyday culture, basic fashion Francesco Morace is a sociologist, writer and journalist who has been working in market research since the 1980s. He is the president of the innovative market research company Future Concept Lab which has been since 1989 a pioneer in its field both in Italy and abroad. It was the first company to set up a network of cult researchers in cities worldwide to follow and observe trends connected to daily life, clothing, food products, life styles and mind styles. Future Concept Lab (FCL) of Milan integrates global values based on a genius loci (spirit of the place) approach, and local behaviours collected using the street & body signals method – into a combined system of the MindStyles. › The dynamics of luxury and basic-ness in post-crisis fashion, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.1, 87-112. Cynthia M. Morawski University of Ottowa, Department of Cynthia Morawski, a graduate of Columbia University Teachers’ College, is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa, where she teaches integrated language/arts, Education, Lamoureux Hall (LMX), 145, Jean-Jacques-Lussier Private, Ottowa, Ontario, K1N 6N5, Canada special education, literacy and children’s literature. Her research interests include arts- based literacy, bibliotherapy, teaching narratives, livesof women, and learning differences. Keywords arts-based education, women’s lives, auto-ethnography › The art of embodiment: auto-ethnographic portraits of two women’s surgical traumas, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.3, 315-323. Greg More Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University (RMIT), Australia, GPO Box 2476, VIC 3001, Australia Keywords architecture, contemporary culture, video games, technology for education Greg More is a Senior Lecturer at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia, within RMIT’s Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory (SIAL), School of Architecture + Design. More is interested in the synthetic spaces of contemporary culture where exchange between material and digital economies transform the relationship between the subject and architecture. In recent years More has been researching, developing and teaching video-game technology for design and artistic purposes. His design work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art New York, selected for OneDotZero and Resfest international film festivals, and featured in a range of international architecture and design biennale and publications. Greg More is also the founder of OOM Creative – a digital environments design consultancy – specializing in information visualization and digital environment design. › Notational Design Vision ;My persistent world, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 5774. Sally J. Morgan Massey University, School of Fine Arts, PO Box 756, Wellington, 6140, New Zealand Keywords postmodernism, paradigm shift, fragmentation, specialist discourse, subversion Sally J. Morgan is Professor of Fine Arts at Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand. She is an artist and cultural historian who has had work published on contextual fine art, memory and monuments, and the visual as public history. Her research has a number of dimensions including a fine art practice based on painting, performance and installation as well as a scholarly practice geared around social history, cultural studies, art theory and pedagogy. Sally is a regular contributor to international peer-reviewed journals and collections. She has had sustained recognition at international level including a major performance project for the ICA London. Her work was cited by the Arts Council of Great Britain as 'the best of Performance Art' in the ’90s, and represented the United Kingdom at Fribourg International Festival, Switzerland. › A Terminal Degree: fine art and the PhD, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.1, 6-15. › Beautiful impurity, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.3, 135-144. Nigel Morgan The University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, Welsh Centre for Tourism Research, Cardiff School of Management, The University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, CF5 2SG, United Kingdom Nigel Morgan is Professor of Tourism Studies at Cardiff School of Management’s Welsh Centre for Tourism Research at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff. He is passionately interested in the connections between tourism, social justice, identity and place and has written or edited fifteen books in these areas, the latest being Destination Brands: Managing Place Reputation (Elsevier, 2011). › Music and textiles interact, Craft Research, 1.1, 39-61. Keywords temporality, materiality, web-based artefacts, open source software, Active Notation Jess Moriarty The University of Brighton, School of Humanities, University of Brighton, Checkland Building, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9PH, United Kingdom Jess Moriarty is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Humanities at the University of Brighton. She is currently finishing her thesis, which combines academic research and an anthology of autobiographical poems and a radio play. › CLTAD International Conference, 1213 April 2010, Berlin Creative partnerships: Helping creative writing and visual practice students to make links between their creative processes and their personal, vocational and academic development, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 285298. Keywords creative practice, personal development, creative writing Simon Morley University of Southampton, Winchester School of Art, Park Avenue, Winchester, SO23 8DL, United Kingdom Keywords iconoclasm, Rothko, theoaesthetic, censoring and veiling, Taoism and Buddhism Simon Morley is Lecturer in Fine Art and Programme Leader, MA in Fine Art at Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton. His special interests are the interaction between word and image, the sublime, abstract art. Over the last ten years he has exhibited his paintings internationally. Author of Writing on the Wall: Word and Image in Modern Art (Thames & Hudson/California University Press, 2003) and Documents in Contemporary Art: The Sublime (Whitechapel Art Gallery/MIT Press, 2010). › Painting the page, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 141-159. Christine Ballengee Morris The Ohio State University, 351 B Hopkins Hall, 128 North Oval Mall, Columbus, OH, 43210, United States of America Keywords heritage, economic policy, identity, representation, craft Christine Ballengee-Morris is Associate Professor in the Art Education Department and American Indian Studies Coordinator at the Ohio State University. She is past president of the United States Society for Teaching Through Art. She is trained to lead social justice workshops and mediation and has served in those positions for several companies, universities, departments, and community organizations. She is a Cherokee-Appalachian. She has received the 2008 National Art Education Higher Education, Western Division Award; the 2007 Ziegfeld Award for Diversity; the 2006 National Art Education Grigsby Award (research in and commitment to diversity); the 2000 OSU-Newark Research and Service Award; and the NAACP Licking County, Ohio’s Young Native American Woman Leadership Award. › Culture, identity, representation: the economic policies of heritage tourism, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 129-142. Janne Morton University of Melbourne, Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia Janne Morton works as a lecturer in the School of Languages and Linguistics at the University of Melbourne. She teaches communication skills and English for Academic Purposes. Her current research interests are oral communication pedagogy, academic literacy, and genre theory. She is currently working on a Ph.D. on the socialization of students into architectural discourse. Keywords architectural design education, student presentations, visual analysis, multimodal semiosis › The integration of images into architecture presentations: a semiotic analysis, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 21-38. Timothy Morton The University of California Keywords Timothy Morton is Professor of English (Literature and the Environment) at the University of California, Davis. He is the author of The Ecological Thought (Harvard UP, 2010), Ecology without Nature (Harvard UP, 2007), seven other books and over seventy essays on philosophy, ecology, literature, food and music. He is currently writing two books: Realist Magic and Hyperobjects. › Freak show ecology: What is the difference between a duck?, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 185-199. Shelby Moser Shelby Moser is an Adjunct Professor of Art History in the Department Azusa Pacific University, Department of Art, 901 E. Alosta Avenue, Azusa, CA 91702, United States of America of Art at Azusa Pacific University (APU) in Southern California. Moser received a BA in History from APU and MA in Art History from California State University, Los Angeles, where she focused on postmodern art trends and Ancient Near Eastern studies. She formerly interned as slide curator for the Huntington Library in San Marino, CA and currently assists in historical research for independent films. Moser lives in the Los Angeles area with her husband and two sons. Keywords postmodern art, Ancient Near Eastern studies, art history › No folds barred: a review of the documentary film, Between the Folds, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 85-87. › Finding civic identity: a review of Sarah Schrank’s Art and the City: Civic Imagination and Cultural Authority in Los Angeles, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 77-79. Gabrielle Moser › BOOK REVIEWS, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 121-130. Keywords Max Moswitzer Zurich University of the Arts, Department of Design, Ausstellungsstrasse 60, Zurich, 8005, Switzerland Keywords art, metaverse, avatar, text, generative Max Moswitzer (aka MosMax Hax) was born in 1968, and lives and works in Vienna and Zurich. Moswitzer’s output is in fine art and the construction of playful situations, and he uses dérive and détournement as methodology for transformation and reverse engineering of networked computer games and art systems. Since 1996 he has provided his own server (http://www.konsum. net) and is a founding member of www.ludic-society.net. In 2007 Moswitzer moved some of his creative practice into the metaverse, i.e. ®Second Life. His architectural installation Whitenoise was one of four winners in the first annual ‘Architecture and Design’ competition in ®Second Life, an internationally juried event of Ars Electronica 2007. He recently completed Ouvroir, a virtual museum in ®Second Life for Chris Marker commissioned by the Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich. › LPDT2, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 81-100. Julia Moszkowicz Bath Spa University, Bath School of Art and Design, Sion Hill, Lansdown, Bath, Avon, BA1 5SF, United Kingdom Keywords artist-practitioners, exhibition phenomenology, emergence, essence, engagement Julia Moszkowicz is a lecturer in the History and Theory of Design at Bath Spa University College. She has published numerous articles and reviews on new media, painting and photography. Julia Moszkowicz has a Ph.D. on 'Phenomenology and Graphic Design Criticism: a reevaluation of historical precedents in the age of New Media'. Her research explores the questions posed by philosophical writers popular in Europe in the 1920s (such as Edmund Husserl and Henri Bergson) about time and the creative process, and discusses how these critical themes were developed in the words and work of contemporary designers (such as Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and Gyorgy Kepes). Her thesis describes how phenomenology, in particular, underpins the early studio-based languages of Graphic Design's pioneering practitioners and argues that despite being marginalized within recent critical discourse, phenomenological concerns remain at the heart of everyday understandings of the design process. › Exhibition Report, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.2, 149-. › Dialogue with Angie B: a collaborative experiment in art criticism, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.1, 39-48. Judith Mottram Nottingham Trent University, Burton Street, Nottingham, NG1 4BU, United Kingdom Keywords painting, fine art, galleries, technology, art education Judith Mottram is Head of Research at Loughborough University School of Art & Design. From 1994 to 2000, she was Programme Leader for the BA (Hons) Fine Art Painting course. Before that, she spent the six years since completing her Ph.D. in 1988 working in London galleries including Waddingtons and the Hayward Gallery. Her current research focus is on the skills and knowledge that might appropriately be included within Fine Art education, and the nature of research and knowledge across the fields of art & design. Judith is currently Secretary for the National Association for Fine Art Education. › New Knowledge and New Technology: restructuring fine art education, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.2, 98-110. › The pedestal and the pendulum: fine art practice, research and doctorates, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.2, 133-151. Neil Mulholland Edinburgh College of Art, Centre for Visual & Cultural Studies,, 74 Lauriston Place, Edinburgh, EH3 9DF, United Kingdom Neil Mulholland is Director, Centre for Visual & Cultural Studies, Reader in Contemporary Art Theory and Programme Leader of Postgraduate Visual & CulturalStudies at Edinburgh College of Art. He writes frequently on contemporary art for a range of international art publications and practices as an artist and freelance curator. He is author of The Cultural Devolution: Art in Britain in the Keywords criticism, artwriting, miseen-scène, convergence LateTwentiethCentury (Ashgate, 2003). His research is currently focused on the use of ambient tactics and with the rise of neomedievalism in recent art practice. He has experimented with some of these ideas in a range of fictional approaches to writing as well as through his curatorial and art practice. This has led to a more nuanced, polymathic model of the relationships between art history and theory, writing, curating and practice. › Editorial-Myth makars, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 261264. › Parallel lines: form and field in contemporary artwriting, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 343-353. Martin Mulligan RMIT University, Globalism Research Centre, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia Keywords local communities, globalization, community arts Dr. Martin Mulligan is the Director of the Globalism Research Centre at RMIT University in Melbourne where he has specialized in research on the sustainability of local communities in the context of globalization. He was the project coordinator for a project on the contribution that community arts can make to the well-being of local communities for the Victorian health promotion agency VicHealth (completed in 2007) and was a lead researcher (with Pia Smith) on the project for Australia Council for the Arts on the project that resulted in the current article. He has also conducted recent research on what can be learnt from the tsunami disasters in Sri Lanka and India on strategies for rebuilding local communities in the wake of a disaster. › Art, governance and the turn to community: Lessons from a national action research project on community art and local government in Australia, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.1, 27-40. Joan Mullin University of Texas, Division of Rhetoric and Writing, College of Liberal Arts, 1 University Station, B5000, Austin, Texas, TX 78712, United States of America Keywords non-verbal communication, written assessment, practice-based research, Writing PAD, dissertation, concept mapping Joan Mullin is a professor in the Division of Rhetoric and Composition at the University of Texas at Austin where she also leads the College of Liberal Arts Writing Across the Curriculum initiative. Her co-edited collection, Intersections: Theory-Practice in the Writing Center won the 1994 National Writing Center Association Award for Outstanding Scholarship, and the co-authored book, ARTiculating. Teaching Writing in a Visual Culture (Boynton/Cook Heinemann, 1998) indicates her current research interest in visual literacy across international curricula. Past president of the National Writing Centers Association, and former co-editor of The Writing Center Journal she serves on editorial boards and committees nationally and internationally. › Textual and visual interfaces in art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 75-80. › Textual and visual interfaces in art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 139-140. Stuart Munro Bartlett School of Architecture, University College of London, Wates House, 22 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0QB, United Kingdom Keywords visual arts, architecture, music, new media His work is a mixture of sculpture and photography and is a continuing exploration of architecture and the visual arts and has been published, most notably in Digital Architecture Now (Thames and Hudson, 2009). Recent talks and workshops have also been held in Japan and Norway. Professionally, he has worked for a number of award-winning design studios, working with visionary graphic designer Vaughan Oliver on several projects for architecture, print and music. Currently he is a teaching fellow for the Masters Architectural Design programme at the Bartlett School of Architecture, and a member of Advanced Virtual and Technological Architectural Research, a group directed by Professor Neil Spiller. As part of the editorial board for Design Ecologies (Intellect Books) he participated in an accompanying lecture series and exhibition in early 2011. › Ecological Design Vision: Dreaming tongues: Journeys and observations through a sensitive and tempered landscape, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 33-56. Sana Murrani University of Plymouth, School of Archirecture, Room 401 Roland Levinsky Building, Drake circus, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords behavioural spaces, collectivity, complex systems, conceptual architecture, architectural theory Sana Murrani (b. 1977, British-Iraqi) is an experimental architect, and currently holds the position of Lecturer in Architecture at the University of Plymouth, UK. She studied Architecture in Baghdad University School of Architecture, graduating in 2000, and obtained her masters degree from the same school in 2003. Her thesis dealt with the emergence of architectural form and formulation by drawing an analogy between architecture and genetics. Murrani started working as a professional architect in 2000 in Iraq. She is presently exploring aspects of the emergence of biological/artificial systems and perception, and the behaviour of architectural situations of in-between representation and experience. Sana Murrani is a member of the Planetary Collegium’s CAiiA-Hub in Plymouth, UK where she undertook her PhD under the supervision of Roy Ascott (President of Planetary Collegium), Mike Phillips (Director of i-DAT), and computer scientist Steve Grand. › The behaviour of architectural forms, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.3, 133-150. › Third way architecture: Between cybernetics and phenomenology, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.3, 267-281. Stuart Murray United Kingdom Keywords samizdat, zine, selfpublishing Stuart Murray, like many modern artists, has two bases, spending his time between The Calton and Dennistoun. He finds this arrangement extremely stimulating. His drawings are remarkable for sharp-eyed and witted vignettes focusing on the ruminations of the folk encountered in daily life. These pointed renderings depict homelessness and begging, menial jobs, drinking and pub culture. His more recent volumes are marked by a melancholic minimal graphic handling and point-of-view shots of real people. Murray graduated with a BA in Printmaking from the Glasgow School of Art in 2000. Murray has published many of his own books of drawings and more recently has been published by Trajectory, Street Level and Tramway.Exhibitions include Stuart Murray, Jerwood Artists Platform, Cell Project Space, London (2007), Alasdair Gray & Stuart Murray, Embassy Gallery, Edinburgh (2006), second International Biennial of Young Artists, Bucharest (2006) and Stuka Do Kupiena, Galeria Sheik Yerbouti, Krakow, Poland (2004– 2005). › Hampstead Revisited, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 301-325. Chris Murray Keywords comics, graphic novels, film, word and image Chris Murray's research interests are in comics, film and popular culture, specifically the theorization of how popular visual culture relates to other discourses (literature, art, and politics). Dr Murray has published on various aspects of comics, including: the relationship between American superhero comics, popular culture and propaganda during World War Two; the comics of Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman and Grant Morrison; Independent/small press comics (mini-comics) and British comics, specifically DC Thomson.Chris is editor (along with Dr Julia Round) of the Intellect comics journal, Studies in Comics. He is Secretary of the Scottish Word and Image Group, which researches aspects of the relationship between verbal and visual representation. › EDITORIAL, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 3-5. › Editorial, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 189-190. › Interview with The Magus, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 7-19. Shaun Murray Eniatype › Editorial, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 7-12. › Ideation:Eniatype, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 13-32. Keywords architecture, environmental design, design communication › The Unprimed Canvas, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 179-181. Colin Murrell University of Central Lancashire, School of Art, Design and Performance, Preston, Lancashire, PR1 2HE, United Kingdom Keywords health, therapy, research, ethics, pedagogy, community, phenomenology, holism, humanitarian, project management, music, theatre Colin has been creating arts (arts-health, interdisciplinary arts, music, creative writing, painting, sculpture, mixed media, photography, film, theatre, and performance) disseminated internationally via independent labels and publishers since 1981. Colin was elected as supervisor of HANFA Registered Charity 1014855 for the positive interaction of disabled and non-disabled people and worked within in-patient and outpatient art, drama, movement, and music therapy. Currently, Colin works at the University of Central Lancashire. › Reviews, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 193-197. Alla Myzelev University of Guelph › EXHIBITION REVIEW, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 231236. Keywords › BOOK REPORTS, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 249-268. Sylvia Nagl UCL Cancer Institute, Paul O'Gorman Building, 72 Huntley Street, London, WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom Keywords architecture, systems architecture, complexity, symbiogenesis, living technologies Dr. Sylvia Nagl is an internationally recognized leader in complexity science and theory. Her research focuses on complexity of the human body and its interrelationswith natural and built environments across multiple scales. She currently heads the Complex Systems Group at the Cancer Institute, University College London (UCL). Her interdisciplinary interests include computer simulation of complex systems, the body and architecture, the human body in science, art and culture, emergence and evolution. Dr. Nagl maintains a network of collaborators from the arts and sciences in Europe, the Asia-Pacific, India and the United States of America. She has been active in diverse debates on the social, cultural and ethical issues arising from bioscience, genomic medicine and digital technologies as a speaker and writer for over twenty years. Dr. Nagl’s work is creating fresh models of thought for biomedicine,architecture, sustainability and transdisciplinary culture in the twenty-first century. › Spaces of affinity, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 191-197. Toshio Naoe University of Tsukuba, Institute of Art and Design, Tsukuba-shi, Ibarakiken, 305-8574, Japan Keywords cooperative learning, secondary teacher education, art, curriculum development, Japan Toshio Naoe, Ph.D. is Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba. He teaches art education on undergraduate, masters and doctorate programmes. He is the author of Reform in Art Education in the First Half of the Twentieth Century in the United Kingdom published in Tokyo by Kenpakusha in 2002. He has also translated Herbert Read’s Education thorough Art into Japanese. › The role of cooperative learning in the introductory stages of art teacher training programmes in Japan, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 163-176. Cláudia Martin Nascimento Rua Linda Ferreira da Rosa, 75 – Perdizes, Cep: 05010-030, São Paulo, Brazil Keywords hypermedia, complexity, web design, mythology, narratives, construction of meaning, hypertext, structure, webs, symbology Cláudia Martin Nascimento is a web designer. She completed her BA in Design in 1996 at Armando Álvares Penteado Foundation (FAAP), São Paulo, Brazil. She obtained her MA in Aesthetics and Art History in 2007 at the University of São Paulo (USP), São Paulo, Brazil. Her research project 'A planetary myth: exploring hypermedia' is a study in which the narrative structure of hypermedia was put in parallel with that found by the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss in the SouthAmerican indigenous mythical narratives. Her research interests include hypermedia structure, web universes, complexity and production of meaning. She works as a web designer since 1998 and had developed projects for big companies and multinationals. › Exploring hypermedia through the myths, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.3, 269-285. Hala F. Nassar Clemson University, Department of Hala F. Nassar, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture at Clemson University, South Carolina. She holds a BSArch, MSArch, and Ph.D. in History of Landscape Architecture from Ain Shams Planning and Landscape Architecture, 168 C Lee Hall, Box 340511, SC, 29634-0511, United States of America University in Cairo, Egypt, and Master of Agricultural sciences in Landscape Design from Pennsylvania State University. She is a founding principal and CEO of HewittNassar Studio. Dr. Nassar served as a faculty member at Ain Shams University while practicing at COPA and ESEI in Cairo before arriving in the United States in 1996. Originally from Egypt, Dr. Nassar brings her broad international understanding of design and culture into her practice, research and teaching. Her research and practice interests include historical and cultural landscapes, Islamic landscape tradition, international education, multiculturalism and the effects of globalization on landscape change. Keywords landscape architecture, design, culture, Islam, globalization › Social justice agency in the landscape architecture studio: an action research approach, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 91-103. Santiago Navarro Universidad de Sevilla, Faculty of Fine Arts, Seville Keywords Alzheimer's disease, sculpture, interdisciplinary research Since 2007 Santiago Navarro has been Vicedecano de Relaciones Internacionales (International Officer) in the Faculty of Fine Arts, Universidad de Sevilla. He studied Fine Arts at the Universidad de Sevilla from 1989 to 1994. Between 1994 to 1999 he received grants to study at the Accademia di Belle Arti, Florence (Italy); Angel’s Orensanz Foundation, New York, (EEUU); and the Scola de Belas Artes, Belo Horizonte (MG-Brazil). Since 1999 he has taught sculpture in the Faculty of Fine Arts in Seville and a doctoral course entitled The Human Body: Meaning into the Contemporary Art World. Research projects include The plastic-sculpture representation of Alzheimer’s disease (1987–97) and Microfusion on ceramic shell: New techniques in bronze casting (2002–06). This project is being developed at the Universitá degli Studii di Firenze (Italy) and Universidade de Lisboa (Portugal). › Alzheimer's: Researching the disease through sculpture, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 133-140. Joseph Nechvatal School of Visual Arts, MFA Computer Arts, 143 Ludlow Street #14, New York, Manhattan, 10002, United States of America Keywords immersive, excess, deep, space, Apse of Lascaux, Since 1986 Joseph Nechvatal has worked with ubiquitous electronic visual information, computers and computer-robotics. His computerrobotic assisted paintings and computer software animations are shown regularly in galleries and museums throughout the world. From 19911993 he worked as artist-in-resident at the Louis Pasteur Atelier and the Saline Royale / Ledoux Foundation's computer lab in Arbois, France on The Computer Virus Project: an experiment with computer viruses as a creative stratagem. In 2002 he extended that artistic research into the field of viral artificial life through his collaboration consciousness, artificial life, virtual reality, noise, immersion, digital art, a-life, audio art, VR with the programmer Stéphane Sikora. Dr. Nechvatal earned his Ph.D. in the philosophy of art and new technology at The Centre for Advanced Inquiry in the Interactive Arts (CAiiA) University of Wales College, Newport, where he served as conference coordinator for the 1st International CAiiA Research Conference entitled 'Consciousness Reframed: Art and Consciousness in the Post-Biological Era' (July 1997). › Immersive Excess in the Apse of Lascaux, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.3, 181-. Ken Neil Glasgow School of Art, Forum for Critical Inquiry, 167 Renfrew Street, Glasgow, G3 6RQ, United Kingdom Ken Neil is Head of Fine Art at Gray's School of Art in Abderdeen. He studied art history and painting at Edinburgh University and Edinburgh College of Art. He has recently completed a Ph.D. that considered the significance of the 'banal' reproduction of the everyday in the painting of the American photorealist. Keywords fine art, visual art, painting, photorealism › …While I am thinking I am just over here…, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 12-17. Fabian Neuhaus University College London, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London, W1T 4TJ, United Kingdom Keywords urban environment, urban design, architecture Fabian Neuhaus, Ph.D. Researcher, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London. His main research interest are temporal aspects of the urban environment in general and cyclical, repetitive temporal patterns specifically. He has been teaching at the University of Plymouth, School of Architecture as a unit tutor in year three and a tutor in year four and five as well as at the Bartlett School of Architecture with the MA Urban Design course as a unit Tutor. He is an invited guest critique at the Bartlett, Architecture Association AA, London Met Faculty of Architecture and Spatial Design, Plymouth School of Architecture. For his Masters of Science in Urban Design at the Bartlett School of Architecture, he was awarded a distinction. Fabian also received a Masters of Architecture from FHNW Basel, Switzerland. He has worked with architecture and urban design practices in the UK and Switzerland as well as › New city landscape – Mapping urban Twitter usage, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 9.1, 31-48. Darren Newbury Birmingham City University, Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, United Kingdom Keywords photography, visual studies, research methods, design, doctoral education, research training, research degrees Darren Newbury is Professor of Photography at Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, Birmingham City University. He has published widely on photography, photographic education and visual research. His most recent research has focused on the development of photography in apartheid South Africa and the re-use of historical images as a form of memorialization in contemporary post-apartheid displays. His book on the subject, Defiant Images: Photography and Apartheid South Africa, was published by the University of South Africa (UNISA) Press in 2009. He is also editor of the international journal Visual Studies. › Doctoral education in design, the process of research degree study, and the 'trained researcher', Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 149-160. Kristina Niedderer University of Wolverhampton, School of Art and Design, Molineux Street, Wolverhampton, WV1 1SB, United Kingdom Keywords experiential knowledge, knowing, knowledge communication, research exhibition, research education, craft research, future of craft, craft theory and practice, craft education, conceptual issues, artefacts, performative objects Dr. Kristina Niedderer, is reader in Design and Applied Arts at the University of Wolverhampton. She is course leader for Applied Arts, and leads Contextual Studies in the Division of Design and Applied Arts and the 'Material and Theoretical Practice' Research Cluster. She was originally apprenticed, and worked as a goldsmith and silversmith in Germany. She then trained as a designer and design researcher in the United Kingdom, with an MA (RCA) and a Ph.D. in Design. A practitioner and researcher, Kristina exhibits and publishes her work regularly at international level. She has been a keynote speaker and has lectured at various universities worldwide. Her research interests range across conceptual issues in craft and design; fundamental principles and practices of using practice within research; the nature and role of knowledge in research; research education. › New knowledge in the creative disciplines – proceedings of the first Experiential Knowledge Conference 2007, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 81-88. › Editorial, Craft Research, 1.1, 3-10. › Expanding craft: Reappraising the value of skill, Craft Research, 2.1, 3-10. Ole John Nielsen University of Copenhagen, Department of Chemistry, Universitetparken 5, 2100 Cpoenhagen 0, Denmark Professor Ole John Nielsen, Ph.D., Copenhagen Centre for Atmospheric Research, University of Copenhagen. 2007 Nobel Peace Prize winner together with Al Gore and 2,500 scientists. He is a member of Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC) and professor of Atmospheric Chemistry since 1999. He was previously employed for 21 years with Risø National Laboratory and 1.5 years with Ford Motor Company. He received his M.Sc. in Spectroscopy Keywords living architecture, green architecture, sustainability, climate adaptation and mitigation, systems architecture from the University of Copenhagen (UoC) in 1978 and a Ph.D. in Atmospheric Chemistry from UoC in 1984. His research interests include atmospheric chemistry and hence the environmental impact of CFC replacement compounds and of oxygenated species, fundamental kinetics and mechanisms of reactions important in atmospheric and combustion chemistry, determination of the environmental impact of anthropogenic and natural emissions – out-door as well as in-door chemistry, atmospheric particulates, air pollution chemistry and global change. › The nautilus – evolving architecture and city landscapes for future sustainable development, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 105-115. Jennifer Kanary Nikolov(a) University of Amsterdam, Krommenieerpad 88, 1521 HB Wormerveer, Amsterdam, Netherlands Keywords art research, physics of thought, independent artist The independent artist Jennifer Kanary Nikolov(a) studied fashion design from 1994 to 1998 before graduating with the first version of roomforthoughts from the fine arts department of the Maastricht Art Academy in 2000.She continued with a Master’s programme at the Sandberg Institute in Amsterdam, which she completed in 2002. Afterwards, she was invited to participate in the first experimental curating course initiated by the University of Amsterdam and the Sandberg Institute. Jennifer has participated in several art and science projects such as Battle of the Universities, Kloone4000 and Discovery07. From November 2007 to April 2008, she has been artistinresidence at the National Psychiatry Museum in Haarlem, the Netherlands. Since 2008, she is the head tutor of the Honours Program Art and Research of the University of Amsterdam and the Gerrit Rietveld Academie Amsterdam. All her installations are about the physics of thought. › Hallucinations, an existential crisis?, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 197-206. Nithikul Nimkulrat Loughborough University, School of the Arts, Loughborough, Leicestershire, LE11 3 TU, United Kingdom Keywords reflective practice, practice-led research, expressivity, materiality, textiles, crafts Nithikul Nimkulrat is a Thai textile artist, designer and researcher, currently working as a Lecturer at the Loughborough University in the UK. She earned a Doctor of Arts Degree from the University of Art and Design Helsinki in 2009. Her research interest is rooted in her textile practice, reaching across conceptual issues in art and design, especially the role of creative practice in academic research and the immateriality of physical materials in creative processes. Having situated her work at the intersection of art and design, and at that of the academic and art worlds, her creative artefacts have received awards and have been exhibited internationally, while her research has been published and presented at international art and design conferences and in publications. › Material inspiration: From practice-led research to craft art education, Craft Research, 1.1, 63-84. Martha Patricia Niño Mojica Universidad Javeriana en Bogotá, Carrera 7 # 40 - 6, Bogotá, (0)3208320, Colombia Keywords fiction, immateriality, subjectivity, telematics bio-power, new world border Martha Patricia Niño Mojica is professor of multimedia in the Department of Visual Arts at Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá Colombia, and has lectured at Universidad de los Andes. She has first degree in fine arts. She continued her studies with a postgraduate Diploma in Multimedia, and in 2004 she was an UNESCO Aschberg Bursaries for Artists laureate at the Planetary Collegium, Plymouth University, United Kingdom. Currently doing postgraduate studies at University of Plymouth. She also forms part of the reviews panel of Leonardo Journal of MIT. Her work as an artist and academic has participated at various international conferences, publications and exhibitions. › Technologies of delusion and subjectivity, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.3, 203-210. › Imaginary cartographies: race and new world borders, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.2, 119-. Christine Noweski Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Softwaresystemtechnik GmbH, ProfDr-Helmert-Str. 2–3, Potsdam, 14482, Germany Keywords design discourses, metadiscipline, creative collaboration, wicked problems, design cognition Christine Noweski studied Political Science in Potsdam (Germany) and Bangalore (India) before she took part in the Design Thinking course at HPI School of Design Thinking at Potsdam. Currently, she is participating in the HPI-StanfordDesign Thinking Research Program as a Ph.D. student. Her research interests are norms and values in work life, especially in teams. As part of her research project,she is conducting team experiments in cooperation with Stanford University and Helsinki University of Technology. › Evolving discourses on design thinking: how design cognition inspires metadisciplinary creative collaboration, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 31-37. Tony O'Connor Tony received his Ph.D. from the National University of Ireland in University College Cork, College of Arts, Celtic Studies and Social Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 1 & 2 Lucan Place, Western Road, Cork, United Kingdom 1975. He has been teaching at the Philosophy Department, University College Cork for almost thirty years. In addition to the conventional activities of writing and teaching, he likes to generate and be involved in philosophical discussion and debate. To this end, Tony has been very active in the organization of conferences and symposia. In addition, he likes to co-operate with the Centre for Adult and Continuing Education here at UCC, especially on its Diploma in Social Studies course. Keywords writing, education, philosophy › Editorial Introduction Aesthetics and its objects – challenges from art and experience, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 123-126. Simon O'Meara Keywords Simon O'Meara is the material culture research fellow of the European Research Council-funded project, 'The Here and the Hereafter in Islamic Traditions', hosted by the University of Utrecht. Prior to this appointment, he was an associate professor of Art History at the American University of Kuwait. He researches the sociological dimensions of Islamic art and architecture, with a regional focus on the art and architecture of North Africa. › CONFERENCE PRECIS, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 179-189. Paul O'Neill University of the West of England, Situations Office, Spike Island, 133 Cumberland Road, Bristol, BS1 6UX, United Kingdom Keywords curating, writing Paul O'Neill is a writer, artist and curator based in London. He has curator over 40 exhibitions and projects in Britain and Ireland. He was gallery curator of the London Print Studio between 2001 and 2003 and is co-director of Multiples X. He is editor of 'Curating Subjects' (De Appel and Open Editions, 2006), an anthology of new curatorial writing and a contributor to 'Art Monthly', 'Cica' and 'The Internationaler'. › Curatorial counter-rhetorics and the educational turn, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 177-193. Peter O'Neill London Metropolitan University, Peter O’Neill is a Writing Specialist for the Write Now Centre for Teaching and Learning at London Metropolitan University and is particularly interested in collaborative peer tutoring in writing and in Calcutta House, London, E1 7NT, United Kingdom Writing in the Disciplines initiatives with academic staff. He is involved in various research activities involving the Writing Centre. In particular,he has long-standing interests in ancient Rhetoric which he hopes to explore from a more practical standpoint. Keywords academic writing, CETL, collaboration, design, design practice › writing design: A collaboration between the Write Now CETL and The Sir John Cass Department of Art, Media and Design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 177-182. Mary O'Neill University of Lincoln, Fine Art, Brayford Pool, Lincoln, LN6 7TS, United Kingdom Keywords art writing, narrative, recipient design, ephemerality Mary O’Neill is Senior Lecturer in Cultural Context and Higher Education Academy Teaching Fellow at the University of Lincoln. Her doctoral research was on the relationship between ephemeral practices in contemporary art and the behaviours associated with bereavement. Her current research interests span a variety of disciplines and fields and include loss, failure, boredom, rejection andsorrow (see ‘Art and Money: Experience Destruction Exposure’ in Money and Culture, Peter Lang 2007). She is interested in the methodology of communicating these subjects and the intersection between academic writing and creative narrative. She was organizer of the symposium Telling Stories: Theory and Narrative, Loughborough University, 2007. Her interest in challenging and difficult material has also led to an examination of ethics and contemporary art. › Here, ‘I’ am, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 293-300. Jhong Sook Oh Institute of Atelier-based Art Education, 202/147-2 Garak, 2 dong Sonpa gu, Seoul, Korea Sout Keywords hermeneutic method, meaning making, young children, art expression Jhong Sook Oh earned her Ph.D. at Hong Ik University in Seoul. She graduated from Seoul National University of Education and was an elementary teacher. She wasEducational Coordinator at Samsung Children’s Museum and Adviser at the Children’s Art Museum, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Korea. She was Professor at Bakseok Art College. Currently she is Director of the Institute of Atelier–based Art education. Her research interest is children’s strategies of art expression and hermeneutic enquiry method. › Documenting children's dialogue: a hermeneutic phenomenological approach, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 75-81. Selavy Oh Keywords art, metaverse, avatar, text Selavy Oh was created in 2007 as an avatar in ®Second Life, where she works using the virtual world as medium. She presented her work in solo exhibitions within ®Second Life, e.g. at IBM exhibition space, Arthole Gallery, and Odyssey. Her work was selected for the ‘Final 5’ exhibition of the mixed-media project Brooklyn Is Watching at the Brooklyn art gallery, Jack The Pelican Presents. Her work has been covered by prestigious web publications such as SmartHistory and art:21. Selavy’s creator works as a neuroscientist at the University of Munich investigating topics from spatial perception over computational neuroscience to human-robot interaction. › LPDT2, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 81-100. Daisuke Okeda Kitahama partners, 14F Sapia Tower, 1-7-12 Marunouchi, Chiyoda-ku,, Tokyo, 100-0005, Japan Keywords animation, Japanese art Daisuke Okeda is a lawyer in Japan and an inspector/director of JAniCA ( Japanese Animation Creators Association ). His special field is computer & IT law, the animation industry and racketeering through intercession in civil disputes. JAniCA is a non-profit organisation composed of Japanese animators, animation directors and their supporters. › Working conditions of animators: The real face of the Japanese animation industry, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 261-271. Tahneer Oksman CUNY Graduate Center Keywords women, Jewish identity, autobiography, comics Tahneer Oksman is pursuing a Ph.D. in English Literature at the Graduate Center at CUNY, and she is currently a Writing Fellow at Brooklyn College. Her dissertation, ‘”Sources”: Jewish American women’s writing post-assimilation’, explores works of prose, as well as comics. Her interests include Jewish American and ethnic literature after 1900, contemporary autobiography and autobiography theory, including graphic memoirs, and the photography of autobiography. Her essay ‘Mourning in the Family Album’ is forthcoming in a/b: Auto/Biography Studies. › Visualizing the Jewish body in Aline Kominsky Crumb's Need More Love, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 213-232. › REVIEWS, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 223-232. Nana Afia Opoku–Asare Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Art, Department of Art Education, P. O. BOX UP 492, Kumasi, Ghana Keywords art education, culture, development, gender, symbolism, African art, dyes, dyeing processes Nana Afia Opoku–Asare is a senior lecturer in Art Education in the Department of General Art Studies, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana. She holds an MA in Art Education from KNUST and MPhil in Education from the University of Sussex at Brighton, UK. Her research interests include issues in culture, education and development; gender and art production; symbolism in African art and culture; dyes and dyeing processes; materials and methods for art teaching; studio art practice. › Cultural identity in the murals of Sirigu women and their role in art education and social sustainability, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 187-202. Hod Orkibi University of Haifa, Graduate School of Creative Arts Therapies, 11/14 Hana Rovina St., Tel-Aviv, 69372, Israel Keywords professional identity, psychodrama and dramatherapy, arts therapy, youth, gender, drama Hod Orkibi, Ph.D., is a creative arts therapist specializing in intermodal psychodrama, faculty member, and Head of the Field Training Division at the Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies at Haifa University, Israel. His practice involves inter-modal psychodrama, teaching, and administration. Hod is a registered member of the International Expressive Arts Therapy Association (IEATA); the Israeli Association of Psychodrama (I.A.P.); and the Israeli Association of Creative and Expressive Therapists (I.C.E.T.). He holds a BSc in Psychology, a BEd in Theatre Education and Directing, an MA in Expressive Arts Therapy, and an MA in Theatre Arts. His research interests include professional identity development, supervision and filed training; psychodrama and drama therapy; teach-treat boundaries in experiential learning; aesthetics topics in the creative art therapies; and drama-based assessment. › The experience of acting: A synthesis of concepts and a clinical vignette, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 193-203. Emily Orley Roehampton University, Digby Stuart College, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PH, United Kingdom Keywords place, encounter, sitewriting, Benjamin, Rendell Dr. Emily Orley is a practicing artist and lecturer in Drama Theatre and Performance at Roehampton University. Her research reflects on, and engages with, place-writing, installation art, performance and scenography. She has degrees from the Wimbledon School of Art, Cambridge and Roehampton Universities, and trained at the Jacques Lecoq School in Paris. › Getting at and into place: writing as practice and research, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 159-172. Susan Orr Sheffield Hallam University, Faculty of Arts, Computing, Engineering and Sciences, City Campus, Howard Street, Sheffield, Yorkshire, S1 1WB, United Kingdom Keywords non-verbal communication, written assessment, practice-based research, Writing PAD, dissertation, concept mapping Susan Orr is Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Arts at York St. John University. In 2009, she was awarded a chair in Pedagogy in Creative Practice. Susan’s research focuses on assessment practices in art and design. She has developed a theorized account of art and design assessment practice that has been used as a means to bring greater reflexivity to the assessment practices adopted in art and design. Working from a social constructivist perspective, her research identifies that assessment discourses are interlocked with narratives of identity and power relations. Susan also researches the role of writing in arts based curricula. Her research in this area subverts the visual/textual binary by recasting writing as a practice that has much in common with studio practice. › Textual and visual interfaces in art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 75-80. › Textual and visual interfaces in art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 139-140. › Assessment practices in art and design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 79-82. › We kind of try to merge our own experience with the objectivity of the criteria: The role of connoisseurship and tacit practice in undergraduate fine art assessment, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 519. › Editorial: Writing encounters within performance and pedagogical practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 5-13. › Editorial: Space and place: writing encounters self, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 133-138. › 11th European League Institutes of the Arts Biennial Conference: HEARTH l'art au coeur du territoire › Nantes, France, 2730 October 2010, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 181-184. › Reflect on this!, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 197-210. Peter Osborne Middlesex University, Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy, Trent Park, Bramley Road, London N14 4YZ, United Kingdom Keywords photography, digital image, post-digitalization, photographic form, social form Peter Osborne is Professor of Modern European Philosophy and Director of the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy, Middlesex University, London and an editor of the journal Radical Philosophy. His books include The Politics of Time: Modernity and Avant-Garde (Verso, 1995), Philosophy in Cultural Theory (Routledge, 2000), Conceptual Art (Phaidon, 2002), Marx (Granta, 2005) and (ed.) Walter Benjamin: Critical Evaluations in Cultural Theory (3 Volumes, Routledge, 2005). › Infinite exchange: The social ontology of the photographic image, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 59-68. Jane Osmond Coventry University, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords threshold concepts, industrial design, tacit knowledge, CETL, pedagogic research Jane Osmond is Senior Research Assistant for the Centre of Excellence for Product and Automotive Design (CEPAD), Coventry University and is researching students’ spatial awareness skills, threshold concepts in design and internationalization of the curriculum. Jane is undertaking a Ph.D. by research in this area, and has published several papers on threshold concepts. › Threshold concepts and the transport and product design curriculum: reports of research in progress, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 169-175. Willy Oud Kohnstamm Instituut, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Plantage Muidergracht 24, Postbus 94208, 1090 GE Amsterdam, Netherlands Willy Oud is Senior Researcher and project leader at the Kohnstamm Instituut of the Universiteit van Amsterdam (University of Amsterdam, UvA) since 1985. She specializes in research on innovation projects in the field of arts education. She was previously a primary school teacher before she simultaneously studied Education Science at the UvA and at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam. Keywords art education, innovation projects › Researching effects on ‘ArtWork(s) in the Third Sector’: how can we evaluate community arts projects?, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.3, 203215. Ellen O’Hara Cockpit Arts, Cockpit Yard, Northington Street, London, WC1N 2NP, United Kingdom Keywords economics, business development, craft business models Ellen O’Hara is Head of Business Development. She holds a degree in Economics and Econometrics from the University of Birmingham and a postgraduate diploma in Administrative Management. She joined Cockpit Arts in 2006, where she is responsible for the design of the business development strand of the incubation offer. She leads Cockpit Arts’ research projects, which have a focus on craft business models and the impact of incubation on growth. Ellen previously worked for The Princes Trust, Arts Council England and Andersen management consultancy. She sits on the Board of Directors for CreativePeop!e, a national network of professional development providers, and This is Not a Gateway, an organization that facilitates the production and exchange of current thinking and research in urbanism. › Raising the Bar – a study of growth trends among Cockpit Arts studio holders and the impact of incubation on their development, Craft Research, 2.1, 129-141. Martina PaatelaNieminen University of Eastern Finland, School of Applied Educational Science and Teacher Education, Harmaapadentie 3, Helsinki, 930, Finland Keywords intertextuality, art, museum pedagogy, young children Martina Paatela-Nieminen gained her Doctorate of Arts from the University of Art and Design, Helsinki (now Aalto University, School of Art and Design) in 2001. She worked as a senior research associate in the School of Art Education at the same university from 1985 until 2006. From 2006-2008 she was a lecturer in visual arts education in the Department of Applied Sciences of Education, Faculty of Behavioural Sciences, at the University of Helsinki. In 2008 she was a lecturer at UIAH.She is currently a professor at the University of Eastern Finland. She has also two adjunct professorships and for the last two years she has been a postdoctoral researcher at the Academy of Finland. Her research interests are art education both in the field of class teacher and art teacher studies, intertextual methodology and intercultural and media projects. She is currently chair of InSEA Finland. › Applying intertextual method in museum pedagogy: studying portraits as cultural texts at Sinebrychoff Art Museum, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.3, 199-210. Kyong-Mi Paek Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), Banyeon-ri 100, Eonyang-eup, Ulju-gun,, Ulsan, 689-798, Korea Sout Keywords art education, creative processes, inquiry oriented learning, interdisciplinary approaches Kyong-Mi Paek is Assistant Professor at Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea. She received her Ed.D. in art education from Teachers College, Columbia University in New York. Her research interests includes socio-cultural aspects of art learning, creative processes and practices in the arts, cognitive approaches to art learning, inquiry oriented learning and interdisciplinary approaches. Her recent research involves investigation of contemporary Korean sociocultural art education practice and a curriculum development research project for the programmes for gifted and talented youth in the visual arts. › Empowering Korean pre-service teachers of art, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.1, 27-42. Adrian Page Keywords consciousness, Kafka, literature, reading, virtual reality Adrian Page is now Academic Leader for the Humanities and Social Sciences modular scheme at London Metropolitan University where he is also teaching and researching in the culture industries. Prior to this he was Deputy Head of Media Arts at the University of Luton. He has researched and published on many aspects of culture and philosophy, including literary theory, new technologies, film and television drama. › The end of reading, the beginning of virtual fiction?, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.1, 33-44. Daniel Palmer Monash University, Melbourne, Art Theory Program, Faculty of Art & Design, Monash University, PO Box 197, Caulfield East, VIC 3145, Australia Dr Daniel Palmer is Senior Lecturer in the Art Theory Program at the Faculty of Art & Design at Monash University, Melbourne. His publications include Twelve Australian Photo Artists (with Blair French) (2009), Participatory Media: Visual Culture in Real Time (2008) and as editor Photogenic: Essays/Photography/CCP 2000–2004 (2005). Keywords civil contract of photography, Ariella Azoulay, surveillance, terrorism, photography restrictions › No Credible Photographic Interest: Photography restrictions and surveillance in a time of terror, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 177-195. › Reflections on medium specificity occasioned by the symposium 'Digital Light: Technique, Technology, Creation', Melbourne, 2011, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 37-49. Luisa Paraguai Anhembi Morumbi University, Rua Aldo Oliveira Barbosa, 58 Parque das Universidades 13086-030, Campinas, SP, Brazil Keywords experience, mediated ritual, enactive interface, multisensory interfaces, mobile devices Luisa Paraguai, artist and civil engineer, holds a Master and Ph.D. in Multimedia from Institute of Arts at State University of Campinas, Brazil. Ad Hoc Consultant at CAPES and Visiting-researcher in residence at Planetary Collegium, Plymouth, United Kingdom. She has been teaching at Master Program in Design at Anhembi Morumbi University, a member of Laureate International Universities. She is currently investigating the potential of mobile devices as an interface for bodyspace perception and experimentation. › Mobile devices, designing affective spatialities, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 221-228. Maria Jesús Agra Pardiñas University of Santiago de Compostela, Faculty of Education, Campus Norte, Avda. Xoán XXIII, s/n, 15704 Santiago de Compostela, 15704, Spain Keywords art education, teacher training, contemporary art Mª Jesús Agra Pardiñas, Visual Artist, Ph.D. in Fine Arts by the Complutense University of Madrid, is a permanent lecturer of Art Education in the Educational Sciences Faculty of Santiago de Compostela University. Shefocusses her profesional interests on the analysis of the relationship between Art and Education and its involvement in Teacher´s Training. Her last research is framed within the Artistic narrative-based research (Art Based Research),and how the new trends of Contemporary Art should be taken into account in Art Education. › Questions before words An Educational Space, a Stimulating Space, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 7-26. Montserrat ParejaEastaway University of Barcelona, Department of Economics, Research Group on Creativity, Innovation and Urban Transformation, Faculty of Economy and Business, Avinguda Diagonal, 696. 3ª planta, Barcelona, 8034, Spain Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway is an Associate Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Barcelona. She currently leads the Research Group on Creativity, Innovation and Urban Transformation, and coordinates the Barcelona ACRE team. She has published several articles on comparative housing policies, on creativity and knowledge in the Barcelona Metropolitan Region, and on urban regeneration towards sustainable development. › New economy, new governance approaches? Fostering creativity and knowledge in the Barcelona Metropolitan Region, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 29-46. Keywords actors' involvement, institutional thickness, leadership, creative and knowledge economy, governance Raquel Paricio Garcia Universidad de Alcalá de Henares, Ali Bey 12, 1/31/2003, Barcelona, Calalunya, 8010, Spain Keywords evolution, new humanism movement, qualia, space of perception, space of representation Raquel Paricio Garcia graduated in Fine Arts and is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the Technical University of Catalunya (UPC) in Barcelona on Evolvable applicationsin Art installations. Her research interests include body consciousness and expression and multi-sensory environments and interfaces, apperception and new qualia. During the last three years she has been developing a robotic installation with evolvable hardware (www.evolvable.net/poetic) in cooperation with a research group from UPC. She is the creator and editor of www.resqualia.net on-line space. She is currently granted by the Catalunya Goverment to develop her work and research. She has been teaching in different University schools of Barcelona. She has participated in exhibitions held in Mendel Art Gallery Saskatoon, Fundacio Tapies, Digital Culture Festival, at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, E-literature Festival, Primavera Sound, Agora Möbius and University of Valencia. › Res-qualia: Could consciousness evolve?, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 35-44. Guillaume Paris Keywords dispositif, heterogeneity, immanence, montage, sinuosity Guillaume Paris is an artist and professor of artistic practice at the Ecole nationale supérieure des beaux-arts in Paris. After initially studying engineering at the Cooper Union in New York City, he earned his BFA from that same institution in 1991. He subsequently pursued his art education at the Institut des Hautes Etudes en Arts Plastiques, in Paris. He has been artist in residence at the Core Program in Houston, Texas, at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam and at the Villa Medici in Rome. Paris has exhibited widely in France – with solo exhibitions at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris and the Musée d’Art Moderne et Contemporain in Strasbourg – and internationnally, in New York, London, Tokyo, Amsterdam, Torino, Prague and Quebec. His work involves a complex and contemporary negotiation of the phenomena of fetishism, reification, faith and the general instrumentalisation of magical and religious thoughts in postmodern society. › Structures of allusion, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 99-117. Clare Park Keywords power, dyskinesia, theatre, movement, photography Clare Park MA (RCA) is a creative and fine art photographer who specializes in portraiture. She explores photographic self image through the use of symbol and metaphor, having begun developing this work as a response to personal narratives of her own life journey and her reflections upon being a dancer. Her strong personal style is evident in posters for theatre and dance companies such as the RNT, RSC and the ROH Covent Garden. The body, movement and collaboration are keys to Clare's work whether it be for a commissioned portrait or for a personal project. › Dance with time: Movement, when all is said and done, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 205-213. Alexander Pasko United Kingdom Keywords function representation (FRep), boundary representation (BRep), HyperFun, Fab at Home (FaH), volumetric computation Alexander Pasko is Professor at the National Centre for Computer Animation, Bournemouth University. Dr. Pasko researches the function-based modelling of shapes in space-time and applying such new modelling methods and tools in animation, sculpture and other artistic forms. His research work started in Russia, then moved to Japan in 1993 and finally to the United Kingdom in 2007. Along with his colleagues, Dr. Pasko has introduced, and has continued to develop, a new approach to modelling real and abstractvolumetric objects along with their internal properties. Together, they have published more than 100 papers in academic journals and conference proceedings. › Fabricating Nature, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 165-173. Andrew Gryf Paterson Andrew Gryf Paterson is a Scottish artist-organizer, cultural producer and independant researcher, based in Helsinki, Finland. His work Aalto University, School of Art and Design, Media Lab, Hämeentie, Helsinki, 135 C, Finland involves variable roles of initiator participant, author and curator, according to different collaborative and cross-disciplinary processes. Andrew works accross the fields of media/network/environmental arts and activism, persuing a participatory practise via workshops, performative events and storytelling. Keywords cultural producer, independant researcher, media art, network arts, environmental arts › Stratigraphical recall: An auto-archaeological interpretation of artistic fieldwork, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 51-69. Ryan Patrick Keywords storytelling, teacher, writer Patrick Ryan, Ph.D., FEA, is a storyteller, teacher and writer. Based in London, he tells stories, lectures and leads workshops on storytelling throughout the United Kingdom, as well as elsewhere in Europe and the United States. Significant storytelling projects in community and educational arts schemes in which he has participated include ‘Kick into Reading’ with the National Literacy Trust, ‘Writing Together’ with the National Association of Writers in Education, and ‘Listen Up!’ with the Verbal Arts Centre. He is a Research Fellow with the George Ewart Evans Centre for Storytelling at the University of Glamorgan. Publications include several articles and book chapters, the children’s anthology Shakespeare’s Storybook (Barefoot, 2001), and Storytelling in Ireland: A Reawakening (Verbal Arts Centre, 1995). › Talking the Game: A Case Study of an Oral Narrative Project with Professional Footballers, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.1, 79-92. Martin Patrick Keywords art critic, history, art/life divide Martin Patrick, an art critic and historian, is Senior Lecturer of Critical Studies at Massey University in Wellington, New Zealand. His writings have appeared in publications including Afterimage, Art Journal, Art Monthly, and Third Text. He has taught as a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago. Two of his essays were included in One Day Sculpture (Cross and Doherty(eds) 2009), and he is currently working on a book that examines artists who engage with the art/life divide. › Performative tactics and the choreographic reinvention of public space, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 65-84. Lissa Paul Brock University, Department of Undergraduate and Graduate Studies in Education, Department of Undergraduate and Graduate Studies in Education, Department of Education, Brock University, 500 Glenridge Avenue, St. Catharines, Ontario, L2S 3A1, Canada Keywords Lissa Paul is a professor at Brock University in the Niagara region of Ontario, Canada. She is the author of Reading Otherways, (Thimble Press, 1998), The Children's Book Business, (Routledge, 2011), an associate general editor of The Norton Anthology of Children's Literature, Norton, 2005, and co-editor, with Philip Nel, of Keywords for Children's Literature (New York University Press, 2011). Supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Council of Canada, Lissa is working on a biography of Eliza Fenwick (b.1766–d.1840), a lateEnlightenment British author of one adult novel and several children's books, who lived and worked for a time in Niagara and Toronto. › history.child.book.shop.2.0., Book 2.0, 1.1, 7-20. Ricardo Peach Australia Council for the Arts, 372 Elizabeth Street, Surry Hills, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia Keywords queer cinema, emerging artists Dr. Ricardo Peach is the Program Manager of the Inter-Arts Office at the Australia Council for the Arts. He initiated the Council’s AlloSphere artist residency at the California NanoSystems Institute in the University of California, Santa Barbara; the Splendid Young and Emerging Artist initiative with the music festival Splendour in the Grass; and the first government supported artist residency in Second Life. His Ph.D. thesis was on crosscultural comparatives of Queer cinema in Australia and South Africa. Peach was born in Mpumalanga in South Africa and moved with his family to Australia in the 1980s. › Proticipation: The Australia council and social media arts in virtual worlds, Metaverse Creativity, 1.2, 223-249. Julia Peck Roehampton University, Media, Culture and Language, Roehampton University, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PU, United Kingdom Keywords photography, Australian landscape, student support Dr. Julia Peck is Senior Lecturer in Photography at Roehampton University, London. Her doctoral thesis examined the visual construction of the Australian landscape in commercial photographic practices. She has a B.A. Photographic Studies from University of Derby and MA Photography from London College of Printing. Her photographic work has been exhibited in the United Kingdom and she has contributed images and reviews to Next Level, Source and History of Photography. She has over fifteen years experience teaching across all levels of photography education, and has specific interests in Widening Participation and student support, especially in relation to written assignments. › Learning support: Student perceptions and preferences, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 135-149. Y.S. Peligah Tamale Polytechnic, Office of the Rector, PO Box 3ER, Tamale, Education Ridge, ER, Ghana Keywords child art, Ghana, creativity, aesthetics, education Alhaji Dr. Y.S. Peligah was formerly the Head of Department and a Senior Lecturer at the Department of General Art Studies (Art Education), at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST). Currently, he is Rectorof Tamale Polytechnic. He has a BA degree in Painting as well as a postgraduate diploma and Masters degree in Art Education from KNUST. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Central England Birmingham in1994 with a specialization in Art Therapy. His research interests include art therapy,archetypal psychology, educational psychology and symbolism in art. As a Polytechnic Rector, he is interested in various aspects of Technical and Vocational education in second cycle and tertiary educational institutions and their academic training programs, particularly in Competency Based Training /Education. › Enhancing children’s learning: the art perspective, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 143-155. Marco Pellitteri London Metropolitan University Keywords sociology, communication, cultural industries, comics, animation, mass media, youths Marco Pellitteri (Palermo 1974), Sociologist and specialist of communication, currently a honorary research fellow at the Faculty of Applied Social Sciences of the London Metropolitan University. He has worked for the CERI (Sciences-Po) in Paris, the University of Trento, the IARD Institute (Milan), the AESVI, and is currently a consultant for the ISICULT institute on cultural industries (Rome). Author of five books on comics, animation, mass media and youths. Translator for several publishers; for Tunué publishing house (Tunue.com) he is the scientific director of the essay series ‘Lapilli’, ‘Lapilli Giganti’, ‘Le virgole’ and ‘Frizzz’. He is also the scientific director of the annual International Cartoonists’ Exhibition of Rapallo (Genoa). His doctorate thesis has won two prizes, among which the 2009 ‘“John A. Lent” Scholarship in Comics Studies’, an academic award assigned by the International Comic Arts Forum. His most recent book, The Dragon and the Dazzle: Models, Strategies, › Alan Moore, Watchmen and some notes on the ideology of superhero comics, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 81-91. Ruth Pelzer-Montada Edinburgh College of Art, Art and Visual Culture, 78 West Port, Edinburgh, Scotland, EH1 2LE, United Kingdom Dr. Ruth Pelzer-Montada is practicing artist and lecturer in Visual Culture in the School of Art at Edinburgh College of Art. The focus of her studio-Ph.D. was the theory/practice relationship in printmaking. She has exhibited nationally and internationally. Her essays on printmaking and the interrelationship between theory and practice have been published in the Journal of Visual Art Practice, Art Keywords research into practice, theory-practice interrelationship, artistic practice, installation art, printmaking, repetition, ornament, pattern, materiality of art, photography, Site-specificity; Performativity, viral methods, feminist art, body Journal, Visual Culture in Britain, US-print journal Contemporary Impressions and Norwegian print journal Rapport. She has also contributed chapters to Rampley, M. (2005) Exploring Visual Culture. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press and Coldwell, P. and Rauch, B. (2009) The Personalised Surface: New Approaches to Digital Printmaking. London: Fade Research. › Post-production or how pictures come to life or play dead, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 229-244. › Cooking up a Storm? ‘Post-production’ as interpretation, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 7-36. Robert Pepperell Keywords conscious art, video feedback, Zen, infinite regression, self-reflection Robert Pepperell is an artist, writer and musician. A former student at UWCN, he took a postgraduate course at the Slade School of Art and went on work with a number of influential multimedia collaborations including Hex, Coldcut and Hexstatic. As well as producing experimental computer art and computer games he has published several interactive CD-Roms and exhibited numerous digital installations including at the Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art, the ICA, London and the Barbican Gallery, London and the Millennium Dome, London. His first book, The Post-Human Condition, was published in 1995 and has now been revised as a third edition. His second book, The Postdigital Membrane is a collaboration with Michael Punt was published recently. › Towards a theory of conscious art, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.2, 117-134. Christine Percy University College for the Creative Arts, Faculty of Fashion and Communication, Epsom Campus, Ashley Road, Epsom, Surrey, KT18 5BE, United Kingdom Christine Percy is Dean of the Faculty of Fashion and Communication at the Surrey Institute of Art and Design, University College. She is Chair of the Faculty Research Group and initiator of the Faculty Group for Research into Teaching and Learning. Her research interests include practice-based learning, and the function of drawing in design pedagogy. Keywords crit, design education, discourse, tacit learning, online learning › Critical absence versus critical engagement. Problematics of the crit in design learning and teaching, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.3, 143-. Colin Perry Colin Perry is a writer and editor based in London. MoMA PS1, New York › Modern Women: Single Channel, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 120-124. Keywords Kjell Yngve Petersen IT University of Copenhagen Keywords telematic, creation strategies, installation design, performer knowledge, human realnessaction, Kjell Yngve Petersen (Ph.D.), assistant professor, Innovative Communication Group, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Kjell Yngve Petersen is trained as an actor and theatre director, and has produced theatre, opera, performance art, installations arts and media arts since the early 1980s. Her research interests include the composition and design of intermedial performances and participatory installations, with a special interest in real-time generative situations and mixed online/offline environments in which the audience take part in performing the artwork. This research has a specific focus on the development of a new compositional model that integrates telemedia technology, and utilizes emergent and performance-based methods to explore new performance forms and expressions. The research engages with telepresence and tele-ecologies, and involves design of acoustic and visual interface ecologies. › Using performers as tools in the creation of telematic artwork, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.3, 147-156. › Extended theatre – composition in telematized environments, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.3, 151-170. › Staging listening ecologies, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 229-246. J. Fiona Peterson Keywords design, architecture, studio learning and teaching, constructivism, scholarly teaching, scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) Fiona Peterson is the Deputy Head of School, Learning and Teaching in the School of Creative Media at RMIT University. She has 30 years’ experience as a teacher andeducational facilitator spanning high school, vocational education and training, as well as undergraduate and postgraduate higher education programs. Her backgroundis in Communication Studies and she has a Ph.D, on collaborative learning networks. Her research interests include strategic knowledge networks, Mode 2 knowledge, virtual communities and global education. › Through the learning and teaching looking glass: What do academics in art, design and architecture publish about most?, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.3, 135-154. Denitsa Petrova Edinburgh College of Art, Centre for Visual & Cultural Studies, 74 Lauriston Place, Edinburgh, EH3 9DF, United Kingdom Keywords public art, reporting and proposing, speculation, risk management Denitsa Petrova was born in 1974 in Sliven, Bulgaria. She went to an experimental class when she was at primary school, where she received 40% more music and arts classes than the rest of the pupils. Her current research interests lie in the field of public art and more specifically relates to guerrilla art, street art activism, urban interventions, graffiti and culture jamming. She is currently undertaking a Ph.D. at the Centre of Visual and Cultural Studies at Edinburgh College of Art. She also works as a Graduate Teaching Assistant, contributing to courses relating to her research. She has presented at a number of international conferences and as an artist has exhibited her work at various shows in Bulgaria, Portugal and the United Kingdom. › How do you sleep at night?: Writing public art, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 293-299. Angus Phillips Oxford Brookes University, Director of Publishing Department, Headington, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX3 0BP, United Kingdom Keywords publishing, media, international students, groups Angus Phillips, Director of the Oxford International Centre for Publishing Studies and Head of the Publishing Department, joined Oxford Brookes University in 2003. He has an MBA from Warwick University, an MA from Oxford University, and many years experience in the publishing industry including running a trade and reference list at Oxford University Press. He has acted as consultant to a variety of publishing companies, and trained publishing professionals from the United Kingdom and overseas in editorial, marketing and management. He is a member of the International Advisory Committee for the International Conference on the Book (held at Oxford Brookes in 2005) and a member of the Editorial Advisory Board for the International Journal of the Book. He has written book chapters and journal articles in the areas of the Internet, book covers, and the role of the publishing editor. › Working in groups in an international publishing class, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.3, 173-188. Mike Phillips University of Plymouth, School of Communications and Electronics,Institue of Digital Art and Technology, Drake Circus, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords architecture, intelligent, operating system, model, inhabitants Mike Phillips is the director of i-DAT (the Institute of Digital Art and Technology) at the University of Plymouth. Phillips initiated and coordinated the B.Sc. (Hons.) MediaLab Arts Programme (1992) and the On-Line M.Sc. Digital Futures programme (2000) and is now overseeing the development of i-DAT. Private- and public-sector grantfunded R&D orbits digital architectures, transmedia publishing and generative media, projects and other work can be found on the i-DAT website at http://www.i-dat.org. › Soft Buildings, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.2, 99108. Giovanni Piazza Keywords Reggio Emilia, process, interaction, creativity, poetics Giovanni Piazza worked as atelierista at the Villetta school in Reggio Emilia for 34 years. His special interest is in designing school spaces and e-learning environments and he is particularly interested in the relationship between digital and traditional artistic languages. For many years he collaborated with Loris Malaguzzi, the founder of the Reggio educational experience and Carla Rinaldi, a consultant to Reggio children. His projects have included work with the Project Zero team at Harvard University on Making Learning Visible, and a collaborative European project with the Lego Factory, called Atom and Bit, on children and robotics. The most recent European project focused on distance education and e-learning for children aged 3 to 14, teachers and parents. He now designs educational spaces and materials for the Malaguzzi International Centre. › On the wave of creativity: Children, expressive languages and technology, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 103-122. Martin Pichlmair Vienna University of Technology, Karlsplatz 13, Vienna, 1040, Austria Keywords playfulness, game design, constraints, digital domain Martin Pichlmair is a media artist living and working in Vienna, Austria. Since he received his doctoral degree in informatics he works as assistant professor at the Institute of Design and Assessment of Technology at the Vienna University of Technology. His art pieces have been shown at various media art festivals and exhibitions. Recent shows include the Ars Electronica Festival, ISEA, Transmediale, and the Microwave International Festival for New Media Art. In his research and publications, he focuses on the theory and practice of interactive art and design – from game design and physical interfaces to open-source development models and community media. › Venturing into the borderlands of playfulness, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 207-212. Andrew Pickering University of Exeter, Department of Andrew Pickering has a Ph.D. in particle physics and another in science studies. He was for many years professor of sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, but in 2007 he returned to Sociology and Philosophy, Amory Building, Rennes Drive, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4RJ, United Kingdom Britain as professor of sociology and philosophy at the University of Exeter. He is the author of Constructing Quarks: A Sociological History of Particle Physics, The Mangle of Practice: Time, Agency and Science and Kybernetik und Neue Ontologien. His latest book, Sketches of Another Future: The Cybernetic Brain, 1940–2000, was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2010. He also edited Science as Practice and Culture and, with Keith Guzik, The Mangle in Practice: Science, Society and Becoming, published by Duke University Press in 2008. Keywords interdisciplinarity, cybernetics, mangle, dance of agency, posthumanism, performance, arts, engineering, spirituality, taoism › Emergence and synthesis: science studies, cybernetics and antidisciplinarity, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 127-133. Analice Pillar Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Faculdade de Educação, Av. Paulo Gama, s/n., Prédio 12201, sala 700-14, Porto Alegre –RS, CEP 90 046-900, Brazil Analice Pillar is Professor of Art Education at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Porto Alegre, Brazil), teaching visual arts. She holds a Ph.D. in Arts from the University of São Paulo. She is a researcher of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), coordinates the Research in Education and Art Group and is a member of the National Association of Researchers in Fine Arts. Keywords art education, research in education › Cartoon and gender: Masculinities in SpongeBob, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 69-79. Eliza Pitri Eliza Pitri is currently an assistant professor of Art Education at the University of Nicosia, Cyprus. Her research interests focus on children’s cognitive development through the arts. She also continues to exhibit her creative work in oil painting. Keywords art education, children’s cognitive development, oil painting › Children's funny art and the form it can take over time, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 81-96. Silvia Pizzocaro Silvia Pizzocaro, Ph.D., is Senior Researcher at Politecnico di Milano. She is in charge of the activities of the operative centre of the Ph.D. programme in Industrial Design, whose aim is to support Ph.D. training programmes in design, while coordinating the didactic initiatives for the Ph.D. students. Keywords Ph.D. programme, curriculum aims and intention, research skills development › Re-orienting Ph.D. education in industrial design: some issues arising from the experience of a Ph.D. programme revision, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 173-194. Tiiu Poldma Universite de Montreal, School of Industrial Design. Faculty of Environmental Planning, CP 6168, Montreal, Quebec, H3C 3J7, Canada Keywords artful visual analysis, qualitative research methods, artbased research, phenomenology and design Tiiu Poldma has practised interior design for over twenty years and is currently assistant professor in the Interior Design programme within the School of Industrial Design at the University of Montreal. Her research interests include interior design pedagogical processes, visual representation methods in qualitative methodology, and how design considerations are essential in everyday human experiences. She has just completed her Ph.D. where she investigated the phenomenological student experiences in an interior design class. › Understanding the value of artistic tools such as visual concept maps in design and education research, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 141-148. Sinikka Hannele Pöllänen Sinikka Pöllänen is a Professor of Craft Science in craft teacher education at the University of Eastern Finland. Her major research areas include craft as a substance of learning and teaching, craft and well-being and craft in special education. University of Eastern Finland, School of Applied Educational Science and Teacher Education, Finland › Beyond craft and art: A pedagogical model for craft as self-expression, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 111-125. Keywords craft science, craft and wellbeing, craft in special education Alex Pollard c/o Sorcha Dallas, 5–9 St Margaret’s Place, Glasgow, G1 5JY, United Kingdom Keywords samizdat, zine, selfpublishing Alex Pollard is an artist based in Glasgow and contributing co-editor of Radical Vans and Carriages. He graduated with a BA in Painting from Glasgow School of Art in 1999 before serving on Glasgow’s Transmission Gallery committee between 2000 and 2002. He represented Scotland at the Venice Biennale in 2005. Solo shows have included The Reliance, London (Disintegrating Hand and Other Works), Sorcha Dallas, Glasgow (Torch Sculptures), Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh (Black Marks) and Whitechapel Project Space (Tea-Leaf Demeanour) and The Dirty Hands (with Clare Stephenson, CCA, Glasgow). Pollard is a lecturer in Fine Art Painting and Printmaking at Glasgow School of Art and is represented by Sorcha Dallas, Glasgow. › Hampstead Revisited, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.3, 301-325. Andrea Polli IFDM c/o College of Fine Arts, UNM Center for the Arts, Bldg 62, MSC042570, NM 87131, United States of America Keywords geography, locative media, meteorology, sonification, visualization Andrea Polli is a digital media artist living in New York City. She is currently an Associate Professor of Film and Media and Director of the MFA Program in Integrated Media Art at Hunter College. Polli’s work addresses issues related to science and technology in contemporary society. She has presented work nationally and internationally and is currently working in collaboration with a number of scientists to develop systems for understanding storms and climate through sound. For this work, she has been recognized by the UNESCO Digital Arts Award 2003 and has presented work in the 2004 Ogaki Biennale in Gifu, Japan and at the World Summit on the Information Society in Geneva, Switzerland. › Eco-media: art informed by developments in ecology, media technology and environmental science, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.3, 187-. Griselda Pollock University of Leeds, AHRC Centre CATH, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords natal memory, Zulu, Irma Stern, Charlotte Salomon, memorymapping Griselda Pollock is Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art and Director of AHRC Centre CATH at the University of Leeds. She specializes in cultural analysis and feminist postcolonial interventions in art’s histories with particular reference to psychoanalysis and aesthetics. Her forthcoming books include Theatre of Memory: Charlotte Salomon (Yale) and Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum (Routledge). › Back to Africa: from Natal to natal in the locations of memory, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 49-72. Jo Pond Birmingham City University, School of Jewellery, Birmingham Institute of Art & Design, Vittoria Street, Birmingham, B1 3PA, United Kingdom After working at Loughborough University as a Technical Instructor, Jo Pond returned to education, graduating in 2005 with an MA distinction in Jewellery, Silversmithing & Related Products, from the School of Jewellery, Birmingham. She subsequently won the 2005 BDI Industry & Genius Awards for ‘Products and Genius’. Alongside her practice as a studio jeweller, Jo now works as a lecturer at the School of Jewellery and is a member of Contemporary Applied Arts. Keywords mental health, narrative, jewellery, Wabi-Sabi › Narrative jewellery: The journey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 309-319. Matthew Poole University of Essex, Centre for Curatorial Studies, Department of Art History & Theory, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex, CO4 3SQ, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary art, curatorial studies, philosophy and critical theory, neo-pragmatism, nonidealist materialism, atelic realism Matthew Poole is Director of the Centre for Curatorial Studies at The University of Essex, Colchester, United Kingdom. As well as lecturing, Matthew works as a freelance curator and collaborates with a wide variety of contemporary artists. He has experience working for a number of arts organisations and galleries both in the public and private sectors. Matthew is also a co-founder and currently a Director of PILOT, an international contemporary artists' & curators' forum and online archive (www.pilotlondon.org), is a Director of PoCA (Political Currency of Art Research Group), and a founding Director of the research group Curating Video (www.curatingvideo.com). › Book Review, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.3, 241-253. › Anti-Humanist curating: Finding a way further in, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 91-101. James Pope Bournemouth University, Media School, Fern Barrow, Poole, BH12 5BB, United Kingdom Keywords digital fiction, interactive fiction, new-media design tools, pedagogy Dr. James Pope is a senior lecturer in English, Media and Communications at the Media School, Bournemouth University. He has been teaching in Further and Higher Education for over 25 years, with a continuing interest in how digital media may be changing narrative forms, and reading and writing practices. He has specific research interests in interactive fiction, reader response studies, the teaching of creative writing in digital media environments, and children’s literature. As well as several recent publications around his research into readers’ reactions to the forms and delivery platforms of interactive fiction, James has also published six novels for children and teenagers, including Spin The Bottle (Penguin), which was listed as oneof the best teenage novels of 1998 by the Federation of Children’s Book Groups. › The design and development of Genarrator at Bournemouth University, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 157-167. Nicole Porter Nicole Porter is a Lecturer in Landscape Architecture at the University University of Canberra, 14/16 Sexton Street, Cook, Australian Capital Territory, 2614, Australia of Canberra, Australia, where she teaches the theoretical and professional aspects of landscape and urban design. Her Ph.D. thesis, The promotion and production of contemporary landscape, interrogates the cultural construction of landscape as practiced by contemporary creative industries, including landscape architecture, place branding and new media communications. She is also working within government as an urban designer. Keywords nature, culture, media, design, landscape › Experiencing contemporary nature: virtual and physical designed landscapes of the Blue Mountains, Australia, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 149-158. Jason Potts Keywords intellectual property, creative industries, economic evolution, China Jason Potts is an evolutionary economist at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, Queensland University of Technology and an honorary visiting senior research fellow at City University London. His research interests include: history of economic thought; evolutionary microeconomics and multiagent simulation modelling; complexity theory; the economics of technological and institutional change; Post-Keynesian monetary theory; the theory of expectations and learning; the theory of the firm; Post-Schumpeterian economics and algorithmic dynamics; the theory of networks and applications of graph theory; the connective and structural geometry of economic space. The research interests broadly align with all theoretical topics that address the phenomenon of economic evolution. › Does weaker copyright mean stronger creative industries? Some lessons from China, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 245-261. John Potvin Keywords John Potvin is Associate Professor of European Art and Design History at the University of Guelph, Canada. He is the author of Material and Visual Cultures Beyond Male Bonding, 1880-1914 (2008), editor of The Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007 (2009), and co-editor of both Material Cultures, 1740-1920 (2009) and Fashion, Interior Design and the Contours of Modern Identity (2010). He is also the author of the upcoming Giorgio Armani: Empire of the Senses (2012), and is currently preparing a manuscript that explores the aesthetics of samesex companions, modernism and domesticity in Britain, Bachelors of a Different Sort: Queer Aesthetics, Material Culture and the Modern Interior. › Fashion and the Art Museum: When Giorgio Armani Went to the Guggenheim, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 47-63. Gilbertto Prado University of Sao Paulo, Department of Visual Arts, School of Communications and Arts, Brazil Keywords complexity and organization, interactive installation, digital art installations, complex adaptive systems, systemic measures Gilbertto Prado is a Multimedia artist. He started his artistic activities in the end of the 1970s, taking part in the Mail Art movement and participating in several exhibitions and projects. Gilbertto studied Engineering and Visual Arts at the Unicamp (University of Campinas – São Paulo). In 1994 he obtained his doctoral degree in Arts at the University of Paris I – Sorbonne. He was an Invited Professor at University of Paris 8 (03/2004 and 03/2006), and since 2001 has been Professor and Head of the post-graduation programme in Visual Arts in the Department of Visual Arts, ECA/USP – School of Communications and Arts, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. › Complex installations: sharing consciousness in a cybernetic ballet, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 159-165. Julieanna Preston Massey University, Institute of Design for Industry and Environment, College of Creative Arts, PO Box 756/ Old Museum, Buckle Street, Wellington, 6140, New Zealand Keywords design process, systems of inquiry, design articulation, design media, design writing Julieanna Preston’s research crosses between theory and creative practice in the fields of design, architecture, spatial design and art installation. Julieanna is known internationally for her contributions in the areas of research through creative practice or design-led research. Taking a distinctive interdisciplinary approach, her research draws from geography, landscape studies, architecture, feminist studies, design history, social science philosophy and fine arts. Her role in the Institute capitalizes on her commitment to design’s capacity to expand knowledge through its creative processes and its attention to contextualized situations including those only temporally evident. › Writing through design, an active practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.1, 45-62. Ross W. Prior University of Northampton, Avenue Campus, St George's Avenue, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Ross Prior is a principal lecturer in Drama and Acting at the University of Northampton. Educated in Australia, he took his first degree at Deakin University, his MA at the University of Melbourne and his Ph.D. at Griffith University. He has recently been involved in a government survey of actor training in England. Keywords tacit knowledge, community music, practice, synnoetics › Editorial, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 237-239. › EDITORIAL, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 3-5. Robert Pulley West Dean College, West Sussex, PO18 0QZ, United Kingdom Keywords three-dimensional design, craft Robert Pulley is Principal of West Dean College, an international postgraduate centre of the arts and a partner college of the University of Sussex. He was formerly Dean of Art and Design at Falmouth College of Arts and, prior to that, Subject Leader for ThreeDimensional Design at Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication. After graduating from the Royal College of Art he ran his own design studio and manufacturing company. Pulley is a member of the Craft Research journal advisory board and of the design think tank Salon. › Feeling good, Craft Research, 2.1, 97-114. Michael Punt Keywords early cinema, postdigital analogue, science, transdisciplinary, play orbit, toys Michael Punt is Professor of Art and Technology and Convenor of Transtechnology Research at the University of Plymouth and is also Editor-in-Chief of Leonardo Reviews. He has made fifteen films and published over 80 articles on cinema and digital media in the last decade. He gained his Ph.D. at the University of Amsterdam (Early Cinema and the Technological Imaginary, 2000) His key articles have been published in: The Velvet Light Trap, Leonardo, Design Issues and Convergence. His most recent book, Screening Consciousness: Cinema Mind World (Rodopi 2006), edited with Robert Pepperell, follows their earlier collaboration, The Post-digital Membrane: Imagination, Technology and Desire (Intellect Books 2000/03). › A post-digital universe, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.3, 191-200. › Play Orbit: a play on the history of play, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 135-148. Malcolm Quinn University of the Arts London, CCW Graduate School, Wimbledon College Dr. Malcolm Quinn is Reader in Critical Practice in the CCW (Camberwell, Chelsea and Wimbledon) Graduate School, University of the Arts London. His current research is engaged with the role of UK government, museums and the early publicly funded art school, in the of Art, Merton Hall Rd, London, SW19 3QA, United Kingdom development of a unified language for art and design activity through an engagement with public culture and industrial capital, following the Reform Bill of 1832. Keywords intellectual history, aesthetics and politics, political economy of art and design, psychoanalysis › Critique Conscious and Unconscious:Listening to the Barbarous Language of Art and Design, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 225-240. Christoph Raatz Keywords reflective practice, dyslexia, mature students, international students, learning styles Christoph Raatz studied B.Sc. (Econ.) Economics and MA Economic History at the London School of Economics (LSE). Following a brief period in marketing consulting, he returned to the LSE as the coordinator of a European Commission-financed, international research project. In 2003, he joined Goldsmiths College as the project officer of the Writing PAD project. › Writing Purposefully in Art and Design (Writing PAD), Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 89-102. Imogen Racz Coventry University, Design and Visual Arts, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords Laibe, vessel, skill, ceramic, exhibitions Imogen Racz is Contextual studies Coordinator at Coventry University, where she lectures on both fine and applied arts. She gained her Ph.D. at the University of Newcastle for her work on the cubist sculptor Henri Laurens. Her current research spans post war craft and sculptural practice, with an emphasis on process, materials and cultural environment. Her book Contemporary Crafts, which was published by Berg in 2009, explores craft practice in America and England in the context of the environment and particular cultural myths associated with the city and the country. Her new area of research, which has developed from this, relates to the contemporary vessel, which references the domestic environment and its associated rituals. › Sculptural vessels across the great divide: Tony Cragg's Laibe and the metaphors of clay, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.3, 215-227. Natascha RadclyffeThomas Villa Maria College, New York, United States of America Natascha Radclyffe-Thomas was a partner in fashion-forward childrenswear company ‘Miss Fleur’ and lectured in fashion and related subjects, both studio-based and theoretical, for over ten years in London College of Fashion, Croydon College and Lewisham College before relocating to Hong Kong and working for the University of the Keywords creativity, intercultural communication, learning culture, stereotypes Arts London International Centre as an In-country Student Advisor and teaching fashion and textile design at the Hong Kong Design Institute. Currently living in New York teaching fashion and related subjects at Villa Maria College whilst studying for a Doctorate in Education with Durham University; Natascha’s research interests are intercultural creativity, innovative pedagogies and the use of technology in art and design education. › Intercultural chameleons or the Chinese way? Chinese students in Western art and design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.1, 41-56. Maziar Raein Kunsthogskolen i Oslo, Faculty of Design, Postboks 6853, St. Olavs plass, Oslo, 130, Norway Keywords reflective practice, dyslexia, mature students, international students, learning styles Maziar Raein studied Fine Art BA (Hons.) at Central Saint Martins College of Art (CSM). After college he made a number of short films, which were shown both nationally and internationally. Subsequently, he returned to CSM to study on the MA Independent Fine Art Film course, during which time he received an Arts Council Film Award and wrote a drama, commissioned and broadcast by Channel 4. He then formed his own independent production company, Underwater Productions, which specialized in arts documentaries for the BBC and Channel 4. Since the early 1990s, he has been teaching on the BA Graphics course, devising the Context programme, during which time he also trained as a specialist tutor in dyslexia. As such, he has published and worked on projects, which focus on positive aspects of visual and spatial ability. › Writing Purposefully in Art and Design (Writing PAD), Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.2, 89-102. › Integration of studio and theory in the teaching of graphic design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 163-174. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.1, 45-54. › Walking with wolves: displaying the holding pattern, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 33-46. › 11th European League Institutes of the Arts Biennial Conference: HEARTH l'art au coeur du territoire › Nantes, France, 2730 October 2010, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 181-184. Jan-Henning Raff Heckmannufer 4 Jan-Henning Raff holds a diploma in communication design from Kunsthochschule Berlin Weissensee (Germany). He has been research assistant at the media centre of Technische Universität Dresden Keywords distributed cognition, design, cognition, practice, everyday design (Germany) where he has built up and headed the department of media design. Currently he is working at the German Society for Design Theory and Research (DGTF) and finishing his Ph.D. thesis on everyday design practices of student learners. His research interests include design research, technology enhanced learning, and usability/user experience. › Everyday Practice as Design, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 149-159. Antti Raike Aalto University, Media department, Hämeentie 135 C, PL31000, Helsinki, 76, Finland Keywords art education, Computer Supported Collaborative Learning, design research, film studies, inclusion Doctor of Arts (DA) Antti Raike works as a post-doctoral researcher at the Media department of the Aalto University School of Art and Design, and leads the three-year project ‘VIPP – Visual Innovations for Inclusive Projects with Diverse Participants’ (2008--2010) funded by the Academy of Finland. Projects led by Raike have been connected to film studies and the general aim of inclusion, for a shared and open university, which should adapt flexibly to the needs of different students. The aim of his doctoral dissertation was to produce an accessible web-based study product 'CinemaSense', as well as to clarify, in support of the production, the sign-language students’ deepening of knowledge and conceptualization related to the subject of cinematic expression, as well as their collaboration during the webbased course. › Concept maps in the design of an accessible CinemaSense service, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 27-55. Mrinalini Rajagopalan University of Pittsburgh, Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Pittsburgh Keywords Mrinalini Rajagopalan is Assistant Professor in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Pittsburgh. Her work focuses on the colonial legacies of architectural preservation in the Indian subcontinent. She is currently working on a manuscript on this topic titled 'Building Histories: The Social Lives of Delhi's Monuments from Imperial Pasts to Postcolonial Presents'. She is also the co-editor of the forthcoming volume, Colonial Frames, Nationalist Histories: Imperial Legacies, Architecture and Modernity (Ashgate, 2012). Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Pittsburgh, Rajagopalan held fellowships at New York University, the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at MIT and the South Asian Studies Council at Yale University. › CONFERENCE PRECIS, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 179-189. Barbara Rauch Ontario College of Art and Design University of the Arts London, Digital Futures, Toronto, Canada Keywords creative thinking, daydream, liminal state, unconscious dream, mindset Barbara Rauch is a Research Fellow engaged in research-led practice. She has recently completed a practice-led exploration of dreaming and online virtual environments. Her interest lies in the neuroscientific model of the unconscious brain and the non-linearity apparent within dreaming narratives. She has created a set of works exploring this area of research in comparison to VR models in the World Wide Web. She is currently working on a project concerned with animal and human facial expressions, drawing on 3D laser scanning devices. This project aims to further explore how digital technology can alter the way we usually impose our human understanding of the world onto other systems including digital forms of VR systems. › A merging of mindsets through collision and collusion, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 55-. Matthias Rauterberg Keywords Nobel Prize in Physics, inventions, discoveries, global warming social application Matthias Rauterberg is the head of the Designed Intelligence research group a the Department of Industrial Design at the Eindhoven University of Technology. He has chaired a number of Technical Committees of the International Federation of Information Processing. He was also Visiting Professor at Kwansei Gakuin University in Japan. In 1998 he was awarded the Swiss Technology Award for the BUILDIT system, and has over 250 publications in international journals (several of which he is on the editorial board for), conference proceedings, and books. › The asymmetry between discoveries and inventions in the Nobel Prize in Physics, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 73-77. Tiina Rautkorpi Helsinki Polytechnic, Research and development, PO Box 4032, Helsinki, FIN-00099, Finland Keywords mentoring, culture, Tiina Rautkorpi is Senior Lecturer of Media at Helsinki Polytechnic, Finland. She worked as a radio and TV journalist and documentary director for ten years. Since then she has been employed as Lecturer in Education Planning and Management in the Department of Visual and Media Arts. She is interested in combining industry and businessoriented research and development with art pedagogy in adult education; and her main research topic is the use of art pedagogy, meaning, creative economy, education developmental work and research methods in journalistic production. › Mentoring in the creative economy, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.3, 231-241. Christina Reading The University of Brighton, School of Humanities, University of Brighton, Checkland Building, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9PH, United Kingdom Christina Reading joined the Faculty of Arts at the University of Brighton in November 2007 to work as a Research Fellow on a project to investigate how art and design students learn from museum collections. She also works on a Heritage Lottery-funded Life History Project designed to celebrate the centenary of the Duke of York’s’ Cinema. Keywords design students, higher education, phenomenography, learning and teaching, inspiration › Sources of inspiration: How design students learn from museum collections and other sources of inspiration, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 109-121. › CLTAD International Conference, 1213 April 2010, Berlin Creative partnerships: Helping creative writing and visual practice students to make links between their creative processes and their personal, vocational and academic development, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 285298. Helena Reckitt › Exhibition Reviews, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 101-116. Keywords Beverly Redman Ursinus College, Theatre and Dance, Ursinus College, 601 East Main Street, Collegeville, PA 19426, United States of America Keywords voice, speech, dramatic literature, theatre history, performance studies Beverly Redman is an Assistant Professor of Theatre at Ursinus College, where she directs and teaches voice and speech, dramatic literature, theatre history and performance studies courses. Her research interests include radical American Theatre and its relationship to the shift in sensibility from Modernism to Postmodernism, with especial attention to the history of theatre communities of the 1960s and the organizational structures they developed to survive. She holds a Ph.D. in dramatic literature and theory from the joint-campus program of the University of California, Irvine and San Diego campuses, and an MFA in Directing from the University of California, Irvine. › Project Report, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.3, 279-288. Joanna Rees The School of Art and Design, 408 E. Peabody Drive, Room 143, Champaign, Illinois, 61820, United States of America Keywords research, leading scholars, art education, Canada Joanna Rees is an Art Education Ph.D. student at National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU) in Taipei, Taiwan. Her Ph.D. dissertation concerns crosscultural research in Hong Kong, Korea, and Taiwan. For the past three years she has worked as an instructor teaching visual culture at Huafan University in Taipei County. At NTNU, Rees works closely with her supervisor Dr. Ann Kuo and was responsible for administrating the 2008 World Creativity Summitand its proceedings. › Art education in Canada: reflections from scholars impacting the field, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 25-40. Brian Reffin Smith École Nationale Superieure d'Art, BP 297, 7 rue Edouard Branley, Bourges, Cedex, F-18006, France Keywords zombie, art, computer, performance, constraint Brian Reffin Smith studied at Brunel University and the Royal College of Art, London. He is currently Professeur, Atelier Art et Info, École Nationale Supérieure d'Art, Bourges, France. He lives and works as an artist and writer in Berlin, Germany, and is the author of eight books about computers and/or art, and numerous articles contributions to books and journals. His artworks are exhibited and performances given internationally. He is represented by Krammig & Pepper, Berlin. He won the first ever Prix Ars Electronica, Linz, Austria, 1987. He is Regent of the College de 'Pataphysique, Paris, France, holding the Chair of Catachemistry and Computational Metallurgy, and is a member of the artists' group OuPeinPo, Paris. › Constraint is freedom. An application of zombie to certain aspects of art and cognitive psychology, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.1, 55-. Anna Reid Macquarrie University, Centre for Prof. Development, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia Keywords engagement, creativity, identity, learning Anna Reid is Associate Professor at Macquarie University, where she is responsible for the Research Development Programme. She has research interests in the discipline areas of music, law, statistics, mathematics, design and accounting. Each of these discipline studies is related to her exploration of the ‘Professional Entity’ a model that helps explain the attributes and activities (such as ethics and creativity) related to professional work. Anna has been part of a team exploring the relationships between creativity, ethics, sustainable development and cross-cultural sensitivity in a project funded by the World Bank. › Design students' experience of engagement and creativity, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.1, 27-40. Adele Reid United Kingdom Keywords participatory research, design, risk, new product development, creative companies Adele Reid has a BSc (Hons) in Psychology and Human Resource Management, and an MSc in Ergonomics. She has been working in the field of ergonomics and design as a researcher for the last eight years; her main areas of research have been in product design and health and safety. She has been involved in projects for the Ministry of Defence, the Health and Safety Executive, the European Standards Agency and research for European Union’s Fifth Framework Programme. › Researching creative companies: lessons learned from a risk in design project, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 161-178. Linden Reilly London Metropolitan University, Sir John Cass department of Art, Central House, 59-63 Whitechapel High Street, London, E1 7PF, United Kingdom Linden Reilly, is Senior Lecturer in theory related to art practice and Course Organiser of the MA by Project, a research programme in the arts. Her research interests include: theories of visual arts practice and epistemology; research methods the arts; the roles of sensation and experience in imagination, research, knowledge, understanding, and theory; the nature and operation of tastes. She is a member of the Visual Arts Practice research Group, and DART. Keywords experiential knowledge, knowing, knowledge and understanding, knowledge communication, practice-led research, questions › New knowledge in the creative disciplines – proceedings of the first Experiential Knowledge Conference 2007, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 81-88. › Special Edition Editorial: What work does the artwork do? A question for art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 5-12. Simona Segre Reinach Keywords made in Italy, fashion, national identity, globalization Simona Segre Reinach, cultural anthropologist, is Contract Professor of Anthropology of Fashion at Iuav University (Venice) and of Fashion and Turism at Iulm University (Milan). She has published several articles, ‘China and Italy. Fast Fashion vs Pret à Porter. Towards a new Culture of Fashion’ (Fashion Theory, 9: 1), ‘Milan, the city of prêt à porter’ (Fashion’s World Cities, Berg, 2006), ‘Italianand Chinese agendas in the global fashion industry’ (The Fashion History Reader, Routledge, 2010) and three books: Mode in Italy. Una lettura antropologica (Guerini, 1999); La Moda. Un’introduzione (Laterza [2005] 2010); Orientalismi. La moda nel mercato globale. Manuale di sociologia, comunicazione e cultura della moda (Meltemi, 2006). She is currently undertaking research in China, collaborating withProfessor Sylvia Yanagisako (Stanford University) and Professor Lisa Rofel (University of California Santa Cruz) on the project ‘TheFashion Theory: The Journal of Dress, Body & Culture › If you speak fashion you speak Italian: Notes on present day Italian fashion identity, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 203-215. Ricardo Reis Escola Superior de Educação de Setúbal, Departamento de Artes Plásticas, Rua do Vale de Chaves2914, 504 Setúbal, Portugal Keywords environment, visual literacy, education, public art Ricardo Reis is currently Ph.D. Student in Arts and Education at University of Barcleona. He's research about the role of the school in the devolpment and social value of visual literacy. He has a MA in Art Education from the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Lisbon. He teaches Visual and Technological Education in a public school in Portugal. He also trainning visual arts teachers and is a member of the Identity(ies) and Diversity(ies) Research Centre at Leiria Polytechnic and is guest lecturer at Setúbal Polytechnic. He is an active member of the National Association of Education and Edutainment (ANAE) and the Association of Teachers of Visual Expression and Communication (APECV) and co-edits In-visibilidades: Ibero American Visual Cultural Education Research Journal. › Public art as an educational resource, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 85-96. Scott Rettberg The University of Bergen, Dept of Linguistic, Literary and Aesthetic Studies, Program in Digital Culture, 5020 Bergen, PO Box 7805, Norway Keywords literary studies, aesthetic studies, electronic literature Born in 1970, Scott Rettberg is Associate Professor of Digital Culture in the Department of Linguistic, Literary and Aesthetic studies at the University of Bergen, Norway. Rettberg is the author or co-author of novel-length works of electronic literature including The Unknown, Kind of Blue and Implementation. His work has been exhibited online and at art venues in the United States and Europe. Rettberg is the cofounder and served as the first executive director of the nonprofit Electronic Literature Organization. Rettberg is also Project Leader of the Humanities in the European Research Area collaborative research project ELMCIP: Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice. › Finding a third space for electronic literature: Creative community, authorship, publishing, and institutional environments, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 9-23. Rebecca Reubens Delft University of Technology, department of Design for Sustainability at the Delft University of Technology, 380015, Netherlands Keywords industrialization, design, bamboo, sustainability, craft Rebecca Reubens began her journey in bamboo as a student of the National Institute of Design (NID) in India. She stayed with the subject while working with the International Network for Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR) for seven years, where she worked with bamboo craft communities in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Her work entailed documenting their craft and providing support to help craft-spersons recontextualize their craft and access contemporary markets. She is currently pursuing her Ph.D. with the department of Design for Sustainability at the Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands, on the linkages between bamboo, sustainability and design. › Bamboo canopy: Creating new reference-points for the craft of the Kotwalia community in India through sustainability, Craft Research, 1.1, 11-38. Rebecca Reynolds Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning through Design, University of Brighton, Faculty of Arts, 66-68 Grand Parade, Brighton, BN2 0JY, United Kingdom Keywords art education, research and resource development, museum studies Rebecca Reynolds was the Higher Education Officer, Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning through Design, based at the Victoria and Albert Museum. Her responsibilities included research and resource development focusing on the use of museums by HE design students. She is currently a visiting lecturer in museum studies at Reading University. › Museum audios for design students: Auditory wallpaper or effective learning support?, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 151-166. James Reynolds University of London, Kingston, Department of Drama, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS, United Kingdom Keywords adaptation, ideologem, V For Vendetta, anarchism James Reynolds is a lecturer in Drama at Kingston University, London. He is currently completing Ph.D. research investigating performance practices in the theatre of Robert Lepage. His published work includes a chapter on Howard Barker’s direction of his own plays in Theatre of Catastrophe (Oberon, 2006), an article on Lepage’s work, ‘Acting with Puppets and Objects,’ in Performance Research (2007), and an article on comic-to-film adaptation, 'KILL ME SENTIMENT', in The Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance (2009). › Ten years on the edge: Phil Fox reflects on a decade of recovery from addiction through applied theatre, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 165-172. Mofizur Rhaman University of Dhaka, Department of Mass Communication and Journalism, Dhaka, 1000, Bangladesh Mofizur Rhaman is currently working as an associate professor in the Department of Mass Communication and Journalism at the University of Dhaka, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh. His research interests includes media, advocacy communication and development, media policy, media, gender, society and culture. Keywords femininity, representation, body, gender, advocacy › Body of the other: Constructing gender identity in anti-acid violence campaign materials in Bangladesh, The Poster, 1.1, 31-60. Bill Ribbans University of Northampton and The County Clinic, School of Health, The County Clinic, 57 Billing Road, Northampton, United Kingdom Professor Bill Ribbans Ph.D., FRCSOrth, FFSEM (UK) is a Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon at Northampton General Hospital and Visiting Professor at The University of Northampton. He is Honorary Orthopaedic Surgeon to the English National Ballet and involved with many professional sports organisations, particularly involving rugby union, association football, cricket, athletics and badminton. Keywords dance, injuries, ballet, orthopaedics, multi-disciplinary healthcare › Best foot forward: An orthopaedic odyssey through the world of dance1, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 53-61. Clarissa Ribeiro University of Sao Paulo, Department of Visual Arts, Rua Vespasiano, 783, São Paulo, São Paulo, 5044050, Brazil Keywords emergent behavior, complexity and organization, digital art installations, complex adaptive systems, systemic measures, creative process › Complex installations: sharing consciousness in a cybernetic ballet, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 159-165. Karen Richard Murray Royal Hospital, Department of Forensic Psychiatry, Perth, PH2 7BH, Australia Dr. Karen Richard, BSc, MBChB, FRCPsych, is a Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist at the Murray Royal Hospital and has contributed to the Journal of Applied Arts & Health. › A descriptive analysis of a pilot drama project in a forensic psychiatric setting, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 267-280. Keywords drama, creativity, mental health, forensic psychiatry, mentally disordered offenders David Richmond York St John University, Lord Mayor's Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords art and design, theatre, reflexivity, reflection David Richmond is Head of Programme of Performance: Theatre and Senior Lecturer in Theatre and Performance at York St John University. For the past twenty years, David has been collaborating with Jules Dorey Richmond creating experimental and innovative works, pulling together their respective disciplines of visual art and theatre. Since 1996 they have been engaged in a Theatre of Witness series of collaborative works with World War Two Veterans, Survivors and Witnesses in various communities throughout Britain. This process is ongoing, and the year 1998 led them on a secular pilgrimage to Auschwitz. David and Jules have been funded by the Scottish Arts Council and Glasgow City Council and have obtained commissions from Mayfest and Centre for Contemporary Arts (Glasgow), as well as receiving support in kind from the British Council. David is touring his solo work slipping away performed at the National Review of Live Art (Glasgow 2010). › Reflect on this!, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 197-210. Jules Dorey Richmond York St John University, Lord Mayor's Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords art and design, theatre, reflexivity, reflection Jules Dorey Richmond was awarded a BA (Hons) in Art and Social Context from Dartington College of Arts and a Master of Fine Art (MFA) from University of Leeds. Currently she is a Senior Lecturer in Live Art and Performance at York St John University. Jules is a sculptor who makes books, video installations and performances. She is fiercely committed to making work drawn from the autobiographical – framing and connecting what impels her fine art practice to a larger field of feminist thinking and wondering. Over the past twenty years Jules has made a diverse range of performance and artworks with, for and by various communities throughout Britain and northern Europe. These range from large-scale outdoor spectaculars, to happenings and interventionist works for nightclubs, parks, the streets, museums and cafes through to small-scale touring shows, performance installations, film works and gallery pieces. › Reflect on this!, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 197-210. Olivier Richon Royal College of Art, Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2EU, United Kingdom Keywords photography Olivier Richon is Professor of Photography at the Royal College of Art, London. His work has been exhibited internationally since 1980 and is in many public collections, including the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Musée d’art moderne de la ville de Paris; Museum Folkwang, Essen; the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto; the Brooklyn Museum, New York; and the National Gallery of New South Wales, Australia. Steidl published a monograph of his photographic work, entitled Real Allegories, in 2006. He is represented by Ibid Projects, London. › The Sophist and the photograph, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 35-40. Kathryn Ricketts Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada Keywords embodied heteroglossic spaces, immigration, identity, practice-based research, arts-based research Kathryn Ricketts has been working for the past 26 years in movement and visual arts presenting throughout Europe, South America, Africa and Canada. Currently she is completing her doctoral programme at Simon Fraser University, Kathryn is researching identity and place with personal stories through embodiment as a means towards literacy. › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Alison Rieple University of Westminster, Westminster Business School, 35 Marylebone Road, London, NW1 5LS, United Kingdom Keywords strategic resources, clusters, fashion industry, apparel design Dr. Alison Rieple is Professor of Strategic Management at the University of Westminster, London. Her principle research interests are the in the management of the creative industries, especially the structuring of the innovation andproduct development process in the music and fashion industries. She is the author of a number of articles on design and innovation, and has also co-authored twostrategic management textbooks, the most recent published in December 2007. › Product development within a clustered environment: The case of apparel design firms, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 273-289. Miguel Domínguez Rigo Complutense University of Madrid, Didactics of Plastic Expression, Faculty of Education, office 1609, c/ Rector Royo Vilanova s/n, Madrid, 28040, Spain Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education The research group ‘Aplicaciones del arte para la inclusión social: arte, terapiay educación para la diversidad’ (Applications of art for social inclusion: art, therapy and education for diversity) is a part of a larger team of teaching staff at the Complutense University of Madrid, which has promoted studies on art, social inclusion and art therapy, to a European M.A. and Ph.D. The group, composed of Primary and Secondary Schools teachers, professorsat the Faculty of Education and researchers on Art Education and Art Therapy, has published a variety of books on art therapy and social inclusion, such as Creación y posibilidad/Creation and Possibility (López FernándezCao 2006) and Arteterapia y educación/Art Therapy and Education (Martínez Díez and López Fernández Cao 2004), and a collection of thirteen educational projects under the name ‘Posibilidades de ser › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Howard Riley Swansea Metropolitan University, Dynevor Centre for Arts Design and Media, De La Beche Street, Swansea, SA1 3EU, United Kingdom Keywords art pedagogy, artworld, conceptual intrigue, perceptual intrigue Howard Riley is Professor of Visual Communication and Head of the School of Research and Postgraduate Studies at the Dynevor Centre for Arts, Design & Media, Swansea Metropolitan University. He has taught drawing, and the history and theory of art and design in Australia and Malaysia as well as the United Kingdom. His publications are in the fields of visual semiotics and multimodality, generative art and his drawings have most recently been exhibited in the the Bay Art Gallery, Cardiff, the Wales Drawing Biennale, and at the Elysium Artspace, Swansea. › Firing Practice: Drawing as Empowerment, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.3, 150-161. › Beyond the horizon: future directions for the teaching of visual arts practice, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 73-80. Lawrence Rinder Keywords poet, playwright, essayist, novelist, curating Lawrence Rinder is the Director of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. He was formerly Dean of the College at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco and Oakland. He has held curatorial positions at the Walker Art Center, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Berkeley Art Museum. He was the Founding Director of the Wattis Institute at the California College of the Arts. He is a published poet, playwright, essayist and novelist. › Paying attention, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 49-51. Kathy Ring York St John College, 2 Norwood Court, Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, HG5 0PR, United Kingdom Keywords young children, drawing, teacher support, meaning-making Kathy Ring is a senior lecturer in Education within the School of Education and Theology, York St John College. She contributes to Initial Teacher Training and Masters programmes with a particular emphasis on early years education. Kathy began her career as a primary-school teacher and spent fifteen years teaching across the infant age range. Her research interests are focused upon the young child as a meaning-maker, and she is particularly interested in the role drawing plays in supporting their thinking and learning. With Angela Anning she is co-author of Making sense of children’s drawings (OUP/McGraw-Hill, 2004). › Supporting young children drawing: developing a role, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.3, 195-209. Sandra E. Hoffmann Robbiani Keywords communication design, perception, ticker tape, spatial sequence, grapheme-colour Sandra Ellen Hoffmann Robbiani is a Communication designer based in Berne, Switzerland, and is a Professor of ‘Typography and Communication Design’ at the Department of Design, University of Applied Sciences in Darmstadt, Germania (Hochschule Darmstadt, Fachbereich Gestaltung). Her research work is based on observation and analysis of cultural situations, supported by systems of recording, storage and retrieval, and applied through visual explanation. She is currently working on a Ph.D. in Zurich and Plymouth (Z-Node Planetary Collegium). › Synoptic Comparisons: An Inventory of Aspects. Visual Case Reports of Typographic Synaesthesia, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 215-219. Felix Robbins University College London Keywords architecture, design, digital design practice, urban regeneration Felix gained a Diploma in Architectural Design from the Bartlett, University College London in 2002, an MArch in 2003, and qualified professionally in 2006. Felix has worked for dECOi architects in Paris and oceanD in London. His work for these practices has included residential, cultural and competition projects – all developing innovative approaches to digital design practice and widely published. Since 2006 Felix has worked at Make, working on large scale commercial and urban regeneration projects. Felix has also taught as a visiting critic at Diploma and MArch level at the Bartlett and AA. He is currently conducting a Ph.D. by Design at the Bartlett supervised by Neil Spiller and Ranulph Glanville – research that speculates on the possibility of design to transcend the contradictions of post-logical architectural production. › Instructional Design Vision:Synthetic opera: transcending contradictions of post, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 75-112. Wood Roberdeau Goldsmiths, University of London, Visual Cultures, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Dr. Wood Roberdeau is an Associate Tutor in Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, where he teaches course on modern and contemporary art and theory. › , Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 159-183. Keywords aesthetics, art theory, contemporary art, domesticity, everyday aesthetics, phenomenology, postmodernism John Roberts Keywords aesthetics, sensible, subjectivization, representation, pragmatism John Roberts is professor of Art and Aesthetics at the University of Wolverhampton. He is the author of a number of books, including The Art of Interruption: Realism, Photography and the Everyday (Manchester University Press, 1998) and The Intangibilities of Form: Skill and Deskilling in Art After the Readymade (2007). › On the limits of negation in Badiou’s theory of art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 271-282. › Philosophy, culture, image: Rancière’s ‘constructivism’, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 69-79. › Photography, landscape and the social production of space, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 135-156. › The flat-lining of metaphysics: François Laruelle’s ‘science-fictive’ theory of non-photography, Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 129-141. Gillian Robertson Gillian is an artist and trained at Winchester School of Art, receiving a Ph.D. in Fine Art (Painting) in 2009. She lives and works in Hampshire Winchester, Hampshire, United Kingdom and London, and exhibits locally and nationally both as a solo artist and as a member of the landscape group Land2 and with the Bermondsey Artists Group. She works in oil on canvas with subjects inspired by landscape, archaeology and mythology. Her paintings explore the territory between figuration and abstraction and examine the relationship of the body to the ground in which it is located and from which the painting develops. She writes on the work of the philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty and is a regular conference speaker on the relationship between art and archaeology, and on drawing. Keywords archaeology, excavation, object, body-ground, metaphor › The excavated object, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 73-82. Deborah Robinson Keywords abstraction, pouring, speed, intuition Deborah Robinson originally trained as an observational painter. She then moved towards abstraction and produced large scale paintings using techniques such as pouring, speed and intuition, derived from abstract expressionism. In this work it became important to find a abstract painterly language that expressed her subjective experience as a woman and mother. During a year spent as artist in residence in Angeles Deborah began to explore relationship between contemporary feminist psychoanalytic/philosophic writing (particularly the writings of Luce Irigaray) and painterly processes. This became the basis of her Ph.D. research project 'Materiality of Body and Text: An Investigation Through Painting and Darkroom Processes' (completed in 2003). After this Deborah took a new direction in her work and began a series of work in which she collaborated with scientists. › The Materiality of Text and Body in Painting and Darkroom Processes: an investigation through practice, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.1, 93-95. Anne Robinson London Metropolitan University, Film Studies Dept, 166–220 Holloway Road, London, N7 8DB, United Kingdom Anne Robinson is a senior lecturer in film studies at London Metropolitan University, and a practicing artist. She is currently undertaking a Ph.D. at London Metropolitan University on the relationship between time in paintings and moving image languages. Exhibitions of video work include Maybe in the Sky (Liverpool World Museum, 2008) and Slipframe (APT Gallery London, 2007). Keywords practice-based research, tacit knowledge, visual intelligence, painting › Underwriting: an experiment in charting studio practice, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 59-74. Matthew Robinson Royal Academy of Music, Marylebone Road, London, NW1 5HT, United Kingdom Keywords temporality, materiality, web-based artefacts, open source software, Active Notation Matthew Robinson is a second year student of piano at the Royal Academy of Music. A student of Jamil Sheriff and Tom Cawley he has performed in numerous youth bands including performances at the Royal Albert Hall, Houses of Parliament and Doncaster Jazz Association. As a solo artist and player with small ensembles he has recently appeared at venues across London including the Southbank Centre and Core Ballroom. › Music and textiles interact, Craft Research, 1.1, 39-61. Julio Romero Rodríguez Complutense University of Madrid., Didactics of Plastic Expression, Faculty of Education, Office 1609, c/ Rector Royo Vilanova s/n, Madrid, 28040, Spain Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education The research group ‘Aplicaciones del arte para la inclusión social: arte, terapia y educación para la diversidad’/'Applications of art for social inclusion: art, therapy and education for diversity' is a part of a larger team of teaching staff at the Complutense University of Madrid, which has promoted studies on art, social inclusion and art therapy, to a European MA and Ph.D. The group, composed of Primary and Secondary Schools teachers, professors at the Faculty of Education and researchers on Art Education and Art Therapy, has published a variety of books on art therapy and social inclusion, such as Creación y posibilidad/Creation and Possibility (López Fernández Cao 2006) and Arteterapia y educación/Art Therapy and Education (Martínez Díez and López Fernández Cao 2004), and a collection of thirteen educational projects under the name › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Joaquín Roldán Ramírez Keywords visual argument, primary teacher training, photography, artsbased educational research Joaquín Roldán Ramírez has a Bachelor degree in Fine Arts (Sculpture) and Ph.D. in Visual Arts and Education. He was appointed as professor at the University of Granada in 1999. He won a national award for sculpture in 1994 and 1995, has work in the Museum Villa de Rota and the contemporary art collection of the University of Granada and has exhibited in the Sudan and Libya. Recent books and exhibition catalogues include (2004), Maps of Seeing (2006), Dialogo de imagenes (2007), Miradas sobre la Violencia de Género/Seeing Gender Violence (2008). › Photo essays and photographs in visual arts-based educational research, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 7-23. Andrés Romero-Jódar University of Zaragoza, Departamento de Filologia Inglesa y Alemana, C/ Pedro Cerbuna, 12, Zaragoza, 50009, Spain Keywords Alan Moore, comic book, graphic novel, avant-gardes, postmodernism, Bertolt Brecht Andrés Romero-Jódar holds a BA and an MA in English Philology, and a BA in Spanish Philology from the University of Zaragoza (Spain). He is a Research Fellow in the Department of English and German Philology of the University of Zaragoza, and is part of the research group entitled ‘Contemporary Narrative in English’. He is currently working on his doctoral thesis on sequential art, iconical genres and representation of trauma in graphic novels in English, and has published on these and related subjects in academic journals such as Atlantis, Estudios Ingleses de la Universidad Complutense, Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses, Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses, Revista de Literatura and Tropelías. › A hammer to shape reality: Alan Moore’s graphic novels and the avantgardes, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 39-56. Simon Roodhouse › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 1.1, 5-6. › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 89-90. Keywords workforce development, vocational qualifications, higher education, qualifications, connectivity › Realizing capabilities – academic creativity and the creative industries, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 137-150. › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 207-209. › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 2.1, 5-7. › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 127-128. › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 215-216. › Editorials, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Creative Industries Journal, 3.2, 105-106. › EDITORIAL, Creative Industries Journal, 3.3, 181-. › EDITORIAL, Creative Industries Journal, 4.1, 3-3. Toni Ross University of New South Wales, College of Fine Arts, School of Art History and Theory, PO Box 259, Paddington, New South Wales, 2021, Australia Dr. Toni Ross is Senior Lecturer in Art History and Theory at College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales. She co-edited (with Jill Beaulieu & Mary Roberts) Refracting Vision: essays on the writings of Michael Fried (2000), and her recent research is focused on political theory in contemporary art, with a particular emphasis on the thinking of aesthetics and politics developed by philosopher Jacques Rancière. Her current research projects include studies of the politics of Keywords philosophy of aesthetics, post-sixties and contemporary art, critical theory, art and politics aesthetics in the art of Olga Chernysheva, Steve McQueen and Tom Nicholson (funded by an Australia Council grant), and a book on Jacques Rancière’s refiguring of the politics of aesthetic modernity that includes cases studies of Australian and international contemporary art. › Aesthetic autonomy and interdisciplinarity: a response to Nicolas Bourriaud's ‘relational aesthetics’, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 167-182. Lisa Rossetti › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 187-198. Keywords Stanislav Roudavski University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia Keywords research methodology, writing in creative practice, creative expression, research dissemination, academic writing An architect, artist and researcher, Dr. Stanislav Roudavski studies and designs technologically sustained places. His current practice-based research work integrates organizational techniques of architecture, unpredictability and richness of performative situations, creative capacities of computing, visual languages of the moving-image arts, dramaturgy and spatial narrative. He is based at the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, University of Melbourne. › Transparency or drama? Extending the range of academic writing in architecture and design, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.2, 111133. Julia Round Bournemouth University, Dorset, United Kingdom Keywords comics, cross-media adaptation, television, discourse analysis Julia Round lectures in the Media School at Bournemouth University, United Kingdom, and co-edits the academic journal Studies in Comics. She has published and presented work internationally on cross-media adaptation, television and discourse analysis, the application of literary terminology to comics, the 'graphic novel' redefinition, and the presence of gothic and fantastic motifs and themes in this medium. She holds a Ph.D. in English Literature from Bristol University, England, and MA in Creative Writing from Cardiff University, Wales, and has previously taught at Central St. Martins College of Art and Design, London, and Bristol University. She is a member of Bournemouth University's Narrative Research Group, the Higher Education Academy, and the International Society for the Study of Narrative. Her research explores contemporary British-American comics from literary, cultural, narratological and semiotic perspectives. › EDITORIAL, Studies in Comics, 1.1, 3-5. › Reviews, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 379-403. › Editorial, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 189-190. Nick Rowe York St John University, Lord Mayor’s Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords stigma, pedagogy, social inclusion, theatre, mental health Nick Rowe is a senior lecturer at York St John University where he teaches in the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences and in the Faculty of Arts. With a background in psychiatric nursing and dramatherapy, Rowe is particularly interested in the relationships between theatre and mental health. He is a performing member of Playback Theatre York and is the author of Playing the Other: Dramatizing Personal Narratives in Playback Theatre (2007). › Border crossings: Arts and health work in a university, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 241-250. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Daniel Rubinstein United Kingdom Keywords digital photography, new media, digital culture, contemporary culture Daniel Rubinstein is the head of digital photography at London South Bank University and the principle editor of Philosophy of Photography – an academic journal devoted to the scholarly understanding of photography. He has published extensively on the subject of new media, digital culture and photography. His research is concerned with the role of photography in contemporary culture and the uses of photographic imagery in new media environments. As an editor of the journal Philosophy of Photography, he aims to delineate a field of study which develops tools for the critical analysis of the many ways in which images affect our lives. His own research is concerned with the cultural shifts caused by the transition from analogue to digital photography and by the impact of photography on (non)representational thinking and the production of meaning. › Tag, Tagging, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 197-200. Ana Eva Iribas Rudín Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Dept. of Painting, Faculty of Fine Arts, Greco, 2 Ciudad Universitaria, Madrid, 28040, Spain Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education Ana Eva Iribas Rudín has held a lecturer position at the department of Painting, Faculty of Fine Arts, Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM) in the last five years. She is preparing her dissertation on the creative process in visual arts and altered states of consciousness; she holds a degree in fine arts and an MA in art therapy from the UCM, and a diploma in first cycle of medicine from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Inês Secca Ruivo Keywords functional-emotional, biomorphology, rhetoric, design Inês Secca Ruivo (1972) is an industrial designer, with a Ph.D. from the University of Aveiro, titled 'Design para o Futuro. O indivíduo entre o artifício e anatureza/Design for the Future: The individual between artifice and nature' She is an assistant professor of the design programme at the University of Évora and a member of the Centro de História da Arte e Investigação Artística (CHAIA – Centre of History of Art and Artistic Research), which belongs to the same entity. Between 1995 and 2007, she has been prolific in the industry through collaboration with different international companies. In 2005, she was responsible for the general co-coordination and supervision of the production ofproject SMD – Significados da Matéria/ No Design/Matter Meanings in Design – within the scope of ‘design towards sustainability’, as defined by the Art Institute of the Portuguese Ministry of Culture. › Rhetoric in industrial design, The Poster, 1.1, 61-76. Sinikka Rusanen University of Helsinki, Department of Teacher education, University of Helsinki, P.O.Box 8 (Siltavuorenpenger 10) FI-00014, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland Sinikka Rusanen, Ph.D., Department of Teacher Education, Section of Kindergarten Teacher and Early Childhood Education, lecturer in Visual Arts Education. › The identities of an arts educator: Comparing discourses in three teacher education programmes in Finland, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 7-21. Keywords Chris Rust Sheffield Halam University, Art and Design Research Centre, Furnival Building, Arundel Street, Sheffield, S1 2NU, United Kingdom Keywords interactive media, design, design and healthcare Chris Rust is Professor of Design and Head of the Art and Design Research Centre at Sheffield Hallam University. He is Chair of the Design Research Society Council, and a member of the AHRC Peer Review College. His research interests include the role of tacit knowledge in research and practice in art and design, the role of personal values in interactive media, the relationship between design and healthcare and the emerging research methods and methodologies in creative disciplines. › The pedestal and the pendulum: fine art practice, research and doctorates, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.2, 133-151. › Context – Many flowers, small leaps forward: debating doctoral education in design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 141-148. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.1, 75-. Nicky Ryan United Kingdom Keywords cultural studies, phenomenography, visual representations, theory and practice Nicky Ryan is Principal Lecturer in Cultural and Critical Studies at the London College of Communication at the University of the Arts London. Her Ph.D. thesis was an examination into cultural-commercial collaborations and the inter-relationship between corporations, artists, non-profit cultural institutions and governments. Research interests include the intersection between art and business, corporatemuseums and art collections, academic and commercial perspectives on luxury, theories of interior design and the role of culture in regeneration. Nicky has delivered a range of conference papers and published articles in relation to the above. Her academic background is in the history of art, and prior to entering education her industry experience was in the fashion business. › Millstone or milestone? The perceived value of cultural studies for art and design students and teachers, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 9-25. Semi Ryu Virginia Commonwealth University, 2144 Ridgefield Green Way, Richmond, VA, Virginia, VA 23233, United States of America Keywords interactive media, virtual reality, spirituality, Eastern philosophy, shamanism Semi Ryu is an Associate Professor of Kinetic Imaging at Virginia Commonwealth University. Ryu is a media artist who specializes in experimental 3D animations and virtual puppetry, based on Korean shamanism and the oral tradition of storytelling. Her works have been widely presented in exhibitions and performances in more than fifteen countries, and her academic papers, which have focused on the ritualization of interactive media, have been published in international journals and conferences. Recently, her virtual puppetry ‘Parting on Z’ was performed at Chelsea Art Museum, NYC (http://www.semiryu.net). › Ritualizing interactive media: from motivation to activation, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.2, 105-124. › Searching for love impossible, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 229-236. › Virtual puppet, my love impossible, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 115-127. Toni Ryynänen University of Helsinki, Latokartanonkaari 9, PB27, 14, Finland Toni Ryynänen is a consumer economist and postdoctoral researcher who works at the University of Helsinki in the Department of Economics and Management. He holds a D.Sc. in Consumer Economics. His research interests focus on media and design studies and consumer culture research. Keywords media, design, consumer culture › Craft in economic context: The representation of Finnish craft in the economic press, Craft Research, 2.1, 115-127. Alexandra Saemmer University Paris 8 Keywords digital media, digital literature, digital art Alexandra Saemmer is Associate Professor of Information and Communication Sciences at University Paris 8. Her current research projects focus on semiotics and aesthetics of digital media, and reading and writing on digital supports. She is author and editor of several books and articles on digital literature and arts. Her books include Matières textuelles sur support numérique (Publications de l’Université de Saint-Etienne, 2007), E-Formes 2 : Les littératures et arts numérique sau risque du jeu (2011, co-editor, Publications de l’Université de Saint-Etienne); and E-Formes 1 : Ecritures visuelles sur support numérique (2008, co-editor, Publications de l’Université de Saint-Etienne). She also writes ‘paper’ poetry and fiction in German (recently, ‘Das Hinterhaus’/'The rear building', 'Neuerdings weiß ich viel mehr'/'Recently I know much more', textem, 2010). › Writing the ephemeral […] and re-enchanting the remnants: The lability of the digital device in literary practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 4.1, 79-92. Olivia Sagan University of the Arts, London, The Dr. Olivia Sagan is Senior Research Fellow (Pedagogy) at the University of the Arts, London. She is interested in the interface of formal and community-based education and her research questions the Centre for Learning & Teaching in Art & Design, 6th Floor, 272 High Holborn, London, WC1V 7EY, United Kingdom potential of each, individually or in partnership, to address issues of social inequity. › Insight on OutReach: Towards a critical practice, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 145-161. Keywords creativity, emotion, identity, space, transitional › Playgrounds, studios and hiding places: emotional exchange in creative learning spaces, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 173-186. › Thou Art: The multiple gaze of audio-visual, community-based participatory research, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 125-136. Prabha Sahasrabudhe Teachers College Columbia University, Arts and Humanities Box 78, 525 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027, United States of America Keywords education, advocacy, cognition, curriculum Prabha Sahasrabudhe retired as a full-time faculty member at Teachers College Columbia University, New York in 1999. He currently holds an honorary position there as the Director/Secretary of the Center for International Art Education, Inc. Professor Sahasrabudhe came to Teachers College after more than eighteen years of teaching and administration in New York State public schools. Prior to that he was an Associate Professor of Art Education at the School of Education, New York University. He is a former President of the United States Society for Education through Art, and has served as a member of the InSEA World Council. In 2003, he edited and published International Conversations thru Art: Proceedings of the InSEA World Congress 2002, the Congress he chaired. › Design for learning through the arts, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 77-92. Andy Salmon Anglia Ruskin University › REVIEWS, Book 2.0, 1.1, 75-86. Keywords Pauline Sameshima Washington State University, College of Education, Cleveland Hall, Pullman, Washington, PO Box Pauline Sameshima is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning in the College of Education at Washington State University. She teachesgraduate courses in the Cultural Studies and Social Thought in Education programme. She is interested in 642112, United States of America creative qualitative research methodologies, sustainable learning systems design, and arts and technology integration. Keywords embodied heteroglossic spaces, immigration, identity, practice-based research, arts-based research, curriculum › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Roberto Sánchez-Camus › The art of dying: Aesthetics and palliative care, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 155-164. Keywords James H. Sanders III The Ohio State University, Department of Art Education, 128 North Oval Mall, Columbu, OH, 43210-1363, United States of America Keywords heritage, economic policy, identity, representation, craft James H. Sanders III is Assistant Professor in the Art Education Department at Ohio State University’s Arts Policy and Administration programme, and directs the museum specialization. Dr Sanders teaches courses on arts education policy, nonprofit boards and governance, arts career development, critical theories and cultural studies of arts policy and practice, and museum education history. His research explores arts education curricula and cultural productions, institutional histories, organizational governance, management, and social change initiatives. Sanders’ arts-based narrative and interpretive research examines institutional policy and practice through a critically queer lens; exploring sites of cultural (re)production and reception that include non-profit art and history museums, community arts organizations, media culture and school settings. › Culture, identity, representation: the economic policies of heritage tourism, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 129-142. Linda Sandino University of the Arts London, CCW Graduate School, Research Department, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, SW7 2RL, United Kingdom Keywords life stories, narrative Dr. Linda Sandino is CCW/V&A Museum Senior Research Fellow working on narrative and oral histories. Previously, she collected extensive life history recordings of artists and designers for National Life Stories at The British Library National Sound Archive, and she is also project director of the Design History Society oral history project. › Relating process: accounts of influence in the life history interview, Journal research, oral history, identity of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 191-200. Claudia Sandoval University of Sao Paulo, Rua do Anfiteatro, 200. Bloco C Ap 305, CRUSP. CEP., São Paulo, 05508-030, Brazil Keywords subversive, obsolescence, critic, web art Claudia Sandoval is a Colombian artist and researcher for the masters degree in multimedia arts at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, with the support of the Scholarship Fapesp. She has participated in exhibitions such as ‘FILE’, Sao Paulo, ‘BOR’, Serbia, ‘Documentary Photography’, Colombia, ‘Salao de Abril’, Fortaleza, Brazil, ‘Rundgang’, Cologne, Germany and ‘Minus Eins’, Wuppertal, Germany. She has presented lectures at the Institute of Cultural Diversity, New York, Universidad del Valle, Colombia, Consciousness Reframed, Munich, and ABCiber, Sao Paulo, Brazil. She has also published articles about photography, art and contemporary aesthetics in magazines in Brazil, the US, Germany, Spain, Colombia, Mexico and England. › A reading on de-territorialization's works of art for the Internet: places, localities and the Internet as a territory, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 237-242. › For a critical perspective of the value of web art, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 21-33. Chetan S. Sankar Auburn University, Department of Management, College of Business, Auburn, AL 36849, United States of America Keywords teaching, research, design Chetan S. Sankar is the Thomas Walter Professor of Management at Auburn University’s College of Business. He received his Ph.D. from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania and has worked at Temple University and AT&T Bell Laboratories. His research interests focus on researching innovative practices to integrate teaching, research, and outreach both locally and globally (www.litee.org). He has published more than 150 papers in journals, book chapters, and conference proceedings. He has won awards for research and teaching from the Society for Information Management, iNEER, Decision Sciences Institute, American Society for Engineering Education, Frontiers in Education, and the Project Management Institute. He is the editor of the Decision Sciences Journal of Innovative Education (www.dsjie.org). He has been the principal or co-principal investigator of several grants from the National Science Foundation budgeted at more than $2.2 million. › Action learning: Application to case study development in graduate design education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 183-198. Katharine Sarikakis University of Vienna, Universitaet Wien Department of Communication, Institut fuer Publizistik- und Kommunikationswissenschaft, Berggasse 11/5, Stiege 1, Wien, 1090, Austria Katharine Sarikakis is professor of media governance, media organization and media industries at the Institute of Communication Studies, the University of Vienna. She is the co-author of Media Policy and Globalisation (2006) and the co-editor of Feminist Interventions in International Communication (2008) and numerous chapters and articles on media and cultural policy. › In the land of becoming: the gendered experience of communication doctoral students, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.1, 29-48. Keywords postgraduate students, gender and higher education, mass communication Pamela Schenk Heriot Watt University, School of Textiles and Design, United Kingdom Keywords drawing research, design process, design education Dr. Pam Schenk has been involved with higher education in art and design for over 35 years. She has taught at all levels, concentrating in recent years on postgraduate studies and research in design, and has been a senior academic at the Manchester Metropolitan University, Glasgow School of Art, the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design (University of Central England) and Duncan of Jordanstone College (Dundee University). She is now an Honorary Research Professor at Gray’s School of Art (The Robert Gordon University), Aberdeen, Scotland and is currently a Visiting Professor at the School of Art, Design and Media, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. › Reflections on the teaching of drawing in the digital age: attitudes of senior academics in the United Kingdom to the place of drawing tuition on the design curriculum in higher education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.3, 189-204. Andreas Schiffler Z-Node der Züricher Hochschule der Künste (ZHdK), Ausstellungsstrasse 60, Zurich, CH-8005, Switzerland Keywords game physics, game design, random number generation, entropy generation, stochastic processes Andreas Schiffler is a graduate of the University of Saskatchewan, Canada where he received his M.Sc. in Space Physics at ISAS in 1996. He worked with media artists Prof. Jill Scott and later the Institute of Visual Media under Dr. Jeffrey Shaw at the ZKM media-art institute in Karlsruhe, Germany. He is currently completing a Ph.D. with the Z_node of the Planetary Collegiums at the ZHdK, Zurich, Switzerland researching the linkage between computer games and physics in a cross disciplinary way. He has also worked full time as software architect with various IT startups in the past and is currently a software tester in the STB division at Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, United States. › Physical Entropy in Computer Games, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 39-45. Christian W. Schneider University of Georgia, English Department, Kettengasse 12, Heidelberg, 69117, Germany Keywords authenticity, Alison Bechdel, autobiography, Gothic Christian W. Schneider studied English Literature and Political Science at Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany, and at the University of Wales Aberystwyth, receiving his Master’s degree. His master’s thesis concerned the Gothic elements in Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman. He is now a post-graduate student at the Heidelberg Graduate School for Humanities and Social Sciences at RuprechtKarls-Universität, working on his doctoral dissertation on the Gothic in graphic literature, which will include an extended chapter on Fun Home and autobiographical comics. His further research interests include contemporary American fiction, the narrativity of digital media and the postmodern transformation of popular literary genres. › Young daughter, old artificer: Constructing the Gothic Fun Home, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 337-358. Diederik W. Schönau Cito, Cito, P. O. Box 1034, 6801MG Arnhem, The Netherlands Keywords Diederik W. Schönau is Senior Consultant in educational assessment at Cito, the institute for educational measurement in the Netherlands. His background is in art history and psychology, and has been active in the field of art education since 1982. He has published on many issues with regards to art education, including assessment and policy. He has served the Executive Board of InSEA in many positions, including the Presidency from 1999 to 2002. › Towards developmental self-assessment in the visual arts: Supporting new ways of artistic learning in school, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 49-58. Sven Christian Schuch › Exhibition Reviews, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 101-116. Keywords Michael Schwab Michael Schwab is a London-based German artist and researcher, who has exhibited his work both in the United Kingdom and abroad. Starting out using photography, he breaches a narrow definition of ‘medium’ in his work, focusing on post-conceptual uses of technology. Keywords photography, drawing, installation art, painting, printmaking Apart from photography, he employs drawing, installation art, painting and printmaking to produce work that is often conceptually developed on the computer. He received his Ph.D. from the Royal College of Art for his research entitled: Image Automation: Post-conceptual Postphotography and the Deconstruction of the Photographic Image. He is a tutor at the Royal College of Art, London, research associate at the Berne University of Arts, Switzerland, and research fellow at the Orpheus Research Centre in Music, Ghent, Belgium. He is the founding editor-in-chief of the Journal for Artistic Research. › First, the second: Walter Benjamin’s theory of reflection and the question of artistic research, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 213-223. Christian Schwager Christian Schwager is a freelance illustrator, comic artist and web designer, based in Auckland, New Zealand. › Rhizomatic cyborgs: hypertextual considerations in a posthuman age, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.1, 3-16. Keywords digitality, hypertext, nonlinearity, posthumanism, rhizome Kirsten Scott Royal College of Art, Textiles Department, Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2EU, United Kingdom Keywords craft, fashion, plaited palm fibre Kirsten Scott is currently researching the potential of craft in ethical sourcing for fashion, through a development project, as part of a Ph.D. in Constructed Textiles at the Royal College of Art, with a particular focus on plaited palm fibre. She is also Head of Fashion at Kensington and Chelsea College, with a background in fashion accessory design and production. › Meeting the maker: Warm irregularity in traditional African craft practice, Craft Research, 2.1, 61-82. Bill Seaman Duke University, Department of Art, Art History and Visual Studies, 114b East Duke Building, BOX 90764, Durham, North Carolina, 27708, United States of America An internationally known media artist, scholar, and media researcher, Seaman has had over 30 major installation works and commissions around the world, a dozen solo exhibitions, and numerous performance collaborations, video screenings, and articles/essays/reviews in books and catalogues. His work explores an expanded media-oriented poetics through various technological means. More recently he has been exploring notions surrounding 'Recombinant Informatics' – a multi- Keywords hybrid invention, machinic genetics, recombinant poetics, generative text, recombinant music, second-order cybernetics, Neosentience, AI, polysensing, interface research, database aesthetics perspective approach to poetics and knowledge production. He has been commissioned on a number of occasions. He is currently working on a series of art/science collaborations – poetic installations, scientific research papers, and a book in collaboration with the scientist Otto Rössler surrounding the concept of Neosentience. This research includes the modeling and long-term production of an Electrochemical Computer. He is also collaborating with artist/computer scientist Daniel Howe on multiple works exploring AI and creative writing/multi-media and completing an album of experimental music with Howe entitled Entanglement › The Hybrid Invention Generator: assorted relations, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.2, 103-116. › (Re)sensing the observer: offering an open order cybernetics, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 2.1, 17-32. › Neosentience – a new branch of scientific and poetic inquiry related to artificial intelligence, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 31-40. › (Re)Thinking - the body, generative tools and computational articulation, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.3, 209-230. Rosaura Navajas Seco Complutense University of Madrid, Department of Physical Education at Faculty of Education, Office 1609, c/ Rector Royo Vilanova s/n, Madrid, 28040, Spain Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education The research group ‘Aplicaciones del arte para la inclusión social: arte, terapia y educación para la diversidad’/'Applications of art for social inclusion: art, therapy and education for diversity' is a part of a larger team of teaching staff at the Complutense University of Madrid, which has promoted studies on art, social inclusion and art therapy, to a European MA and Ph.D. The group, composed of Primary and Secondary Schools teachers, professors at the Faculty of Education and researchers on Art Education and Art Therapy, has published a variety of books on art therapy and social inclusion, such as Creación y posibilidad/Creation and Possibility (López Fernández Cao 2006) and Arteterapia y educación/Art Therapy and Education (Martínez Díez and López Fernández Cao 2004), and a collection of thirteen educational projects under the name ‘Posibilidades › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Lesley Seeger Lesley Seeger is a professional artist working on the renal unit at York Hospital and has painted full time for the past 15 years. Lesley is a York Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, The York Hospital, Wigginton Road, York, YO31 8HE, United Kingdom qualified art therapist with experience of using the creative process in a variety of therapeutic settings including the NHS and NSPCC. She joined the Art and Design Team in 2006 as Art Development Worker in the renal units of York, Easingwold and Harrogate hospitals. Keywords art therapy, art development › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. William P. Seeley Franklin and Marshall College, Department of Philosophy, PO Box 3003, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, PA 17604-3003, United States of America William P. Seeley is a professor of philosophy and a sculptor. He received his M.F.A. from Columbia University in 1992, his Ph.D. from CUNY – The Graduate Center in the spring of 2006, and is currently Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, PA. His welded steel sculptures and mobiles have been exhibited in New York City, Tokyo, at the Addison Gallery of American Art, and at Yale University. Keywords aesthetics, cognitive neuroscience, neuroaesthetics, vision, mental imagery › Naturalizing aesthetics: art and the cognitive neuroscience of vision, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 195-214. Pirita SeitamaaHakkarainen Keywords design education, design experiment, collaborative designing, textile design project, virtual design studio Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen is Professor of Craft Science at the Savonlinna Department of Teacher Education, University of Joensuu. She is also a Visiting Professor at the University of Art and Design, Helsinki, UIAH. Her research interests focus on expert-novice differences in designing as well as facilitation of collaborative design through technology-based learning environments. › Three design experiments for computer-supported collaborative design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.2, 101-120. › Sources of inspiration and mental image in textile design process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 105-119. Alexander Sekatskiy кв. 38, ул. Бурцева д. 20, СанктПетербург, St Petersburg, Russia Keywords memory prosthetic, Alexander Sekatskiy is an Associate Professor and Chair of Social Philosophy and the Philosophy of History at Saint-Petersburg State University. He is a Visiting Professor at the Institute of Politics in Saint-Petersburg. He has published extensively on phenomenology, existentialism and the philosophy of history. Selected publications include The ontology of lying (Saint-Petersburg, 2000), The danger of chronometry, perception, visual turn, mental image reality (Saint-Petersburg, 2003) and Applied Metaphysics (SaintPetersburg, 2005). › The photographic argument of philosophy, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 81-88. Adele Senior University of Exeter, Department of Drama, College of Humanities, Thornlea, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Keywords discourse, performance, sacred, semi-living, tissue culture Adele Senior is a Ph.D. candidate at the Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts, Lancaster University, UK. Her thesis, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, examines the relationship between theory and practice in the work of bioartists researching and publishing within the academy. This concern parallels her own attempt to negotiate bioart practices through the academic text of the artist. With a background in Theatre and Performance Studies she is interested in the relationship of these texts and practices to conceptualisations of theatre and performativity and the potential of this relationship in constituting a ‘poststructural’ approach to the analysis of contemporary bio(techno)logical art. › Towards a (Semi-)Discourse of the Semi-Living; The Undecidability of a Life Exposed to Death, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.2, 97-112. Jinsil Seo Simon Fraser University, School of Interactive Arts and Technology, 318545 Rochester Ave., Coquitlam, BC, V3K2V4, Canada Keywords interactive immersive environment, body interface, physical interaction, flow of energy, organic interface, light, aesthetics of immersion Jinsil Seo is an Interactive Artist/Designer and a Ph.D. candidate at the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University in Canada. Her interdisciplinary, interactive art practice investigates the intersection between body, nature and technology. She has created several interactive environments that evoke these experiential properties of immersion, as well as interactive installations, responsive environments, wearable computing projects, and web projects. Seo has chosen interactive art for her creative practice and research in particular because it encourages active, self determined relationships within a work of art. › Touching light: A new framework for immersion in artistic environments, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.1, 3-14. James Michael Shaeffer › WEBSITE REVIEW, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 117-119. Keywords Greg Shapley University of Technology, Media Arts and Production, 4/32 Queen Street, Beaconsfield, Sydney, New South Wales, 2015, Austria Greg Shapely teaches in Media Arts and Production at the University of Technology, Sydney and in Photomedia at Sydney College of the Arts. He was Director and Curator of Don't Look Experimental New Media Gallery, Dulwich Hill, and a practicing artist. › After the artefact: Post-digital photography in our post-media era, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 5-20. Keywords media art, production, photomedia Mae Shaw University of Edinburgh, Moray House School of Education, Holyrood Road, Edinburgh, EH8 7HA, United Kingdom Keywords community worker, community development, education Mae Shaw worked as a community worker in a range of settings in the voluntary sector for 15 years and is now a senior lecturer in the Institute for Education, Community and Society at the Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh. She writes extensively on community development and has co-edited a number of books including Popular Education and Social Movements in Scotland Today (1999), Community Development in Theory and Practice: An International Reader (2008) and Community Development inthe United Kingdom: 1950–2010 (2011). She is a longstanding member of the Community Development Journal. › Community development and the arts: Sustaining the democratic imagination in lean and mean times, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.1, 65-80. Raja Shehadeh Raja Shehadeh can be contacted through Karolina Sutton, at Curtis Brown Group Ltd., Curtis Brown, 5th Floor, Haymarket House, 28–29 Haymarket, London, Scotland, SW1Y 4SP, United Kingdom Keywords human rights, international law, Middle East Raja Shehadeh is a Palestinian human rights lawyer and the author of Strangers in the House (2002), When the Bulbul Stopped Singing (2003), A Rift in Time: Travels with My Ottoman Uncle (2010) and Palestinian Walks (2007), which won the 2008 Orwell Book Prize. Raja was born in Ramallah and trained as a barrister in London before returning to Palestine to practice law with his father. In 1979 he cofounded the pioneering human rights organization Al Haq (Law in the Service of Man). He is the author of several books on international law, human rights and the Middle East. › An Imagined Sarha, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 133-144. Lynette Sheridan Burns University of Western Sydney, School of Communication, Design and Media, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith Campus, Sydney, New South Wales, 1797, Australia Keywords critical reflection, professional education, journalism, efficacy Lynette Sheridan Burns has been a journalist for more than 25 years and has also taught journalism in Australian universities since 1989. She founded the journalism programme at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales in 1992 before moving to her current position as Associate Professor of Journalism at the University of Western Sydney in 2002. She has won numerous awards for journalism, mostly recently in 2002, and in 1999 won the Australian Award for Excellence in Educational Publishing (Teaching and Learning Package) and a University Award for Excellence in Teaching. She published Understanding Journalism, with Sage Publications in 2002 and today combines teaching with freelance journalism, curriculumdesign consultancy and on-going research into teaching and learning. Her Ph.D. explores the role of tertiary education in preparing practitioners in journalism. › A reflective approach to teaching journalism, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.1, 5-16. Alexandra Sherlock Department of Sociological Studies at the University of Sheffield Alexandra Sherlock is the postgraduate researcher for 'If the Shoe Fits: Footwear, Identity and Transition', an ESRC funded research project currently being conducted in the Department of Sociological Studies at the University of Sheffield:www.sheffield.ac.uk/iftheshoefits. Keywords › BOOK REVIEWS, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 237-247. Stephanie Shestakow Keywords art history, museum education, Atlantic World Stephanie Shestakow earned a BA in Art History at Barnard College, followed by Masters degrees from University College London and Teachers College, Columbia University. Her original specialization was eighteenth-century art, particularly that of the French Revolution, but now she focuses on museum education as well as the visual culture of the Atlantic World. She has taught museum-learning workshops and has published reviews in several academic journals. She currently serves as Program Coordinator for Student Affairs at The College of New Jersey, where she is also an adjunct professor. › Teaching Che: a picture is worth a thousand words (or t-shirts), Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 53-57. Miho Shimohara Kagoshima University, 1-20-6 Kirimoto, Kagoshima-shi, 8300065, Japan Keywords Japanese art history, media, workshops, social constructivism, situated learning Miho Shimohara is Associate Professor in the Fcaulty of Education at Kagoshima University, Japan. She received her MA from Kwansei Gakuin University. Her main research theme in Japanese art history especially pre-modern Yamato-e paintings, and she researched this at the British Museum between September 2001 and January 2002. Her recent research also includes the study of workshops using Japanese art for cross-cultural understanding. › The Narikiri Emaki (picture scroll) project, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.1, 7-27. Ryan Shin The University of Arizona, Assistant Professor of Art Education, School of Art, P. O. Box 210002, Tucson, AZ 85721-0002, United States of America Ryan Shin is an assistant professor in the School of Art at the University of Arizona. His research interests include issues of the representation and appropriation of Asian images and objects in the popular media and visual culture, critical discourse on minority visual culture, and Asian cultural performances and folk traditions. › An intercultural learning of similarities and differences of rituals and customs of two cultures, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 361-380. Keywords clothing, food, Korean Ancestor Worship service, Native American Sweat Lodge, intercultural learning Alison Shreeve Buckinghamshire New University, High Wycombe Campus, Queen Alexandra Road, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, HP11 2JZ, United Kingdom Keywords qualitative variation, research, design projects, visual reproducing, conceptual responses, Communities of Practice Alison Shreeve is the Director of the HEFCE funded Creative Learning in Practice Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CLIP CETL) at the University of the Arts London. The centre’s role is to enhance and disseminate successful student learning activities and to reward excellence in teaching. The centre’s activitiesinclude developing pedagogic research in the university and investigating what is specific to learning in the disciplines of art and design. Staff development is used to share and disseminate learning from all the centre’s activities. Alison has over twenty years experience in teaching textiles and a Masters in Art Education. She is interested in research into aspects of learning within our disciplines and this includes students and tutor’s conceptions of assessment. Alison iscurrently completing the doctoral programme in educational research at Lancaster University and the focus of her research is on the practitioner tutor’s experience of practice and teaching. › Students’ approaches to the ‘research’ component in the fashion design project: Variation in students’ experience of the research process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.3, 113-130. › Learning development and study support – an embedded approach through communities of practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.1, 11-26. › Editorial for ADCHE special issue, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 139-144. › Editorial, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.2, 107-110. Kaye Shumack University of Western Sydney Keywords photography, visual design, media, visual grammars, social creativity Associate Professor Kaye Shumack has a background in photography, visual design and media. Her research is largely practice-led, exploring visual grammars and forms of new media representations, and the spaces between fiction, documentary, and the social that are being created through 'transmedia' digital platforms. Her research includes an interest in processes of social creativity that are part of everyday living, and how these might be harnessed by designers for innovation and new thinking using context mapping for social enablement. Her research also engages with exploring visualisations of the heuristic and pragmatic processes that occur within design decision-making. Her Ph.D. is titled 'Design and the Conversational Self'; this work uses an auto-ethnographic methodology to explore the dynamic shifts that happen in design processes across the spectrum of public/private and individual/collective. › Learning as experience: a model for teaching the ‘reflective exegesis’ for communication design practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 59-72. Elizabeth Sikiaridi Keywords communication, global Xenakis, music, architecture, media art Elizabeth Sikiaridi is Founder of Hybrid Space Lab (Amsterdam/Berlin), a r&d and design practice focusing on the hybrid fields that are emerging through the combination and fusion of environments, objects and services in the information/communication age. Elizabeth is professor at the University of Duisburg-Essen, working on the design and development of the cityscape and consultant to the Dutch government on 'the use of space in the information/communication age'. She studied architecture and urbanism at the École d'Architecture de Belleville in Paris and at the Technical University of Darmstadt. She has worked at the architectural office Behnisch & Partner in Stuttgart and the Technical University of Berlin. › IDENSITY(r): urbanism in the communication age, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.1, 69-76. › The Architectures of Iannis Xenakis, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.3, 201-208. Cheryl Sim United Kingdom Keywords visual art, pedagogical reasoning, cooperative learning, creativity, knowledge-in-action Cheryl Sim is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Education, Griffith University in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She has 25 years of experience in secondary and tertiary teacher education. She completed undergraduate and postgraduate studies in History. Her Ph.D. (1999) investigated the development of pedagogical content knowledge of preservice history teachers. In the last decade, her research has focused on the knowledge base of teachers, in particular the role of communities of practice and pre-service teacher preparation, and the changing nature of the teaching workforce. › Pedagogical reasoning, creativity and cooperative learning in the visual art classroom, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 51-61. David Simmons The University of Northampton, School of English, Media and Culture, Northampton University, Avenue Campus, St George’s Avenue, Northamptonshire, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Keywords American literature, contemporary novel David Simmons is currently employed as a lecturer in American Literature, Film and Television Studies at the University of Northampton. He has published extensively in the areas of American Literature and Media, including a monograph entitled The Anti-Hero in the American Novel: From Heller to Vonnegut (Palgrave, 2008) and an edited collection, New Critical Essays on Kurt Vonnegut (Palgrave, 2009). David also co-edited (with Nicola Allen) a collection of essays that are concerned with re-evaluating the contemporary novel entitled Reassessing the Contemporary Canon: From Joseph Conrad to Zadie Smith. › ‘Nothing too heavy or too light’: Negotiating Moore’s Tom Strong and the academic establishment, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 57-67. Marc Singer Howard University, Department of English, Washington, DC, 20059, United States of America Keywords contemporary literature, comics, popular culture Marc Singer is Assistant Professor of English at Howard University in Washington, DC. His articles on contemporary literature, comics, and popular culture have appeared in Post Script, Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, Journal of Narrative Theory, TwentiethCentury Literature, African American Review, and the International Journal of Comic Art. He is the co-editor, with Nels Pearson, of Detective Fiction in a Postcolonial and Transnational World and the author of Grant Morrison: Combining the Worlds of Contemporary Comics, forthcoming from the University Press of Mississippi. › Dark Genesis: Falls from language and returns to Eden from ‘Pog’ to Promethea, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 93-104. Abhigyan Singh Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology, Hasdeo Vihar Colony, Champa-Jangir, Jangir, Chattisgarh, 495668, India Abhigyan Singh is a design researcher. He holds a Master of Arts in New Media Design from Aalto Unviersity School of Art and Design (previously known as the University of Art and Design Helsinki), Finland, and a Bachelor of Technology in Information and Communiction Technology, India. He explores the social aspects of ICT use and translates his research findings into design concepts. Keywords design research, new media design, ICT › Visual artefacts as boundary objects in participatory research paradigm, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 35-50. Benedict Singleton University of Northumbria Keywords Benedict Singleton is a designer and writer who lives and works in London. He divides his time between independent design strategy consultancy (for a range of organizations from small biotech start-ups to multinational corporations) and more experimental design work. He is currently working on a Ph.D. in Design at Northumbria University with the working title 'Subtle empires', which draws on architecture, philosophy and the history of technology to trace a history of suspicions about artisans, and what they tell us about the relationship between people and artefacts. › Subtle empires: On craft and being crafty, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 249-264. Susan Sinkinson Susan Sinkinson is currently a Ph.D. student at the University of British Columbia, specializing in Art Education. Before this, she completed an MA degree in Art Education and BFA degree in Film Production at Concordia University. She has made and screened several experimental films and videos. Her research into Trinh T Minhha’s work for her masters degree have inspired her to construct a praxis based in multicultural film and video art, feminism, and the autobiographical voice. She values working with international students, such as Belidson Dias, because of the opportunities this creates for intercultural dialogue through art. Keywords visual culture, spectatorship, art education, feminism, queer theory › Film spectatorship between queer theory and feminism: transcultural readings, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.2, 143-152. Anita Sinner Concordia University, Art Education, 1455 De Maisonneuve Blvd., West, EV 2.821, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1M8, Canada Anita Sinner is an Assistant Professor of Art Education at Concordia University, Montreal, Canada. Her research interests include preservice and in-service teacher education, community-based art education, arts-based methods, rela-tional aesthetics, life writing and digital media. Keywords ecotones, triptychs, arts research › Arts research as a triptych installation: A framework for interpreting and rendering enquiry, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 127144. Diana Reed Slattery Xenolinguistics, 260 Bungalow Ave., San Rafael, California, 94901, United States of America Diana Reed Slattery is the director of DomeWorks, an artscollaborative bringing sounds and sights in live performance to domed environments. She is the author of the novel The Maze Game and is engaged in Ph.D. research on linguistic phenomena in the psychedelic sphere with the Planetary Collegium. Keywords hallucination, psychedelics, reality, extended perception, immersion › VR and hallucination: a technoetic perspective, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 3-18. Ruslan Slutsky University of Toledo, Department of Early Childhood, Physical and Special Education, Gillham Hall Room 4500L, Toledo, OH. 43606, United States of America Ruslan Slutsky is Associate Professor of Early Childhood Education at the University of Toledo. Dr. Slutsky teaches courses in early childhood education, language development, and children’s play. His research is qualitative in nature with current interests focusing on the impact of learning communities on student learning, the Reggio Emilia approach, Head Start and children’s play, particularly in the area of war Keywords early childhood education, language development, children’s play and superhero play. › Judging a book by its cover: Preschool children’s aesthetic preferences for picture books, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.2, 171-185. Cathy Smilan Keywords integration, expeditionary learning, environment, sustainability Cathy Smilan is Assistant Professor of Art Education at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and Director of the Master of Art Education Program. Recent publications include articles in Art Education, Childhood Education, and the International Journal of Social Sciences. She has delivered numerous papers and presentations at international, national and state conferences. Research interests include art integration throughout the curriculum, museum and community partnership in art education, art education and sustainability, and teacher education and preparation. › Lessons learned from the landscape: an integrated approach, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 169-185. Jill Smith University of Auckland, Faculty of Education, Gate 3, 74 Epsom Avenue, Auckland, 1150, New Zealand Keywords art education, a/r/tography, research, New Zealand Jill Smith is Principal Lecturer in the School of Arts, Languages and Literacies at the Faculty of Education, University of Auckland, New Zealand. A Pakeha (European) New Zealander, her teaching and research interests focus upon the connections between art, culture, curriculum and education policy. In particular, she is interested in the relationship between bicultural (Maori/European) policy and visual arts practice, issues of culture, diversity and difference in pedagogical practices, and the A/R/T connection between art practice, research and teaching Although New Zealand is becoming an increasingly multicultural nation it has a strong commitment to biculturalism. Jill's most recent research is on how and whether visual arts teachers take into account the ethnic diversity and cultural differences of students. Her current research focuses on Asian students' perspectives on visual arts education in New Zealand secondary schools and tertiary art/design institutions. › The A/R/T connection: linking art practice, research and teaching, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 265-281. Chris Smith London Metropolitan Univ., John Cass Dept - Art, Media & Design, 6973 Whitechapel High Street, London, E1 1PF, United Kingdom Keywords definition, naturalized epistemology, artwork, art practice, documentation, practice Chris Smith is Convenor of the Visual Arts Practice Research Group and editor of the Journal of Visual Art Practice. His research interests lie in the field of art anddesign philosophy, particularly the connection between theory and practice, and a concern with praxis in art and design. He collaborates with others from the VisualArts Practice Research Group in projects related to the relationship of imagination and image, and with Art & Language on the question of ‘What work does the artwork do?’ This has led to various national and international symposia and exhibitions. Chris supervises a range of doctoral students drawn from art and design as well as the crafts. He has run a number of workshops in collaboration with the Centre for Learning and Teaching in Art and Design, University of the Arts, London, on supervision of Masters and Doctoral students. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 3-4. › Special Edition Editorial: What work does the artwork do? A question for art, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.1, 5-12. › Special Edition Editorial: The Problem of Documenting Fine Art Practices and Processes, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 167-174. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.2, 103-105. › Writing on Practice, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 8.1&2, 3-5. Matt Smith Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, Community Drama programme, Mount Street, Liverpool, L1 9HF, United Kingdom Keywords puppetry, participation, environment Matt currently leads the undergraduate Community Drama programme at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts. Matt is also the artistic director for PickleHerring Theatre Company. Matt has been a freelance artist for sixteen years, working in diverse settings such as schools, prisons, hospitals, environmental agencies and working with the homeless. Matt’s work is always eclectic, working across disciplines such as drama, puppetry, masks, and music. Matt completed his MA in Contemporary Arts at Manchester Metropolitan University. › Puppetry as Community Arts Practice, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.1, 69-78. Pia Smith Keywords community art, music, dance Pia Smith worked in the Globalism Research Centre at RMIT University, Melbourne, on three projects related to the social benefits of community art. These included one project for the Victorian health promotion agency VicHealth, one for Regional Arts Victoria and a project for Australia Councilfor the Arts. She has a background in music and dance and has worked as a freelance writer and editor. › Art, governance and the turn to community: Lessons from a national action research project on community art and local government in Australia, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.1, 27-40. Jimmy Smith Independent Scholar Keywords Jimmy Smith studied Illustration at the Cambridge School of Art, and is a graphic artist, writer and collector/scholar of comics and graphic novels. Jimmy is currently researching a number of projects, including articles on obscure nineteenth century cartoonists and the Japanese horror comics of Suehiro Maruo and Hideshi Hino. He is also writing and designing his own graphic stories exploring folklore, historical events, fairy tales and the supernatural. › Beyond Maus: The experimental comics of Art Spiegelman, Book 2.0, 1.1, 47-56. Deborah L Smith-Shank Deborah Smith-Shank is Professor of Art Education at The Ohio State University; Chair of Undergraduate Studies and Licensure. Her research focuses on material culture examined through semiotic and feminist lenses. She is VicePresident of the International Society for Education Through Art (http://www. insea.org/), and co-editor of Visual Culture & Gender, an international, multimedia, juried journal (http://www.emitto.net/visualculturegender). The Ohio State University, Department of Art Education, 1288 S. 4th Street, Columbus, OH, 43206, United States of America Keywords art education, material culture › The city as a site for interdisciplinary teaching and learning, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 27-40. Ismail Özgür Soğancı Anadolu University, Yunusemre Kampusü, Eskisehir, 26470, Turkey Keywords art education, cultural exchange programmes, Erasmus Ismail Özgür Soğancı was born in Turkey in 1974. After graduating from the Department of Art Education at Gazi University, he worked as an art teacher in different levels of the Turkish schooling system for two years until he wasawarded the International Graduate Scholarship by the Turkish Ministry of Education in 1999. In the frame of this scholarship, Soğancı completed his Masters and Doctorate at Arizona State University in the field of Art Education. In 2005, he started teaching at Anadolu University in Turkey asan assistant professor. Currently serving in the InSEA World Council as a representative of the Middle East Region, he is actively involved in cultural exchange programmes such as Erasmus as coordinator. His recent research concentrates on links between teaching and various modes of visuality, along with the historical and cultural constructs that have shaped them. › Mom, why isn’t there a picture of our prophet?, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 21-28. › The city as a site for interdisciplinary teaching and learning, International Journal of Education through Art, 7.1, 27-40. Patricia Soley-Beltran University of Edinburgh, Sociology Department, University of Edinburgh Keywords Patrícia Soley-Beltran is an Honorary Fellow at the Sociology Department, University of Edinburgh, a founding member of the International Society for Cultural History and a member of the Working Group on the Anthropology of, the Body (Catalan Institute of Anthropology). She regularly publishes in academic, and cultural journals; her first book is Transexualidad y la Matriz Heterosexual: Un estudio crítico de Judith Butler (Edicions Bellaterra, Barcelona: 2009). She worked as an advertising and fashion model, and actress for ten years. › Aesthetic (dis)orders: Styling principles in fashion modelling, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 185-205. Michael R. Solomon Saint Joseph's University, Department of Marketing, Haub School of Business, 5600 City Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19131, United States of America Keywords impression management, avatars, virtual worlds, body image, self-concept Professor Solomon’s primary research interests include consumer behaviour and lifestyle issues, branding strategy, the symbolic aspects of products, the psychology of fashion, marketing applications of virtual worlds and the development of visually-oriented online research methodologies. His textbook, Consumer Behavior: Buying, Having, and Being, published by Prentice Hall, is widely used in universities throughout North America, Europe, and Australasia and is now in its ninth edition. › Digital identity management: Old wine in new bottles, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 173-180. Ian Solomonides Macquarie University, Institute of Higher Education Research and Associate Professor Ian Solomonides was formerly Programme Leader for Furniture and Product Design and Learning and Teaching Coordinator in the School of Architecture, Design and Built Environment at Nottingham Trent University, United Kingdom. He is Development, Sydney, New South Wales, 2019 now Director of the Learing and Teaching Centre at Macquarie University, Sydney. His research has ranged from student approaches to study in engineering to curriculum design and the quality of student learning in Art and Design. He is currently interested in the nature of student engagement as understood by students and staff. Keywords engagement, creativity, identity, learning › Design students' experience of engagement and creativity, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.1, 27-40. John Somers University of Exeter, Department of Drama, Honorary Fellow, School of Arts Languages and Literatures,, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom John Somers works extensively in Britain and internationally and is the 2003 recipient of the American Alliance of Theatre and Education Special Recognition Award. He founded and directed the Exeter University MA Applied Drama, and was founder/Artistic Director of Exstream Theatre Company. He makes interactive theatre (his production On the Edge won major national awards) and community theatre in non-theatre spaces. Keywords theatre, community theatre, drama › Theatre as communal work, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.3, 247-264. John Sorenson Brock University, Department of Sociology at Brock University, Chair, Department of Sociology, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, L2S 3A1, Canada Keywords Professor John Sorenson is currently the Chair of the Department of Sociology at Brock University, where he teaches in the area of Critical Animal Studies, as well as in anti-racism and globalization. His books include Animal Rights (Halifax: Fernwood, 2010), Ape (London: Reaktion, 2010), Imaging Ethiopia (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1998), Ghosts and Shadows (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001), Culture of Prejudice (Peterorough: Broadview, 2003), Disaster and Development in the Horn of Africa (Houndmills: Macmillan, 1995) and African Refugees (Boulder: Westview, 1994). › Ethical fashion and the exploitation of nonhuman animals, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 139-164. Adriana de Souza e Silva IT University of Copenhagen, Design, Culture and Mobile Communication, Denmark Adriana de Souza e Silva is an Associate Professor at the IT University of Copenhagen (ITU) in the Digital Culture and Mobile Communication group and a member of the Center for Network Culture at ITU. She is also an Assistant Professor at the Department of Communication at North Carolina State University (NCSU), affiliated Keywords hybrid spaces, mobile interfaces, location-aware technologies, mobile phones faculty at the Digital Games Research Center, and a faculty member of the Communication, Rhetoric and Digital Media (CRDM) program at NCSU. Dr. de Souza e Silva's research focuses on how mobile and locative interfaces shape people's interactions with public spaces and create new forms of sociability. She teaches classes on mobile technologies, location-based games and Internet studies. Dr. de Souza e Silva is the co-editor of the book Digital Cityscapes—Merging digital and urban playspaces (Peter Lang, 2009), and the co-author of the forthcoming book Net-Locality: Why location matters (Blackwell, 2011). › From simulations to hybrid space: how nomadic technologies change the real, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.3, 209-222. Silvia Sovic Keywords stress, international students, creative arts Dr. Silvia Sovic is Research Project Coordinator at the Creative Learning in Practice Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at the University of the Arts, London. Her background is in history (degrees from Ljubljana, London and Essex). She has researched in Florence, Graz and Cambridge and is currently Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Historical Research, where she also teaches statistics for historians. › Coping with stress: the perspective of international students, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.3, 145-158. Chris Speed Edinburgh College of Art, Architecture, Lauriston Place, Architecture School, Edinburgh, PL48AA, United Kingdom Keywords Web 2.0, social navigation, blogs, Raindance, tag clouds Dr. Chris Speed is Reader in Digital Spaces across the Schools of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the Edinburgh College of Art, where he teaches undergraduate, masters and supervises Ph.D. students. Chris has sustained a critical enquiry into how digital technology can engage with the field of architecture and human geography through a variety of established international digital art contexts including: International Symposium on Electronic Art, Biennial of Electronic Arts Perth, Ars Electronica, Consciousness Reframed, Sonic Acts, LoveBytes, We Love Technology, Sonic Arts Festival, MELT, Less Remote, FutureSonic, and the Arts Catalyst / Leonardo symposium held alongside The International Astronautical Congress. Chris is currently working with collaborative GPS technologies and the streaming of social and environmental data. › Will Web 2.0 add ‘purpose’ to writing by artists and designers?, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 77-84. Jeremy Spencer Keywords aesthetic thought, Marxist theories, critical theories, materialism, deconstruction Jeremy Spencer has completed a doctoral thesis on the methodological role of the literary theory of Paul de Man in materialist art histories at the University of Essex. He teaches contextual studies at the Colchester School of Art and Design, Colchester Institute and is an Associate Lecturer with the Open University. › The bodies and the embodiment of modernist painting, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.3, 229-. Miriam Brown Spiers University of Georgia, Department at the University of Georgia, 254 Park Hall, Athens, GA 30602, United States of America Keywords graphic memoir, Fun Home, Alison Bechdel, queer relations/relationships Miriam Brown Spiers is a doctoral student in the English Department at the University of Georgia, where she studies contemporary American literature, gender studies and Native American literature. She has presented conference papers on Alison Bechdel and also on the subject of her thesis, which deals with the roles of women in Maxine Hong Kingston’s Fifth Book of Peace. She spends most of her time grading papers and reading in the excellent coffee shops of Athens. › Daddy's little girl: Multigenerational queer relationships in Bechdel's Fun Home, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 315-335. Neil Spiller The Bartlett School of Architecture, Wates House, 22 Gordon Street, London, United Kingdom Keywords nanotechnology, pataphysics, slamhound, Valazquez Machine, surrealism, surreal Neil Spiller is Professor of Architecture and Digital Theory and a practising architect. He is the MArch. Course Director, Director of the Advanced Virtual and Technological Architecture Research Group (AVATAR) and Vice Dean at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College, London. He is author of the book Digital DreamsArchitecture and the New Alchemic Technologies (1998). He is coeditor of AD ‘Architects in Cyberspace’ (1995), guest-editor of AD ‘Integrating Architecture’ (1996), AD’ Architects in Cyberspace II’ (1998) and AD ‘Young Blood’ (2001) and formerly editor of Building Design Interactive’magazine. He is co-editor with Peter Cook of The Power of Contemporary Architecture (1999) and the Paradox of Contemporary Architecture (2001). › Communicating vessels: The 'pataphysical exceptions of reflexive architecture, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.3, 223-. › Surrealist complex systems, parallel biology and the greening of architecture, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 75-78. › Plectic architecture: towards a theory of the post-digital in architecture, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 95-104. Michael Stanton Keywords Michael Stanton was educated at Antioch College, Harvard and Princeton. His design work has been awarded by the ACSA, the Architectural League of New York, the Biennial Steedman Prize and Progressive Architecture. He was a fellow at the American Academy in Rome and the first Aga khan travelling fellow. His publications include chapters in books, numerous articles in journals and a forthcoming book on the American city in the context of paradox. Stanton has taught at several American universities and directed study-abroad programmes for many schools and independently. He was Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Architecture and Design at the American University of Beirut and the Hawkins Distinguished Professor at the University of Texas Arlington. He is currently teaching at the University of Maryland and the Metropolis Graduate Programme in Barcelona. › Book Reviews, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 151-168. Mike Starr University of Northampton, The School of the Arts, St George’s Avenue, Northampton, Northamptonshire, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Mike Starr is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Northampton, specializing in science fiction and post-structuralist philosophy; his Ph.D. thesis explores the work of H.G. Wells in light of the theories of Gilles Deleuze. He has recently presented conference papers on mortality in Battlestar Galactica, and the assemblage of self in Joss Whedon’s Dollhouse. He also lectures in popular culture and cultural theory. Keywords science fiction, poststructuralist philosophy, H.G. Wells › The Magus in Marks and Spencer, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 3-5. John Steers Nat Soc for Education in Art & Design, NSEAD, 3 Mason's Wharf, Corsham, Wiltshire, SN13 9FY, United Kingdom Keywords visual culture education, art and design curriculum, globalization Dr. John Steers was appointed General Secretary of the National Society for Art Education (now the National Society for Education in Art and Design) in 1981 after fourteen years teaching art and design in secondary schools in London and Bristol. He has been a member of the editorial board of the International Journal of Art and Design Education from its inception in 1981.He was the 1993-96 President of the International Society for Education through Art and served on its executive committee in several capacities between 1983 and 2005. He has served also on many national committees and as a consultant to government agencies. He has published widely on curriculum, assessment and policy issues. He is a trustee of the Higher Education in Art and Design Trust and a member of the Advisory Committee of the National Arts Education Archive, Bretton Hall. › The ever-expanding art curriculum – is it teachable or sustainable?, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.2, 141-154. Daniel T. Stein Keywords Lee Smith, The Devil's Dream, southern regionalism, country music history, denial of black presence Daniel T. Stein holds a Master's degree in American Studies from Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany. He has been teaching in the English Department at the University of Michigan for the past two years. › Reviews, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 379-403. Shepherd Steiner Keywords photography, art history Shepherd Steiner is an art historian and critic currently teaching between Emily Carr University of Art and Design and the University of British Columbia. He co-edited Cork Caucus: On Art, Possibility, and Democracy (Frankfurt, 2007). Other publications on photography include ‘Allergy Patch: Michel Fried’s why photography matters as art as never before’ (Texte zur Kunst, 2010); ‘Reading reading in Benjamin’s “Little history of photography”’ (In Tensions, 2008); and ‘In other hands: Jeff Wall’s Beispiel’ (Oxford Art Journal, 2007). › Dialectical inroads to a post-political photography: Democratic violence in the work of Lidwien van de Ven, Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 57-81. Tim Stephens London South Bank University, Faculty of Art Media & English, 103 Borough Road, London, SE1 0AA, United Kingdom Tim Stephens teaches Digital Photography, Art History and Critical Theory at London South Bank University. Recent papers include, ‘The Walk-as-Art Practice: the influence of Zen practice on Art’ (Royal Geographic Society, 2009) and ‘Sensory Illiteracy: sensory learning methodologies in Art’(Art and Ecology Conference, 2008). Keywords post-phenomenology, photography theory, time, nonrepresentational theory, formalist aesthetics › What is rhythm in relation to photography?, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 157-175. › Dosimetry, personal monitoring film, Philosophy of Photography, 2.1, 153158. René Stettler New Gallery Lucerne and the Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics, PO Box 3501, Postfach 3501, 6002 Lucerne, Switzerland Keywords communication problems, implicit assumptions, conceptions of reality, extended science ontology, semiotics René Stettler is a cultural researcher with many years of international experience. He is the founder of the New Gallery Lucerne (1987) and the Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics (1994). Both institutions are supported by the City of Lucerne and the Regionalkonferenz Kultur Region Luzern (RKK), the Swiss National Science Foundation, and private donors. Major topics such as Brain– Mind–Culture (1995), Liquid Visions (1997), Frontier Communication: Human Beings, Apes, Whales, Electronic Networks (1999), The Enigma of Consciousness (2001), Consciousness and Teleportation (2005), and Consciousness and Quantumcomputers (2007) have been discussed a the Swiss Biennial by internationally acclaimed speakers such as the British mathematician Roger Penrose, the Austrian quantum physicist Anton Zeilinger and the German chaos theorist Otto E. Rössler. Together with Otto E. Rösser Stettler co-authored Interventionen: Vertikale und horizontale Grenzüberschreitungen (1997). › Mind, matter, and quantum mechanics: towards a new conceptual theoretical framework, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.2, 125-. › Reframing semiotic telematic knowledge spaces, and the anthropological challenge to designing interhuman relations, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 163-170. Mary Stewart Instituto Cervantes, c/o 3 Place Aubert, Candiac, PQ, J5R 5R2, Canada Keywords artful visual analysis, qualitative research methods, artbased research, phenomenology and design Two of Mary Stewart’s interests are qualitative research methodology and literacy education. She is passionate about exploring alternative ways to analyse data, particularly through the use of arts-based and narrative methods. Her recent work has focused on poetry, collage and the role of collaboration in research groups. She is presently teaching and researching literacy education in an urban high school. › Understanding the value of artistic tools such as visual concept maps in design and education research, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 141-148. Don Stewart Griffith University, School of Public Health, Logan campus, Meadowbrook, QLD 4131, Australia Keywords choral singing, psychological, well-being, cross- Donald Stewart is Professor of Health Promotion, School of Public Health, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. His research expertise lies with health promotion, mental health, health and ageing and public health services. He teaches on a wide range or subjects including: health promotion, health and ageing, health research methodology, music (singing and dance), management culture and change and the prevention of HIV/AIDS using multi-strategy interventions. national survey, resilience › Choral singing and psychological wellbeing: Quantitative and qualitative findings from English choirs in a cross-national survey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 19-34. Theodore Stickley University of Nottingham, School of Nursing, Midwifery & Physiotherapy, Duncan Macmillan House, Porchester Road, Nottingham, NG3 6AA, United Kingdom Theodore Stickley is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at the University of Nottingham. He is also a Director of City Arts, Nottingham. › Reviews, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 341-344. › A philosophy for community-based, participatory arts practice: A narrative inquiry, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 73-83. Keywords community art, medicine, health sciences Blake Stimson University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, United States of America Keywords art history, critical theory, photography Blake Stimson teaches Art History and Critical Theory at the University of California, Davis. His research explores the social and political legacy of the eighteenth-century aesthetic ideal, particularly the role played by photography, art, and criticism in framing that ideal for the world we find ourselves in today. Recent publications include The Pivot of the World: Photography and Its Nation, The Meaning of Photography (co-edited with Robin Kelsey), Collectivism after Modernism: The Art of SocialImagination after 1945 (co-edited with Gregory Sholette), and Institutional Critique: An Anthology of Artists’ Writings (co-edited with Alexander Alberro). › Photography and ontology, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 41-47. Mary Stokrocki Arizona State University, ASU Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, PO Box 871505, Tempe, AZ 85287-1505, United States of America Keywords fashion, disguise, semiotic, identity, intergenerational difference Dr. Mary Stokrocki is Professor of Art and Area Head of Art Education, Arizona State University. She was former Vice-President and World Counselor of the International Society for Education Through Art (eight years); and Webmaster (ten years) and former President of the United States Society for Education through Art. She received 2007 College of Arts & Architecture Alumni Award, Pennsylvania State University and she also won the following National Art Education Association Awards: 2007 Women’s Caucus June King McFee Award; 2005 Lowenfeld Award, and the 1995 Manual Barkan for outstanding research article. Her qualitative research focuses on multicultural teaching/learning in the inner-city Cleveland; Rotterdam, Holland; Ankara, Turkey; Sao Paulo, Brazil; Warsaw, Poland; Barcelona, Spain; Evora, Portugal; and the Yaqui, Pima/Maricopa, AkChin, Apache and Navajo Reservations in Arizona. Her recent research involves explorations in empowering students and disenfranchised people in virtual worlds. › Special Feature, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.3, 259-. › An intergenerational and semiotic exploration of hair combs as material culture, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 163-179. Peter Stott Independent Artist, United Kingdom Keywords augmented reality, virtual perspective, anamorphosis, random order, 'higher' order, transcendental imaging/CGI, ultimate gestalt, computational model, cognitive framework, cannabis, embody, reification Peter Stott is an artist and writer. He was born in Burnley in 1962. He has a BA Honours degree in 3D Design from Sunderland University and an MA degree in European Fine Art from Winchester School of Art. From 2002 to 2006 he studied part-time for a Ph.D. in Fine Art at UCA, Canterbury, UK. He had a solo show at the Galeria Panorama in Barcelona in 2001 and a solo show at the Mash Tun, Winchester in 2002. In 2006 he was short-listed for the Celeste Art Prize. Some of Peter Stott´s experimental artwork exploring the concept of Transcendental Object perception, can be viewed at: www. saatchionline/pstotto. › Transcendental imaging and augmented reality, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 9.1, 49-64. Sara Malou Strandvad Performance-design, Department of Communication, Business and Information Technologies, Roskilde University, Building 42.2, Universitetsvej 1, Roskilde, 4000, Denmark Sara Malou Strandvad is an assistant professor at Roskilde University. She holds a MA in sociology and a Ph.D. in organizational studies. Her previous work has dealt with the career construction of young Danish filmmakers, and development work in Danish film production from the perspective of 'the new sociology of art' that looks into the role of mediators and the co-constructions of material works and social relations. Currently, she studies how creative talent is performed and evaluated in entrance examinations. Keywords sociology of art, production of culture, actor-network theory, socio-materiality, attachment, mediation, co-production, performativity › Is this what we should be comparing when comparing film production regimes? A systematic typological scheme and application, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 171-192. Wendy Strauch-Nelson › Transplanting Froebel into the present, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 59-72. Keywords Janez Strehovec Keywords e-literature criticism, new media art theory, aesthetics, philosophy, phenomenology of media, text as a loop, new media content as a ride Janez Strehovec received his Ph.D. in Aesthetics from the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia in 1988. Since 1993 he has been working as principal researcher for projects on cyberarts, e-literature and the Internet culture. He is a part-time Associate Professor for New Media Theories at University of Ljubljana and the author of seven books in the field of cultural studies and aesthetics published in Slovenia. His most recent book is The Text and New Media (2007). › New media art as research: art-making beyond the autonomy of art and aesthetics, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.3, 233-250. Anniina Suominen Keywords identity, arts-based research, autoethnography, diversity education Anniina Suominen is an Assistant Professor at Kent State University. Her research interests include interdisciplinary research, critical theory, feminist theory, visual, silent and embodied knowledge, narrative as educational research/teaching/learning method, diversity education, and relational and contextual identity. She received her master’s degree from the University of Art and Design Helsinki, Finland and a Ph.D. from The Ohio State University, USA. › Writing with photographs writing self: Using artistic methods in the investigation of identity, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 139-156. Ian Sutherland Keywords embodied cognition, habitus, music, social interaction, tacit knowledge Originally from Canada and trained as a pianist and musicologist, Ian Sutherland works at the intersection of sociology, musicology and music theory. His main interest is in the compositional process as social action; how works of music are socially influenced or act as affordance structures for social discourse. Currently Ian is working on aesthetic changes in music from the Weimar Republic to the Third Reich under the supervision of Prof. Tia DeNora. › Thinking with art: from situated knowledge to experiential knowing, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.2, 125-140. Cal Swann Keywords design, graphic design, typography, language Cal Swann was Professor of Design in the School of Design at Curtin University of Technology from 1996 to 2001 where he supervised the Higher Degrees by Research. He was responsible for the development of the coursework Master of Design programme in distance education mode, delivered via the Internet and available for study through Open Learning Australia in 1998, the first professional design course to exploit the new technology in this way. Now retired from full-time education he still practices graphic design and has a special interest in typography and the communication of language in both its spoken and printed forms. › Nellie is Dead, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.1, 5058. Robert W. Sweeny Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Art/Art Education, 115 Sprowls Hall, 11th Street Indiana, PA, 15705-1004, United States of America Keywords art education, hypertext, mash-up, MMORPG simulation, networked identity Robert W. Sweeny is Associate Professor and Coordinator of Art Education at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. His research interests deal with interactive, social, locative, and new media as they relate to art educational theory and practice. He publishes and presents in numerous international venues. › There’s no ‘I’ in YouTube: social media, networked identity and art education, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 201-212. Steve Swindells University of Huddersfield, Contemporary Art, School of Art, Design and Architecture, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, HD1 3DH, United Kingdom Keywords institute, performative, animal, encounter, becoming Dr. Steve Swindells is a Reader/Research Leader at the University of Huddersfield; his most recent exhibition Summoning the Face of the Other at New Zealand Film Archive. He has worked collaboratively with Steve Dutton, Professor in Creative Practice at Coventry University for many years. His individual and collaborative work plays with and critically interrogates images, objects and texts through processes of collage and multiple-association. The references are wide and nomadic, often deeply encoded within the images, objects, texts, animations and sound pieces constructed. The intention is to foster complex interpretations by working through various modes of production and strategic interventions; not to deliberately confuse but to tacitly suggest or invoke a realm in which doubt, reticence and inconclusiveness is privileged over other forms of knowledge. › Writing Encounters: ‘Institute of Beasts’ (2008), Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 117-125. Heather Symonds University of the Arts London, Student Services, 272 High Holborn, London, WC1V 7EY, United Kingdom Keywords oral assessment, student voices, sustainable design Currently, Heather is Dyslexia Co-coordinator/Adviser at LCC, University of the Arts London. She has been working with students within the field of Creative Arts for fourteen years. Her work includes staff development and awareness training. Her Teaching and Learning Fellowship in 2005 led to staff and student handbooks and e-guidance for oral assessment. In promoting a sustainable viva voce as accommodated assessment she has delivered staff development both nationally and internationally, notably, HEA 2007, SEDA 2007, CLTAD 2008 ,INSEA Japan 2008 and ‘Doing It Better’ RMIT/La Trobe in Australia 2007. › Introducing oral assessment within creative practice: ‘I can write but it's like walking against the wind’, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 227236. Elson Szeto The Hong Kong Institute of Education, 10 Lo Ping Road, Tai Po, New Territories, HKSAR, China Keywords design knowledge, coherent design curriculum, fragmented meanings of design, design discourse, design education Dr. Elson Szeto is a member of the Centre for Learning, Teaching and Technology, the Hong Kong Institute of Education, China. He is involved in the institute’s e-learning development and related educational projects for enhancement of learning and teaching with Information and Communication Technologies (ICT), including blended learning and related professional development in the context of teacher education. Szeto has published articles on the development of design innovation in firms in TQM Magazine and on transformation of design education in China in Xpress Journal. His research interests are innovative pedagogy, design education, and impacts of ICT on learning, teaching and assessment. › Framing an integrated framework of design curriculum in higher education: understandings, meanings and interpretations, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 75-93. Michael Szpakowski Writtle School of Design Michael Szpakowski is a film-maker, composer and writer who teaches at Writtle School of Design. › One Minute Volumes 1–4, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 129-135. Keywords Joanna Szupinska › Exhibition Reviews, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 101-116. Keywords Morten Søndergaard Copenhagen Institute of Technology, Lautrupvang 2B, Ballerup, DK-2750, Denmark Keywords mapping, collaborative creative processes, trans-disciplinary domains, renegotiating competences Morten Søndergaard is an Associate Professor and Media Art Curator; since 2008 at C.I.T. – Copenhagen Institute of Technology/Aalborg University – curating, researching and teaching within Art & Technology, Interaction Design (conceptual) and Media Art Histories. He is also Media Art Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Roskilde, Denmark 1999–2008. His latest publication in English (w. Mogens Jacobsen) is RE_ACTION – The Digital Archive Experience (Aalborg University Publishers, 2009); (w. Peter Weibel): MAGNET – Thorbjørn Lausten’s Visual Systems (Kehrer, 2007); Get Real – Art + Real time (New York: George Braziller Publishers, 2005). His Ph.D. dissertation(2007, in Danish) was entitled 'Space Punctures – ShowBix and the Media Conscious Practice of Per Højholt 1967'. › MAPPING the domains of media art practice: A trans-disciplinary enquiry into collaborative creative processes, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.1, 77-84. Cheung-on Tam The Hong Kong Institute of Education, Department of Cultural and Creative Arts, Assistant Professor, 10 Lo Ping Road, Tai Po, New Territories, Hong Kong Dr. Cheung-on Tam was awarded a Bachelor of Education in 1992 (University of Wolverhampton), a Master of Education in 1996 (University of Hong Kong) and a Doctor of Philosophy in 2006 (University of London). He is currently working at the Hong Kong Institute of Education as Assistant Professor in the Department of Cultural and Creative Arts. His publications include From Galleries to the Classroom: Museum and Art Education (2004), Teaching and Learning of Art and Music: Innovations, Approaches and Cases Keywords teacher education, art education, reflective practice, experience of art (2004), and Art Appreciation, Criticism, and Education (2001). Dr Tam’s paper entitled ‘Making Meaningful Personal Connections: A phenomenological study of non-art specialist museum visitors’ experience of paintings’ appeared in the Canadian Review of Art Education (2006). › Engaging in reflective practices: investigating pupils' experiences of art from a phenomenological perspective, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 181-195. Stella Tan United Kingdom Keywords graphic design practice, design process, design activities, activity theory Stella Tan is a practicing freelance visual communication designer. She is currently working as a researcher on evaluating learning spaces in higher education institutions, and teaches part-time to undergraduate design students. Her research interests are in design practice, designer expertise, user centred experience, and applied ethnography. › Graphic designers' activities during the conceptual design phase of clientinitiated projects Report of research in progress, reflection on the research process, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.1, 85-92. Curtis Tappenden University for the Creative Arts, Design Department of The Mail on Sunday newspaper, New Dover Road, Cantebury, CT1 3AN, United Kingdom Keywords discussion, participatory, experiment, drawing, observation Curtis Tappenden is an author/illustrator, painter, teacher, performance artist and poet who also works in-house for the Design Department of The Mail on Sunday newspaper, London. He has written eighteen books on art and design practice and has poems published in anthologies. He also writes for the popular art press and has more recently written for the Travel section of The Mail on Sunday. Curtis lectures part-time in the Further Education Department, and facilitates the Creative Writing Group as part of this Learning and Teaching research project at the University for the Creative Arts, Kent and Surrey. He lives with his wife and two children in Brighton on the south coast of England. › Writing experiments with a lateral leaning, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 211-225. › Out of our minds: Exploring attitudes to creative writing relating to art and design practice and personal identity, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 3.3, 257-283. Miriam Tawil International Psychoanalytic Association Keywords Miriam Tawil is a psychologist from Institute Sedes Sapientiae. She is a full member of the Brazilian Psychoanalytic Society of Sao Paulo, Founder of the group Body and Culture, Founder of the Laboratory for Studies on Intolerance, and Mediator from Mediativa. She is also a member of Endangered Species – a social activism forum set up by Suzie Orbach. › Fashion World – models and backstages, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 207-222. Brynjulf Tellefsen Keywords team organization, higher education, constituent orientation, leadership Brynjulf Tellefsen is Associate Professor of Market Orientation at the Norwegian School of Management, Department of Leadership and Organizational Management. He earned his Ph.D. in business at Columbia University in 1977. His research fields are market orientation, knowledge management, and industrial buyer behaviour. Tellefsen edited the book Market Orientation in 1995, and he has published articles on constituent market orientation internationally. After four years at State University of New York, he served as Dean of the Norwegian School of Marketing for ten years. After merging with the Norwegian School of Management in 1993, he led and introduced several study programmes. He has been an officer of the Norwegian Marketing Association, and a visiting scholar at several business schools around the world. Tellefsen was Vice Chairman of NAMM; a research consortium funded by the Norwegian Research Council to study market-oriented product development and market development in the food industry. › Integrating research education across departments and disciplines: theory and experience, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.3, 161172. Susana Tereso Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Tapada da Ajuda, 1349-17 Lisboa, Portugal Susana Tereso has a graduate degree, a Master's and a Ph.D. in Biology and is working on a Ph.D. on Fine Arts at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Lisbon. Since 2004, she has been developing a postdoctoral project including creativity projects, a programme on education through art and an art project. Keywords › Environmental education through art, International Journal of Education through Art, 8.1, 23-47. Nicholas Theisen University of Michigan, 1421 McIntyre St. Ann Arbor, MI 48105, United States of America Keywords textuality, parody, autobiography, schizophrenia, Marcel Proust Nicholas Theisen received his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Michigan (UM) in 2009. He has interests in comparative poetics and new media studies. Currently he teaches at UM as a Lecturer in the Department of Classical Studies and is coauthor of the weblog Libral Thinking (www.libralthinking.com) on textuality and the future of the book. › is not Dave Sim: Writing life as parody in Cerebus, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 233-255. Andrea Thoma University of Leeds, Department of Contemporary Art Practise, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords dwelling, nomadic space, photography, visual methodology, Heidegger Andrea Thoma was born in Munich, Germany. She studied Fine Art at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts of Perpignan and of Montpellier in France (Diplôme National Supérieur d’Expression Plastique). She has exhibited widely in Europe and in the United States of America (painting, photography and video) and has completed various international collaborative projects. Andrea is a lecturer in Fine Art at the University of Leeds. She is part of an interdisciplinary research cluster dealing with spatiality and is currently involved in several practice-based projects. › The making of 'place' to enable memory, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 83-94. Paul Thomas Curtin University of Technology, Fine Art, 6 Hunter Street, North Perth, Perth, Western Australia, 6006, Australia Keywords nanotechnology, science, perspective Dr. Paul Thomas, is the coordinator of the Studio Electronic Arts (SEA) at Curtin University of Technology and was the founding Director of the Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth. Paul has been working in the area of electronic arts since 1981 when he co-founded the group Media-Space. Media-Space was part of the first global link up with artists connected to ARTEX. From 1981-1986 the group was involved in a number of collaborative exhibitions and was instrumental in the establishment a substantial body of research. In 2000 he founded the Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth. Paul’s current research project ‘Nanoessence’ explores the space between life and death at a nano level. The project is part of an ongoing collaboration with the Nano Research Institute, Curtin University of Technology and SymbioticA at the University of Western Australia. › Nanoessence: God, the first nano assembler, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.3, 217-231. Malaika Sarco- Thomas Keywords ecology, improvisation, dance,performance, community perception Malaika Sarco-Thomas is a lecturer in choreography at Dartington Campus of University College Falmouth. She is a dance artist whose research spans dance improvisation, ecological philosophy, site-based performance, tree-climbing, guerilla tree-planting and community practice. Malaika studied dance, theatre, biology and improvisation at the North Carolina School of the Arts, Hollins University, Kyoto Art Centre, Dartington College of Arts and PARTS in Brussels and was awarded a Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Fellowship in support of her postgraduate research. She is currently completing her Ph.D. thesis, Twig Dances: Improvisation Performance as Ecological Practice. › Improvising in Ruyang: Community Art as Ecological Practice, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.1, 45-68. Stephen Thompson Cardiff School of Art & Design, University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, CF24 0SP, United Kingdom Keywords future practice, design philosophy, holism, concept design, speculative materialism Stephen Thompson Ph.D. MA(rca) BA(Hons) FRSA is a co-convenor and lead researcher of the MeAT Design Research Group at Cardiff School of Art & Design andthe Transtechnology Research Group in the University of Plymouth. Dr. Thompson is a design philosopher and an industrial and interaction designer, and Head of the Department of Creative Communication, Cardiff School of Art & Design, University of Wales Institute, Cardiff. › Joey: a design scenario for an ordinary life in the future, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.1, 13-29. Linda J. Thomson University College London, Room G2, UCL Wolfson House, 4 Stephenson Way, London, NW1 2HE, United Kingdom Linda Thomson is Research Associate on the ‘Heritage in Hospitals’ programme at University College London, and a psychologist and lecturer specializing in research methods, biopsychology, memory and learning. Her research interests include the roles of vision and touch in enhancing health and well-being. Keywords vision, health, well-being, biopsychology, memory › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Will Thorne Will Thorne completed a degree at the Mackintosh in Glasgow, and then worked in practice on a variety of projects from a public arts and a private house at a small practice called ATAP, to a major international airport at Richard Rogers Partnership. At the Bartlett he thought about how they could build buildings hosting ecosystems of devices that encourage us to make our spaces more comfortable and conspire to reduce our environmental impact, in a way that is easy to understand and hopefully delightful. Will is currently working at Richard Rogers Partnership. Keywords robot, façade, environmental control › Edge monkeys - the design of habitat specific robots in buildings, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.3, 169-180. Tim Thornton Tim Thornton is an artist based in Tokyo and works on a series of art, architectural and teaching projects. › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. Keywords Teresa Tipton Anglo-American University, Humanities and Social Sciences, Lesni 557/14, Dobrichovice, 25229, Czech Republic Keywords gallery education, teacher, education, cross-cultural, pedagogy, visual culture Dr. Teresa M. Tipton is a Senior Lecturer in Visual Culture and Contemporary Art at the Anglo-American University in Prague, Czech Republic. She is also Adjunct Faculty in Conflict Management at University of New York, Prague. Her research and publications focus on reflective practice and dialogic methods in pedagogy, art, and communication with undergraduate and graduate students. She has recently been an External Evaluator for the EU Comenius Lifelong Learning Project, 'Image and Identity: Improving Citizenship Education through Digital Art' through Roehampton and Charles University in Prague. As a visual artist, she conducted arts-in-education residencies for in-school and after-school programmes in the Seattle, Washington State area (United States). For the past twelve years, she has taught pre-school to adult learners in international schools in Africa, China and the Czech Republic and participated in community service projects in Africa, China, Czech Republic, and Brazil. › Through the eyes of a stray dog: encounters with the Other, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 111-128. Mirjana Tomasevic Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic is Senior Advisor for Visual Arts at the Dancevic Education and Teacher Training Agency in Zagreb, Croatia. She has a MA from Zagreb University: Teacher of Visual Arts, History of Art, and English as a foreign language. She is currently writing a doctoral thesis in History of Art/ Art Education. She is an artist, co-author and illustrator of education materials, including art textbooks; author of a book on art therapy (Kako nacrtati osjećaj? – Likovna terapija i (s)likovni dnevnik kao samopomoć / How to Draw a Feeling? – Art Therapy and the Visual Diary as Self-help. Zagreb: Profil, 2005) and a book of short stories & poems/drawings (Letjeti i vratiti se / To Fly and Come Back. Zagreb: Knjigra, 2010). HRV-InSEA / Education and Teacher Training Agency, Visual Arts / Primary and secondary education, Jarnoviceva 3, Zagreb, Grad Zagreb, 10000, Croatia Keywords teacher training, communication, visual language/foreign language, feelings, art therapy, children › VISUAL ESSAY, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 85-. Milena Tomic › Exhibition Reviews, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 101-116. Keywords Mike Tovey Coventry University, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords threshold concepts, industrial design, tacit knowledge, CETL, pedagogic research A graduate of the RCA, Professor Mike Tovey was an industrial designer prior to joining the institution in 1973 as a Lecturer in Industrial Design. He was appointed to Head of Industrial Design in 1985 and in 1989 was made Dean of the Coventry School of Art and Design. In 2007, he changed positions to take on the university-wide post of Director for Design. Professor Tovey is responsible for developingcourses and applied research in design across the university and is Director of the Centre of Excellence for Product and Automotive Design (CEPAD). › Threshold concepts and the transport and product design curriculum: reports of research in progress, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 8.2, 169-175. Katherine Townsend Nottingham Trent University, School of Art and Design, Burton Street, Katherine Townsend, Ph.D., is a Principal Lecturer and Programme Leader for MA Applied Design Futures at Nottingham Trent University. She was awarded her doctorate in 2003 for her practice-led Ph.D., which investigated printed textile and fashion design from a 3D Nottingham, NG1 4BU, United Kingdom perspective through the integration of hand and digital technologies. The study was informed by her early career in the industry, where she worked as a designer-maker. Her postdoctoral research is focused on the materiality of digital craft approaches; how disparate technologies can be synthesized in innovative ways. Katherine has presented lectures, published papers and exhibited her work internationally. She is a member of the Bonington Gallery curatorial board in the School of Art and Design, and involved in the organization and curation of research exhibitions Keywords printed textile, fashion design, digital technologies, digital craft › Reviews, Craft Research, 1.1, 160-166. › Editorial, Craft Research, 1.1, 3-10. › Expanding craft: Reappraising the value of skill, Craft Research, 2.1, 3-10. Sarah Tremlett Chelsea College of Art and Design, 8 Foxcombe Road, Bath, BA1 3ED, United Kingdom Keywords matternal narrative,nontraditional,subtitle poetry,freezeframes,video painting Sarah Tremlett is a video artist/poet and Ph.D. candidate at Chelsea College of Art and Design studying subjectivity in text-based art. She was involved in Consciousness Reframed IX, where, influenced by Karen Barad’s theories of agential realism, she introduced the term ‘matternal theory of practice’, which seeks to remove the inherited post-Socratic western dualities between text or form and matter. 2009 conferences and exhibitions: Topographies, Sites, Bodies, Technologies, Stanford University; solo show – Cultural Communication Centre, Klaipeda, Lithuania; The Text Festival, Bury, England; Videoformat – National Centre for Contemporary Arts, Moscow. 2010 conferences and exhibitions: Fabrika Project Space, Moscow; Loop, Barcelona; Poetry and Voice conference, Chichester University. › Some everybodies design and non-dualist filmic experience, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 139-147. Nicholas Tresilian Calle Antonio Machado 1, Las Pinedas, Cordoba, 14111, Spain Keywords evolution, agility, punctuated, gradual, open/closed consciousness Nicholas Tresilian MA, F.R.S.A., is an art historian, broadcaster and founding director of UK media PLCs in the United Kingdom and Europe. He was for many years a director of Artist Placement Group and its successor Organisation and Imagination pioneers in the placement of artists within government organisations. He has made films for BBC2 on Peter Blake, Richard Smith and Joe Tilson. He wrote the bid for Classic FM and broadcast for the station for ten years. He is currently Vice-President of the US-based International Society for the Study of Time. He lectures and writes on the relationship between art-history and cultural evolution. He lives in Bath in the United Kingdom and near Cordoba in Spain. › Coherence, agility and cultural selection, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.2, 61-72. › The swarming of the memes, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.2, 115-126. Keith Trigwell Director of the Institute for Teaching and Learning, The University of Sydney, Institute for Teaching & Learning, Level 3, Carslaw Building, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia Keith Trigwell is Principal Research Fellow in the Institute for the Advancement of University Learning at the University of Oxford where he leads the Institute’s higher education research programme. His research interests include the experience of university teaching, including the scholarship of teaching and student learning, particularly relations between students’ approaches to learning and their perceptions of aspects of their learning environment. Keywords Institute for the Advancement of University Learning at the University of Oxford, dissertation, practice, art and design, phenomenography, learning › Approaches to Teaching Design Subjects: a quantitative analysis, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.2, 69-80. › How art, media and design students conceive of the relation between the dissertation and practice, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 4.1, 5-16. Michele Trimarchi Via Ozanam, n. 113 00152, Roma, Italy Keywords intangible value, social quality, cultural economics, cultural policy, creative districts Michele Trimarchi, Ph.D., is professor of Economic Analysis of Laws (Catanzaro) and teaches Cultural Economics (Bologna). He is Scientific Director of the Master in Law, Economics and Management of Cultural Tourism (Catanzaro), and a member of the Executive Board of ARTMALL-culture future (Rome, Italy), of the Scientific Committee of Tafter journal, and the Editorial Advisory Board of Creative Industries journal. › Book Reviews, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 291-296. › The economics and policy of creativity: The Italian perspective, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 231-246. Melissa Trimingham The University of Kent, Department Melissa Trimingham worked extensively in UK community theatre including many applied theatre projects with Horse and Bamboo Theatre Company, Lancashire. She is a lecturer in Drama at the of Drama, School of Arts, Jarman Building, Canterbury, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom University of Kent. She has previously published on Oskar Schlemmer, the Bauhaus theatre and the methodology of practical research. She has just completed a book on the theatre of the Bauhaus for Routledge (2011). She is co-leader with Dr. Nicola Shaughnessy of the Centre for Cognition, Kinesthetics and Performance at the University of Kent, and engaged with Dr. Shaughnessy on joint practical research into media interventions with autistic children. Keywords therapeutic, object, embodiment, puppet, autism › Objects in transition: The puppet and the autistic child, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 251-265. Paul Trott University of Portsmouth, Business School, Richmond Building, Portland Street, Portsmouth, PO1 3DE, United Kingdom Paul Trott is a Reader in Innovation Management at the Business School, University of Portsmouth. He is the author of many reports and publications in the area of innovation management and his book Managing Innovation and New Product Development published by Financial Times Management is now in its second edition. He is also co-author of the Penguin Business Dictionary. Keywords innovation management, business, product development › Innovation in Arts and Cultural Organisations, Hasan Bakhshi and David Throsby, NESTA INTERIM RESEARCH REPORT 1, December 2009, Creative Industries Journal, 2.3, 297-303. Efrat Tseëlon University of Leeds › Outlining a fashion studies project, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.1, 3-53. Keywords fashion theory, cultural practices, material artefacts › Charlotte Waite’s Fairy Project: Rethinking the fashion show, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.1, 136-143. › Is identity a useful critical tool, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 1.2, 151-159. › Introduction: A critique of the ethical fashion paradigm, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 3-68. Myrto Tsilimpounidi University of Sussex, Department of Myrto Tsilimpounidi is a social researcher, photographer and the executive director of Ministry of Untold Stories. Her Ph.D. research focuses on cosmopolitanism and social change in contemporary urban Athens. She is currently based at the University of Sussex. Social and Political Thought, Friston Building, Brighton, BN1 9RH, United Kingdom › Painting human rights: Mapping street art in Athens, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 111-122. Keywords photography, cosmopolitanism, social change, Athens Soichiro Tsuda United Kingdom Keywords computing, robot, cognitive systems, artificial intelligence, information processing Dr. Soichiro Tsuda is a Leverhulme Trust research fellow at the University of the West of England. He has been working on the true slime mould, Physarum polycephalum, throughout his research career. So far he has developed various bio-hybrid devices using the organism, such as a slime-controlled autonomous robot and a storable whole-cell biosensor. He is currently interested in architectural applications of the slime cell because it shows some ‘primitive intelligence’ (e.g. cell shape optimization), which could potentially be useful toward developing the concept of living buildings. › Robot with slime ‘brains’, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 133-140. Judith Tucker Film International, Larch House, Sandy Gate, Scholes, Holmfirth, HD9 1SS, United Kingdom Keywords landscape, postmemory, painting, Marianne Hirsch, Edward Casey Dr. Judith Tucker is a painter and currently AHRC Research Fellow in the Creative and Performing Arts in the School of Fine Art, History of Art and Cultural Studies and the AHRC Centre CATH, University of Leeds. She is co-convenor of LAN2D, a network of artists associated with higher education who are concerned with radical approaches to landscape, with a particular focus on memory, place and identity. She exhibits regularly both in the United Kingdom and on the continent. › Resort: re/visiting, re/visioning, re/placing, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 95-106. › On the Beach at Bornholm, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.3, 267-272. Mark Turin University of Cambridge and Yale University Mark Turin was trained in social anthropology at the University of Cambridge after which he spent a year cataloguing Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf's ethnographic films. Then he joined the Himalayan Languages Project at Leiden University, the Netherlands, to write a grammar of Thangmi, a hitherto undescribed Tibeto-Burman language Keywords spoken in eastern Nepal. His doctoral dissertation offers an analysis of the grammar of the Thangmi language supported by glossed texts and a comprehensive lexicon of the two main dialects.Mark currently directs the Digital Himalaya Project and the World Oral Literature Project. He is an associate research scientist at the South Asian Studies Council, Yale University; a research associate at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge; an honorary research fellow at Anglia Ruskin University and a fellow of Hughes Hall, University of Cambridge. › Salvaging the records of salvage ethnography: The story of the Digital Himalaya Project, Book 2.0, 1.1, 39-46. Joan Turner Goldsmiths College - University of London, Language Studies Centre, Lewisham Way New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Keywords tutor-student interaction, academic writing in fine art, English for specific purposes, genre analysis Joan Turner is Senior Lecturer and Head of the Language Studies Centre at Goldsmiths College, University of London. Her research interests are in the role and conceptualizations of language, as well as language use in academic contexts. She has written a book on study skills, co-edited a book on writing in the university, and published a number of articles on cross-cultural pragmatics, conventional metaphor, English for academic purposes, and academic literacy. › Synergy in art and language: positioning the language specialist in contemporary fine art study, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 149-162. Cathy Turner University of Winchester, Performing Arts, West Hill, Winchester, SO22 4NR, United Kingdom Keywords performance, theatre, dialogue, playwriting, dramaturgy Cathy Turner is a Reader in Performing Arts at the University of Winchester and researches within the Centre for Research into Expanded Dramaturgies. She is director of ‘Writing Space’, a research project investigating the development of new writing and is joint author, with Synne Behrndt, of Dramaturgy and Performance (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008). She is a core member of Wrights & Sites, a group of artists whose work is concerned with our relationship to place and space. › ‘Something to glance off ’: Writing Space, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.2, 217-230. Helen Turner York St John University, Lord Mayors Walk, York, North Yorkshire, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords cross-art form, community groups, mental health, public art Helen Turner is a senior lecturer in Community Art and Fine Art at York St John University. Helen is a Visual Artist working across Community Art and Public Art. She has worked on a variety of projects ranging from; schools, mental health service users, community groups, disadvantaged youth, care leavers and in healthcare. She has a particular interest in collaborative and cross-art form work and project management. She also delivers training courses for visual artists aspiring to apply their practice. › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Jessica Turrell University of the West of England, Centre for Fine Print Research, Bower Ashton Campus, Kennel Lodge Road, Bristol, BS3 2JT, United Kingdom Keywords innovation, contemporary jewellery, skill, craft, vitreous enamel Having graduated from Central School of Art in London, Jessica Turrell established a jewellery and enamel studio in Bristol. Latterly she undertook a sustained period of research into mark-making in enamel using non-traditional techniques which, combined with investigations into print-making techniques for enamel, formed the focus of her postgraduate study at University of the West of England (UWE), Bristol. Jessica’s current studio practice includes the production of both jewellery and larger scale enamel work for exhibition. › Surface and substance: A call for the fusion of skill and ideas in contemporary enamel jewellery, Craft Research, 1.1, 85-100. Jane Tynan Central St Martins College of Art and Design - University of the Arts London, Southampton Row, London, WC1B 4AP, United Kingdom Keywords cultural studies, vocationalism, foundation degree, widening participation, nontraditional students Jane Tynan is a senior lecturer in cultural studies at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design. She has taught on cultural and historical programmes for art and design courses in the National College of Art and Design in Dublin, Goldsmiths College and London College of Fashion in London. Her current Ph.D. research on World War I British army uniform explores representations of soldiers and cultures of production and consumption of army clothing. Her research interests include art and design modernism, gender and visual representation. › Access and participation: Rethinking work-based learning on the foundation degree in art and design, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 39-54. Moraiti Tzeni United Kingdom Keywords Greece, preschool children, secondary colours, educational intervention Dr. Moraiti Tzeni is a graduate in the Department of Preschool Education at the University of Crete, Greece, in the Department of Primary School Education at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, and completed her Ph.D. thesis at the Democritus University of Thrace, Greece. She worked for many years as kindergartner in preschool education and for four years she was a Preschool Advisor. Now she teaches in the Department of Preschool Education at the University of Thessaly in Greece. She has written five books on subject instructional procedures in preschool education, and articles which have been published in Greek and foreign reviews. Her research proposals have also been included in Greek and foreign conference proceedings. › Creating orange purple and green: an experiment with preschool children in Greece, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 37-49. Rebecca Uchill Keywords Rebecca Uchill's publications include On Procession: Art on Parade (2009) and Adrian Schiess: Elusive (2007), along with articles in ASPECT: The Chronicle of New Media Art, Visual Resources and Art Papers. She was Associate Curator of contemporary art at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, and is now completing her doctorate in the History, Theory and Criticism of Art program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she studies the institutional conditions for contemporary art production, display and dissemination. › Hanging Out, Crowding Out or Talking Things Out: Curating the Limits of Discursive Space, Journal of Curatorial Studies, 1.1, 27-43. Hideshi Uda Nara University of Education, Takabatake-cho, Nara City, Nara Prefecture, 630-8528, Japan Keywords teaching guidelines, playful activity, art study, Japan Hideshi Uda is a professor of Fine Arts Education, Graduate School of Education and Faculty of Education, Nara University of Education, Japan. He was a codirector, congress agenda of the 32nd InSEA World Congress 2008 in Osaka, Japan. His research interests include development of teaching materials for art classes, the history of art education and refreshment of teachers in in-service education. › Japanese Art Education: Introduction of Zokei-Asobi (Playful Art Study), International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 229-242. Victor I. Ukaegbu The University of Northampton, School of The Arts, St George’s Avenue, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Keywords performance, interaction, medicine sales, advertising, shamanism, sales-performers Dr. Victor I. Ukaegbu is a senior lecturer and course leader for Drama at The University of Northampton. He has written on African and intercultural theatres, postcolonial performances, gender, black British theatre, applied theatre, including a book; The Use of Masks in Igbo Theatre in Nigeria: the Aesthetic Flexibility of Performance Traditions. He is Associate Editor of African Performance Review and a member of the Editorial Board of World Scenography (Africa/Middle East). › Performative encounters: Performance intervention in marketing health products in Nigeria, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 35-51. Seija Ulkuniemi University of Lapland, Faculty of Art and Design, Rovaniemi, PL 122, 96101, Finland Seija Ulkuniemi was born at Rovaniemi, Lapland in 1963. From 1985 she worked both as a classroom and art teacher in comprehensive and high schools in Finland. In 1997 she was appointed Senior Lecturer in Art Education at the University of Lapland where in 2006 she became Professor of Art Education in the Faculty of Art and Design. Keywords visual communication, photography, women, family › Exposed lives: dialogues between viewers and installations about family photography, International Journal of Education through Art, 3.1, 43-56. Kevin Underwood AECOM Keywords Kevin Underwood is the Vice-President of AECOM Design + Planning. As global leader of AECOM's resorts, leisure and tourism projects, he works with the world's major hotel operators, and his focus is on combining the finest hospitality with economic, environmental and social sustainability. In urban masterplanning and regeneration, current projects include the Msheireb Heart of Doha in Qatar, creating a unique modern Islamic city rooted in the past. His landscape design projects range from the settings for corporate HQs to campus design among the largest schemes underway is Education City in Qatar, where academic institutions will enjoy a sustainable landscaped setting of more than 1000 hectares. › Msheireb Heart of Doha: An Alternative Approach to Urbanism in the Gulf Region, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 1.1, 131-147. Vuk Uskoković Vuk Uskoković, a native of Belgrade, Serbia, holds degrees in Physical Chemistry, Electrical Engineering and Nanosciences and University of California, San Francisco, California, 94143, United States of America Nanotechnologies. He is currently at the University of California, San Francisco, where he is involved in the research of bio-mimetic formation of biomineralized tissues. He is a former member of Jožef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, where he developed methods for the synthesis of magnetic nanoparticles applicable in the fields of electronics and biomedicine, and of the Center for Advanced Materials Processing of Clarkson University in Potsdam, NY, where he investigated the mechanisms for the precipitation of cholesterol. Besides his dedication to scientific research in the area of physical chemistry, he has published studies in the fields of cognitive science, ecology, philosophy and social science. Keywords co-creation, creativity, electron microscopy, science › A collection of micrographs: where science and art meet, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.3, 231-247. Øyvind Vågnes University of Bergen, Department of Information Science and Media Studies, P. O. Box 7802, Bergen, NO5020, Norway Keywords narrative erotics, trauma, graphic memoir, Stitches, David Small Øyvind Vågnes is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Information Science and Media Studies at the University of Bergen, Norway, where he is a part of the research group Nomadikon. Among his publications are several articles on comics (in Norwegian) for the Book Review Morgenbladet. He is working on a book tentatively titled Images from the Dark Side: Picturing the War on Terror, on nonfiction narratives that concern the ongoing War on Terror (with chapters on Errol Morris, Joe Sacco and Nina Berman, among others), and has published articles on the subject of witnessing and 9/11. With Asbjørn Grønstad he is the co-editor of a volume of essays on the album cover, Coverscaping: Discovering Album Aesthetics (Museum Tuscalunum Press). He has published three novels in Norwegian, Ingen skal sove i natt (2003), › Showing silence: David Small's Stitches, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 301-314. Louise Valentine Keywords designer’s thinking, mindfulness, rhetoric, visual thinking, dialogue Dr. Louise Valentine is a lecturer and AHRC Postdoctoral Research Investigator based in Duncan of Jordanstone College, University of Dundee. Louise’s research remit within the multi-disciplinary team project investigating ‘Past, Present and Future Craft Practice’, includes collaboration with contemporary craft practitioners, external relations management and employment of knowledge management strategies for developing teamwork. She also has responsibility for the development of a new interdisciplinary/interuniversity postgraduate programme entitled ‘Capitalising on Creativity’, which synthesizes creative and management practice, and lectures on the theory and practice of design thinking, visualization and teamwork. Louise was Course Director for the multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural Master of Design programme at Duncan of Jordanstone (2005) and has initiated a new MSc, Craft and Creative Business. › Sustaining Ambiguity and Fostering Openness in the (Design) Learning Environment, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.3, 155167. Deneb Kozikoski Valereto Deneb Kozikoski Valereto is completing her Research Masters in Literature at Leiden University, the Netherlands. Her interests include twentieth-century continental philosophy and intersections between philosophy and literature, especially in the works of Derrida and Deleuze. Her literary interests include twentieth-century Latin American and German literature. Among her newly found interests are Alan Moore’s graphic novels and literary visions of new modes of thinking the questions of ethics and justice. Leiden University Keywords continental philosophy, literature, ethics › Philosophy in the fairground: Thoughts on madness and madness in thought in The Killing Joke, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 69-80. Michaela Vamos University of Arts Linz, Department of Art Education, Sonnensteinstraße 11-13, 4040 Linz, Austria Keywords pupils, secondary-school, new media, survey Michaela Vamos is an art teacher and researcher within the field of art education. She studied Art Education and Textiles at the University of Art in Linz, Austria (1998–2004), followed by doctoral studies (2004– 07). In December 2007 Michaela was awarded the Junger Wissenschaftspreis (Young Science Award) (IPOL) from the federal government of Upper Austria for the work she did for her Ph.D. › Gender-orientated media usage?, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.1, 59-73. Hilde Van Gelder Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Faculty of Arts: Art History, BlijdeInkomststraat 21, postbus 3313, B3000 Leuven, Belgium Hilde Van Gelder is Professor of Contemporary Art History at the KULeuven (Belgium). She is director of the Lieven Gevaert Research Centre for Photography (www.lievengevaertcentre.be). She is also Editor of the ‘Lieven Gevaert Series’ (University Press Leuven) and Editor of Image [&] Narrative (www.imageandnarrative.be). Photography Theory in Historical Perspective. She is co-author of Case Studies from Contemporary Art with Helen Westgeest (University Leiden). Keywords art history, contemporary art, photography, culture, philosophy › Photo-filmic images in contemporary visual culture, Philosophy of Photography, 1.1, 48-53. Catalina Rigo Vanrell Complutense University of Madrid, Dept. of Didactics of Plastic Expression, Office 1609, c/ Rector Royo Vilanova s/n, Madrid, 28040, Spain Keywords art therapy, gender equity, social change and inclusion, education The research group ‘Aplicaciones del arte para la inclusión social: arte, terapia y educación para la diversidad’/Applications of art for social inclusion: art, therapy and education for diversity, is part of a larger team of teaching staff at the Complutense University of Madrid, which has promoted studies on art, social inclusion and art therapy, to a European MA and Ph.D. The group, composed of Primary and Secondary School teachers, professors at the Faculty of Education and researchers on Art Education and Art Therapy, has published a variety of books on art therapy and social inclusion, such as Creación y posibilidad/Creation and Possibility (López Fernández Cao 2006) and Arteterapia y educación/Art Therapy and Education (Martínez Díez and López Fernández Cao 2004), and a collection of thirteen educational projects under the name ‘Posibilidades de › Social functions of art: Educational, clinical, social and cultural settings. Trying a new methodology, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 397-412. Maarten Vanvolsem Sint-Lukas Brussels University College of Art and Design / Lieven Gevaert Research Centre for Photography, Stationsstraat 62, Stationsstraat 62, Sint-Joris-Weert (Oud-Heverlee), B-3051, Belgium Keywords photography, stripphotography, time, experience of time, time and the image, camera designer Dr. Maarten Vanvolsem is photographer, Head of the MA programme in Photography at Sint-Lukas Brussels University College of Art and Design and is Research Fellow at the Lieven Gevaert Centre for Photography. Recently he published an article: 'Motion! On how to deal with the paradox in dance photography', Image [&] Narrative [ejournal], 23 (2008), and the book MOVE:IN:TIME in collaboration with the Concertgebouw Brugge, on the occasion of the International Dance Festival DecemberDance (December 2007). In the last five years he had several solo- and group-exhibitions in Belgium and abroad. Maarten Vanvolsem graduated as a master in photography, at Sint-Lukas Brussels in 2000, he then was accepted as a research fellow at the Jan van Eyck Akademie (Maastricht The Netherlands) in 2001. › Hinting at an experience of time in still photography, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.1, 49-. Augustus Veinoglou Keywords Renaissance, sculpture Augustus Veinoglou was born in Athens in 1982. He graduated from Edinburgh College of Art with a BA (HON), 2004. In 2003 he stayed in Estonia for four months where he joined the interdisciplinary department at the Estonian Academy of Art under the supervision of the artist and head of department Jaan Toomik. He received the John Kinross research award, from the Royal Scottish Academy, 2004 to travel to Italy and research Renaissance and ancient Italian art. He lived in Greece from 2005 to 2009 where he exhibited in numerous group shows in Athens and Thessaloniki. During that time he worked as an art tutor and freelance sculptor. In 2009 started his Postgraduate degree (MFA) in Edinburgh College of Art, in the department of Sculpture under the supervision of professors, Neil Mulholland, Kristin Mojsiewicz and sculptor Kenny Hunter. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. Rodrigo Velasco Keywords correspondence, flânerie, photography, travel, visual research Rodrigo Velasco studied architecture in Bogota, Columbia. He has received various prizes in national and international design competitions and is currently undertaking doctoral research at the University of Nottingham. He recently organized a symposium of the Architectural Construction Research Group on ‘Systems & Design’ (a project in collaboration with Nottingham Trent University, University of Lincoln and Architecture Week 2004). › In the Study of the Letters in Red…, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 4.1, 1928. Luiz Velho Keywords virtual reality, panoramic image, Visorama, cybernetic observatory Dr. Luiz Velho is a researcher at the Instituto de Matematica Pura e Aplicada in Rio de Janeiro. His experience in computer graphics spans the fields of modelling, rendering, imaging and animation. During 1982 he was a visiting researcher at the National Film Board of Canada. From 1985 to 1987 he was a Systems Engineer at the Fantastic Animation Machine in New York, where he developed the company's 3D visualization system. From 1987 to 1991 he was a Principal Engineer at Globo TV Network in Brazil, where he created special effects and visual simulation systems. In 1994 he was a visiting professor at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University. He has published extensively in conferences and journals of the area. He is the author of several books and has taught many courses on graphics-related topics. › A cybernetic observatory based on panoramic vision, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.1, 79-98. Shilpa Venkatachalam University of Nottingham, Postgraduate School of Crit Th & Cultural Studies, University Park, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, NG7 2RD, United Kingdom Keywords contemplation, spectator, Heidegger, Arnheim Shilpa Venkatachalam is currently doing her Ph.D. in the area of philosophy and literature at the Postgraduate School of Critical Theory and Cultural Studies, University of Nottingham. Her research focuses on the notion of ‘being, consciousness and the self’ and the expression of this in certain literary texts and in the philosophy of Martin Heidegger. Shilpa completed her Masters from the University of Durham, in English studies, with special emphasis on the interrelation of literature with philosophy and science. › Technology and the contemplation of art Contemplating the work of art using the HIPS technology, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.3, 179-194. Emmanuel Vercruysse Architectural Association and University College London Keywords design, education, architecture Emmanuel Vercruysse BSc [hons], DipArch, MArch. Emmanuel is a designer, fabricator and educator. He studied Furniture design in Gent, Belgium before completing his architectural education at the Bartlett School of Architecture, London, where he teaches Diploma Unit 23 with Bob Sheil of Sixteen*[makers]. Emmanuel is also a design tutor embedded in the Bartlett’s workshops and having previously run the metal workshop, he now runs the Bartlett’s state-of-the-art Cad Cam facility. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. Marcus Verhagen Keywords Postgraduate Diploma courses, crossovers, curating, learning, teaching strategy Marcus Verhagen [RB1] has a Ph.D. in art history from the University of California at Berkeley, and has taught at universities and art colleges in both United Kingdom and the United States. Initially working on French art of the late nineteenth century, he now writes chiefly on contemporary art. He has published articles in academic journals and anthologies and has, over the past few years, contributed some fifty essays and reviews to magazines such as Art Monthly, Art Review, Modern Painters and frieze. Much of his most recent work looks at globalization and its impact on contemporary art. › Learning in groups: the student experience in Postgraduate Diplomas of Fine Art, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 6.2, 117-132. Victoria Vesna UCLA, Dept. of Design | Media Arts, Broad Arts center, 11000 Kinross Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90095, United States of America Keywords nanotechnology, nanometre, nanobots Victoria Vesna is an artist, professor and chair of the department of Design/Media Arts at the UCLA School of Arts. She is currently a Visiting Professor and Director of Research at Parsons Art, Media and Technology, the New School for Design in New York and a senior researcher at IMéRA – Institut Méditerranéen de Recherches Avancées in Marseille, France and Artist in Residence at the Institute of Advanced Studies, University of Bristol. Her work can be defined as experimental creative research that resides between disciplines and technologies. With her installations she explores how communication technologies affect collective behavior and how perceptions of identity shift in relation to scientific innovation. Victoria has exhibited her work in over twenty solo exhibitions, more than seventy group shows, has been published in excess of twenty papers. › The Nanoneme Syndrome: Blurring of fact and fiction in the construction of a new science, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.1, 724. Rachel de Sousa Vianna Universidade do Estado de Minas Gerais, Escola Guignard, Rua Coletor Celso Werneck, 200/102, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, 30.350-010, Brazil Rachel de Sousa Vianna is a lecturer at Universidade do Estado de Minas Gerais, in Brazil. She has a BA degree in Architecture and Urbanism from Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, an MA in Art Education from The University of Texas, and a Ph.D. in Education from Universidade de São Paulo. Her research interests include Built Environment Education, Critical Studies, Visual perception and Sociohistorical Theory applied to art education. Keywords art education, perception, critical studies, built environment education, museum education › Development of visual perception and the role of ‘visual concepts’ in Critical Studies, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 23-35. Judit Vidiella Judit Vidiella is a doctoral student and research assistant in Fine Arts at the University of Barcelona. She also teaches on a Masters course about Visual Culture Studies. She is participating in research projects being carried out at the Centre for Studies for Change in Culture and Education at the university; and the work of the Technologies of Keywords body representation, visual culture, education, interdisciplinary Gender group at the Museum of Contemporary Art who research issues of feminism, gender and identity politics, activism, sexualities, and post-pornography. She is a member of a performance group called Corpus Deleicti working on questions of embodiment, sexuality and power relations of representation. › Beyond Lucian Freud: Exploring body representations in children's culture, International Journal of Education through Art, 2.2, 105-118. Turlif Vilbrandt Digital Materialisation Lab, Fukushima, Aizu Wakamatsu, Izumi 470, Japan Keywords function representation (FRep), boundary representation (BRep), HyperFun, Fab at Home (FaH), volumetric computation Turlif has been researching methods and processes to exactly describe (computationally capture) the complexity and quality of natural and real things for twenty years. Turlif developed a generalized and holistic approach for accurately modelling complex real world objects. He established one of the first (and still few) companies to engineer and apply this technology using personal computers. Currently, he is the co-founder of a newly formed start-up in Norway and a computerscience doctoral candidate in London. He also directs, manages and contributes to several international free and open-source organizations and ongoing projects including HyperFun.org and NextFab.org. › Fabricating Nature, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 165-173. Carl Vilbrandt Digital Materialisation Lab, Fukushima, Aizu Wakamatsu, Izumi 470, Japan Keywords function representation (FRep), boundary representation (BRep), HyperFun, Fab at Home (FaH), volumetric computation Carl Vilbrandt is a professor, fine artist, aerospace engineer and computer scientist with a profound commitment to the understanding of materials and processes and the freedom to be innovative. Carl specializes in three-dimensional spatial perception, understanding materials and processes in the real world and their representation in the virtual world. Born in the United States, Carl’s research took him to Asia for over a decade and he is currently residing in the wilds of Chile working on bridging the gap between advanced manufacturing technologies, rural communities and self-sufficient sustainable practices. › Fabricating Nature, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 7.2, 165-173. Marina Vishmidt Queen Mary University, School of Business and Management, 20 Lansdowne Drive, London, E8 3EG, United Kingdom Keywords labour, capital, capitalism, Marx, feminism, materialism, finance, speculation, realism, critical, experimental, moving-image, value, avant-garde, politics Marina Vishmidt is a writer based in London concentrating on art and work. Currently conducting Ph.D. research at Queen Mary, University of London on 'Speculation as a Mode of Production in Art and Capital', recent research posts include a critic's residency at the FRAC Lorraine and a fellowship at the Jan van Eyck Academie. She received her MA at the Middlesex Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy in 2004. She has co-edited Uncorporate Identity (2010) with Metahaven, and Media Mutandis: Art, Technologies and Politics (2006). She has written for artists' publications including Ruth Buchanan, Chris Evans and Olivia Plender, and is a frequent contributor to catalogues, edited collections and journals such as Mute, Afterall, Texte zur Kunst, and Reartikulacija. › The cultural logic of criticality, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 7.3, 253-269. Natasha Vita-More University of Plymouth Keywords biomedia, ethics and bias, future studies, NBIC technologies, transBioArt Natasha Vita-More is a Ph.D. candidate, Planetary Collegium and University of Plymouth. Her research concerns human enhancement and radical life extension. Vita-More’s design ‘Primo Posthuman’ has been featured in , LAWeekly, The New York Times, U.S. News & World Report, Net Business, Teleopolis and The Village Voice. She has appeared in over 24 televised documentaries on human enhancement and transhumanism, and is featured in 100 000 Ans de Beauté. Currently, Vita-More is a fellow at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies; a Visiting Scholar at 21st Century Medicine; and Advisor to the Singularity University, the Board of Directors for Humanity Plus, the Scientific Board of the Lifeboat Foundation, the Alcor Foundation and Kenya SIYM International. › Brave BioArt 2: shedding the bio, amassing the nano, and cultivating posthuman life, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 5.3, 171-186. › Aesthetics of the radically enhanced human, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 8.2, 207-214. › Epoch of plasticity: The metaverse as a vehicle for cognitive enhancement, Metaverse Creativity, 1.1, 69-80. Frans Vogelaar Keywords urban, communication, Frans Vogelaar is Founder of Hybrid Space Lab (Amsterdam/Berlin), a r&d and design practice focusing on the hybrid fields that are emerging through the combination and fusion of environments, objects and services in the information/communication age. Professor of Hybrid Space at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne and consultant to the Dutch government on 'the use of space in the global information/communication age'. He studied industrial design at the Design Academy in Eindhoven and architecture and urbanism at the Architectural Association School of Architecture (AA) in London. He worked at the architectural and design office Studio Alchymia (Allessandro Mendini) in Milan and at the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA/Koolhaas) in Rotterdam. › IDENSITY(r): urbanism in the communication age, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.1, 69-76. Anne Carina Völkel Keywords Anne Carina Völkel is an architect and member of rakete-n-tur, a platform for multidisciplinary collaboration in architecture, technology and art, based in London and Germany. After studying architecture at the UoAS Trier, Germany (2006), she has been awarded several prizes including a scholarship from the German Academic Exchange Service. Most recently she received a Master of Architecture with distinction from the Bartlett, University College London. › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. Otto von Busch University of Gothenburg, School of Design and Craft, Box 131, Gothenburg, 40530, Sweden Keywords counterfeit crochet, craft exhibition, DIY culture, net politics, crafts Dr. Otto von Busch is a haute couture heretic and DIY-demagogue, but also researcher at the School of Design and Craft, University of Gothenburg. In his research he explores the emergence of a new ‘hacktivist’ designer role in fashion and the crafts; here designers and participants collaborate to reform fashion from a phenomenon of dictations and anxiety to a collective experience of empowerment by distributing agency throughout the system. In other words, it is an approach where designers strive to make participants become fashionable. › Exploring net political craft: From collective to connective, Craft Research, 1.1, 113-124. Tim Vorley University of Leicester, Department of Geography, University Road, Dr. Tim Vorley is a University Lecturer in Economic Geography at the University of Cambridge. The focus of Tim’s research is the Geography of Higher Education in the United Kingdom and Europe, with a specific focus on academic entrepreneurship and knowledge/ Leicester, LE1 7RH, United Kingdom Keywords academic entrepreneurship, knowledge transfer, higher education, innovator companies technology transfer. His other research interests include innovation and entrepreneurship in high-tech nascent markets and innovator companies. › Realizing capabilities – academic creativity and the creative industries, Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 137-150. › Structured Creativity: Formulating an Innovation Strategy,Tim Sauber and Hugo Tschirky (2005), Creative Industries Journal, 1.2, 197-201. David Walker Barker University of Leeds, Department of Contemporary Art Practice, 96 St Helen's Street, Elsecar, South Yorkshire, S74 8BQ, United Kingdom Keywords human histories, geology, mineralization, landscape, convergence David Walker Barker is an artist and collector with a long-standing interest in landscape environments. He is a lecturer in the School of Design at the University of Leeds, and exhibits both nationally and internationally. His artwork and associated research is concerned with diverse aspects of landscape environments and has developed, in part, through fieldwork carried out at a variety of locations. Interest in aspects of geology and landscape evolution developed whilst at the Royal College of Art and has continued as a significant preoccupation providing reference points for a range of artworks including paintings, drawings, painted constructions and cabinets. These identify a fascination for land surface and the structural complexity of geological contexts, associated processes and their concealed dimensions. A central focus relates to the intersection of geological and human histories and their industrial and cultural impact upon landscape forms. › Realities and histories: 'In search of a hidden landscape', Journal of Visual Art Practice, 5.1, 5-20. Les Walkling RMIT University, Melbourne, School of Art, College of Design and Social Context, RMIT University, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne VIC 3001, Australia Dr Les Walkling is an artist, educator and consultant. He was formerly Director of Media Arts and is now a Senior Research Fellow at RMIT University, Melbourne. His works are in the collections of the Centre for Creative Photography, Arizona; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and the national galleries of Australia and Victoria. Keywords › Reflections on medium specificity occasioned by the symposium 'Digital Light: Technique, Technology, Creation', Melbourne, 2011, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 37-49. Aylwyn Walsh University of Northampton, Department of Performance Studies, Avenue Campus, St. Georges Avenue, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Aylwyn Walsh is currently undertaking Ph.D. at the University of Northampton, titled ‘Performing (for) survival’, focusing on women in prison. She is artistic director of Ministry of Untold Stories, using research and theatre practice in dialogue. › Painting human rights: Mapping street art in Athens, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2.2, 111-122. Keywords women in prison, theatre practice Maria Walsh University of the Arts London Keywords Maria Walsh is Theory Leader of the BA Fine Art course at Chelsea College of Art & Design. She has published essays on artists' film installation and cinema in journals including Screen, Angelaki, Rhizomes, Senses of Cinema and Refactory. She has contributed chapters to a number of books including Screen/Space: The Projected Image in Contemporary Art (Manchester University Press, 2011). She is a regular contributor to Art Monthly and is currently researching screen/spectator intersubjectivity. › Re-enacting cinema at the crossroads: Nicky Coutts's Passing Place, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 69-77. Shei-chau Wang United Kingdom Keywords book-making, teaching, visual culture, college students Shei-chau Wang is Associate Professor of Art Education at Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, United States. His research interests include teaching visual culture at the college level, e-learning in art and design, and electronic portfolio development and assessment. He has published articles in both English and Chinese and presented numerous papers at both national and international conferences. › Contextualizing meanings as personal cultural inquiry: A book-making project, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.1, 75-92. ShiPu Wang University of California, Merced, School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, SSHA, 5200 North Lake Road, Merced, CA, Dr. ShiPu Wang is an art historian and assistant professor in the School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, University of California, Merced, United States. He teaches global arts and visual culture surveys and seminars on American art, in addition to a photography history and practice course. Wang’s research and scholarship focus on rediscovering the diverse body of work by émigré Asian and Asian 95343, United States of America American artists who contributed to many vanguard artist groups as prominent members in pre-war American art. His forthcoming book, Becoming American? The Art and Identity Crisis of Yasuo Kuniyoshi (University of Hawaii Press), presents an in-depth critical re-evaluation of the artistic production of Yasuo Kuniyoshi (1889–1953), a prominent American artist of Japanese descent, in the pivotal decades preceding and following Pearl Harbor and explores ways in which his work interrogates issues of race, diasporas and nationalism in American art. Keywords photography, art history, teaching, integrated curricula › The effecting eye: An integrated approach to teaching history of photography, International Journal of Education through Art, 5.2&3, 213227. Wenchun Wang Independent Scholar, Department of Fine Arts at National Taiwan Normal University, 2-42-1 Toyosatodai, Utsunomiya-shi, 320-0003, Japan Keywords understanding art, repertoires, developmental theory, art appreciation, appreciation skills Dr. Wenchun Wang is a graduate in the Department of Fine Arts at National Taiwan Normal University and has completed her Ph.D. thesis at University of Tsukuba. She is past Visiting Scholar in the Department of Art Education at the Ohio State University and past Coordinator of Invited Seminar Japan of the 31st InSEA World Congress in New York. Her publications include articles in the Studies in Art Education 43: 4 and Journal of Aesthetic Education 37: 4. › Considering the framework of art appreciation repertoires, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 327-341. Jen Webb University of Canberra, Faculty of Arts and Design, Australia Keywords artist book, rhizome, object relations, fetish object, performative Jen Webb is Professor of Creative Practice at the University of Canberra and combines cultural theory and creative writing with the production of handmade books. Her most recent academic work was Understanding Representation (Sage, 2009), and she is currently writing a book on theories of embodiment and completing a novel that extends the myth of Icarus. Her research investigates representations of critical global events, and the use of research in and through creative practice to generate new knowledge about human rights. Jen is coeditor of TEXT: Journal of Writing and Writing Courses. › The book objects: writing and performance, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 27-44. Helena Webster Oxford Brookes University, Department of Architecture, Headington, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX3 0BP, United Kingdom Keywords design project, reflective learning, tutor-student relationship, Design Jury, Michael Foucault, power Helena Webster is an architect and Reader at Oxford Brookes University. Her current research focuses on Holocaust Memorials and architectural education, for which she was awarded a National Teaching Fellowship in 2005. Her publications include The Analytics of Power: Re-presenting the design jury (, February 2007) and Architecture without Rhetoric: essays on the work of Alison and Peter Smithson (1997) and most recently Bourdieu for Architects (Routledge, 2011). › Facilitating critically reflective learning: excavating the role of the design tutor in architectural education, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 2.3, 101-112. › A Foucauldian look at the Design Jury, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.1, 5-20. Hannele Weir City University London, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies in Professional Practice, School of Community and Health Sciences, Northampton Square, London, EC1V 0HB, United Kingdom Hannele Weir is a Lecturer in Applied Sociology, in the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies in Professional Practice, School of Community and Health Sciences at City University London. She is currently involved in a research project on Art, social inclusion and the Community Programme at Tate Modern. › You don’t have to like them: Art, Tate Modern and learning, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 93-110. Keywords art, violence, learning, practice, museum Monika Weiss Keywords drawing, video, performance, time paths, trace Based in New York City, Polish-American artist Monika Weiss creates environments that explore the body as cultural and physical signifier, in the context of historical and individual memory. 'Much of her work to date is structured as a remarkable, individual counterpoint between technological media (video projection) and the ancient activity of drawing, which is presented in a primal state inseparable from the body as a whole.' (Guy Brett, London, 2007). In 2005 the artist's first partial retrospective exhibition was on view at the Lehman College Art Gallery, The City University of New York, followed by the publication of a monographic survey catalogue and a New York Times review. › Anamnesis (Swiatlo Dnia), Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 4.2, 79-88. Claudia Westermann Laboratory for Inhabitable Theories and Research in Architecture Keywords Claudia Westermann is a licensed architect holding a postgraduate degree in Architecture from the University of Karlsruhe (Dipl. Ing.), a second postgraduate degree in Media Fine Arts from the University of Art and Design (HfG) at the Center for Art and Media (ZKM) in Karlsruhe, Germany, and a PhD from the University of Plymouth, UK.Her Ph.D. thesis entitled 'An experimental research into inhabitable theories' was supervised by Professor Roy Ascott. Her works have been exhibited internationally, including at the Venice Biennale for Architecture, the Moscow International Film Festival, ISEA Symposium for the Electronic Arts in Japan, and the ZKM in Karlsruhe. Publications include `The Architect's Circle, or The Geometrical Incline of Truth' in New Realities: Being Syncretic (Springer, 2008), and `An Entry without Inscription, a Letter, and a Map' in Orientation _ Dis-/Orientation (Lars Müller, 2009). › Myths of complexity, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 267-284. Nigel Wheale › REVIEWS, Book 2.0, 1.1, 75-86. Keywords Pauline White Western Development Commission, Policy Keywords policy, quality of life, western region of Ireland, rural regions, creative industries Pauline White is a Policy Analyst with the Western Development Commission in Ireland (www.wdc.ie). She has been involved in the analysis of, and published a number of reports on, labour market, rural enterprise, regional development and infrastructural issues in the Western Region. She oversaw the baseline research on the creative sector in the Western Region, and wrote the WDC report 'Creative West: The Creative Sector in the Western Region' (WDC 2009a). › Creative industries in a rural region: Creative West: The creative sector in the Western Region of Ireland, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 79-88. Duncan White University of the Arts, London, Duncan White is a research fellow at Central St Martins College Art and Design, University of the Arts London. He is the lead author and co-editor of Expanded Cinema: Art Performance Film (Tate Publishing Central St. Martins College of Art & Design 2011). Current research interests include film and media experiments, poetry, art and performance. Keywords expanded cinema, performance, video, production, reception, writing › Unnatural fact: the fictions of Robert Smithson, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 161-175. Mike White St. Chad’s College, University of Durham, 18 North Bailey, Durham, DH1 3RH, United Kingdom Keywords consultation, practice, participation, art, health Mike White is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Medical Humanities and St. Chad’s College, University of Durham, United Kingdom. His work for the centre has included workforce development programmes in arts-in-health, project-based evaluations, and audits and literature reviews of arts-in-health for government agencies. In 2005 he was awarded a fellowship of the UK’s National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts to research community-based arts in health and to build both national and international links in this field. Radcliffe, Oxford, published the resulting book, Arts Development in Community Health – ocial Tonic, in 2009. › Developing guidelines for good practice in participatory arts-in-health-care contexts, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 139-155. Derek Whitehead Keywords fine arts curriculum, visual arts philosophy, John Dewey, Lev Vygotsky, aletheic imagination Derek Whitehead has a background in the visual arts, Classical languages, and Continental philosophy. He holds a Ph.D. from Sydney University specializing in cross-disciplinary research: fine arts, aesthetics, and pedagogy, and has taught at the secondary, tertiary, and adult education levels. He is an independent researcher, writer and teacher in the areas of aesthetics, aesthetic education, and varying themes in art research from historical and contemporary perspectives, and has published in respected journals in Australia, United States, and United Kingdom. He is a practicing visual artist, with work in private collections in Australia and overseas, and is represented by RexLivingston Art Dealer, Surry Hills, Sydney, Australia. › The pedagogical aesthetic and formative experience: educating for aletheic imagination in the fine arts curriculum, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.3, 195-208. Nigel Whiteley Nigel Whiteley, a cultural historian, is Professor of Visual Arts in the Lancaster University, Tatham House, Burton in Lonsdale, via Carnforth, Lancs, LA6 3LF, United Kingdom Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts at Lancaster University. He has been a visiting professor in India and China, and lectured widely in the United States and Europe. His most recent book is the critically acclaimed Reyner Banham: Historian of the Immediate Future (MIT, 2002), and other solo books include Design For Society (Reaktion, 1993, regularly reprinted), and Pop Design – Modernism to Mod (Design Council, 1987). Whiteley is editor of DeTraditionalisation and Art: Aesthetic, Authority, Authenticity (Middlesex University Press, 2000). He has had essays published in journals such as Visible Language, Art History, The Oxford Art Journal, Artforum, the Journal of, Keywords art history, creative process, visual intelligence › Seeing what, how and why: the ARTnews series, 1953–58, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 215-228. Paul Whittaker Keywords innovation, creative, design, technology, lasers Dr. Paul Whittaker is senior lecturer and Director of Education at the University of Southampton, Winchester School of Art. He has exhibited nationally and internationally, led research seminars on European identity and difference at the University of Massachusetts and published papers for research conferences and the Higher Education Academy. His research interests centre on promoting innovation through the reconsideration of established practices by way of unconventional means, and experimentation and speculation regarding temporality and time in the creative process. Paul is currently lead academic on a European Union funded, interdisciplinary design project that involves six European partners in the digital reinterpretation of historical textiles. › Jakob Schlaepfer: A case study in laser innovation and the unexpected, Craft Research, 1.1, 125-132. Jessica Whyte Monash University, Department of the Faculty of Art & Design, 900 Dandenong Road, Caulfield East, Victoria, 3145, Australia Keywords civil contract of photography, Ariella Azoulay, surveillance, terrorism, photography restrictions Dr. Jessica Whyte completed a doctoral thesis on the political thought of Giorgio Agamben at the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, Monash University in 2010. She is the co-editor of the Theory and Event special issue ‘Form of Life: Giorgio Agamben, Ontology and Politics’ (2010), and The Agamben Dictionary (Edinburgh University Press, 2011). She is currently a research assistant in the Faculty of Art & Design, Monash University. › No Credible Photographic Interest: Photography restrictions and surveillance in a time of terror, Philosophy of Photography, 1.2, 177-195. Dietmar Wiegand Keywords network development, creative networks, regional development, cultural economy, culture tourism in rural areas Professor Dipl.-Ing. Dietmar Wiegand: Architect, head of division Real Estate Development and Management at Vienna University of Technology. Research of the division focuses on appropriate players and organizations for projects aiming at urban and regional development, and on the life cycle of the built environment and organizations. › From culture to cultural economic power: Rural regional development in small German communities, Creative Industries Journal, 3.1, 89-96. Anthony Williams University of Newcastle, Faculty of Engineeering and Build Environment, University Drive, Callaghan, New South Wales, 2308, Australia Keywords assessment, creativity, quality assurance, thinking Anthony Williams is Assistant Dean for Teaching and Learning of the Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment. He teaches design and has previously taught art and design at university level (Australian Catholic University) and art at high school level. Williams is a winner of both University and National Awards for Teaching Excellence and has worked extensively in curriculum design and implementation at both program and course levels. He is highly regarded in this area having worked as a curriculum consultant nationally (QUT & Edith Cowan) and internationally (AIIAS Philippines & Poly U Hong Kong). His research, including Ph.D., is in the field of design methodology, specifically in skills profiling for effective participation in design collaboration. A recently completed CRC project on ‘Core Skills for Participation in Virtual Design Teams’ has continued this line of research. › Assessing creativity in the creative arts, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 5.2, 97-118. Ian Williams Graphicmedicine.org, Hafoty Lwyd, Llanrhaeadr, Denbigh, Denbighshire, LL16 4PH, United Kingdom Ian Williams is an ex General Practitioner, a visual artist andmedical humanities scholar, now working as a comics artist and illustrator under the nom-de plume 'Thom Ferrier'. He writes about the interface between comics and medicine under his real name and runs the website GraphicMedicine.org Keywords comics, graphic novels, medicine, graphic medicine › Reviews, Studies in Comics, 1.2, 379-403. Austin Williams Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University Keywords Austin Williams is the director of the Future Cities Project and a lecturer in Architecture at Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Suzhou, China. He was previously the technical editor at the Architects' Journal and transport correspondent with the Daily Telegraph. He convenes the Bookshop Barnies and was the founder of mantownhuman and the 'Critical Subjects' Architecture & Design Winter School. He is an independent film-maker, writer and illustrator, and author of The Enemies of Progress, and co-editor of The Lure of the City: From Slums to Suburbs. › Fashionable dilemmas, Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty, 2.1-2, 69-82. Elizabeth Anne Williams Elizabeth Anne Williams recently completed her Masters in Architectural Design with Merit from the Bartlett in London. Originally from New Orleans, Louisiana, she hopes to continue finding pleasu re in flirting with the confines of traditional architectural paradigms. She was able to begin interrogating these ideas while completing her Bachelor of Architecture at Louisiana State University. Keywords › Project Profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.2, 307-321. Steve Willis Missouri State University, Associate Professor of Art Education, Missouri State University, 901 South National Avenue, Springfield, MO 65879, United States of America Steve Willis is an Associate Professor of Art Education at Missouri State University in Springfield. His interests include Native American practices, arts assessment, service learning and community engagement, and spirituality in art. Steve is an enrolled member of the Cherokee of Western Missouri. › An intercultural learning of similarities and differences of rituals and customs of two cultures, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.3, 361-380. Keywords clothing, food, Korean Ancestor Worship service, Native American Sweat Lodge, intercultural learning Robert Wilsmore York St John University, Lord Mayor’s Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Dr. Robert Wilsmore is Head of Creative Practice in the Faculty of Arts at York St John University. His research engages with performance, composition, musicology, collaboration and pedagogy. Recent publications include articles on prog rock group 'Yes' for Routledge journal Parallax (issue 56, 2010) and a chapter in Keywords collaboration, Goat Island, performance Kraftwerk: Music Non-Stop for Continuum Books (2011) joint authored with Simon Piasecki. › The Last Performance [dot org]: an impossible collaboration, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 2.1, 15-25. Brent Wilson Keywords biographical inquiry, ethnographical inquiry, informal curriculum, qualitative research, thirdsite pedagogy Brent Wilson is emeritus professor of art education at the Pennsylvania State University, School of Visual Arts. His research areas include the cultural influences on children’s drawings, children’s graphic narratives, pedagogical theory, and theories of interpretation. His artistbooks were exhibited most recently at the Pearl Street Gallery in New York City. › Research at The Margins of Schooling: Biographical Inquiry and Third-Site Pedagogy, International Journal of Education through Art, 4.2, 119-130. Mick Wilson Dublin Institute of Technology, Head of Fine Art, 143-149 Rathmines Road, Dublin 6, Ireland Keywords artist, writer, curating, education Mick Wilson is an artist, writer and educator. He is Head of Fine Art at DIT. From the mid-1990s to 2000, he produced a series of one-person shows and projects including: Trains Made Mary Vague, Temple Bar Gallery & Studios (2000); The Tuileries Incident, Hugh Lane Gallery, Dublin (1999); The Medium’s Project, Temple Bar/various (1998); Athman Ben Salah: On Loss, Triskel, Cork (1997). He returned to artmaking, after a break of several years, with his participation in the group exhibitions Float (2007) New York curated by Sara Reisman; and Blackboxing (2007) curated by Tessa Giblin at the Project Arts Centre, Dublin; and Coalesce: Happenstance (2009) curated by Paul O’Neill at SmartProject Space, Amsterdam. › Curatorial counter-rhetorics and the educational turn, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.2, 177-193. › Retro-Spective: ‘Places with a Past’ – New site-specific art in Charleston, Spoleto Festival USA, 1991, Art & the Public Sphere, 1.1, 55-64. Nick Wilson King’s College London, Centre for Culture, Media & Creative Industries, Dr. Nick Wilson is Senior Lecturer in Cultural & Creative Industries at the Centre for Culture, Media & Creative Industries, King’s College London, which he joinedin September 2009. Prior to this he was Course Director of the MA in Creative Industries & the Creative Room 11D, Chesham Building, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS, United Kingdom Economy at Kingston University. His research interests include critical entrepreneurship, social creativity, aesthetic experience, artistic performance, and cultural production; the UK early music performance movement (1960s-present); and critical realist meta-theory, metareality, and esoteric sociology. Keywords creative economy, creative industries, higher education, management, occupation › Learning to manage creativity: an occupational hazard for the UK's creative industries, Creative Industries Journal, 2.2, 179-190. Karen Wilson Baptist University of Manitoba, Department of Landscape Architecture, Room 305C J.A. Russell Building, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3T 2N2, Canada Karen Wilson Baptist is an assistant professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Manitoba. She has recently completed her Ph.D Studies in Landscape Architecture at the Edinburgh College of Art. Her dissertation, entitled, 'Memorial Landscapes: A Phenomenology of Grief', explores the relationship between grief, death, and landscape, and privileges the role of landscape and landscape architecture in the mediation of grief. Keywords architecture, landscape architecture, grief, death › Social justice agency in the landscape architecture studio: an action research approach, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 91-103. Nathan Wiseman-Trowse University of Northampton, St George’s Avenue, Northampton, Northamptonshire, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Keywords popular culture, popular music, identity Nathan Wiseman-Trowse is Senior Lecturer in Popular Culture at the University of Northampton. He has taught at the University for twelve years over a range of media related courses and is currently Course Leader for the University’s BA Popular Music degree. Nathan’s research has covered the multiple Blade Runner narratives, discourses of identity in British indie music, the guitar solo and symbolic disruption and shamanism in the music of Julian Cope. His doctoral thesis, 'Performing Class in British Popular Music' was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2008. His article on Nick Cave, ‘The Singer and the Song: Nick Cave and the Archetypal Function of the Cover Version’ will be published in The Art of Nick Cave (Intellect 2012) and he is currently completing a monograph for Reaktion books, Nick Drake: Dreaming England (2012). › The Magus in Marks and Spencer, Studies in Comics, 2.1, 3-5. David Wood Vanderbilt University, Department of Philosophy Keywords Yucatan, mirror, Robert Smithson, art David Wood is Centennial Professor of Philosophy and Joe B. Wyatt Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University. His interests lie in the possibilities of reading and thinking opened up by contemporary continental philosophy and by nineteenth century German thought. Current philosophical projects include: reworking/displacing Heidegger's treatment of time within fundamental ontology; developing a nonprescriptive posthumanistic approach to ethics; providing an account of truth that does justice both to its normative, ‘existential’ and metaphysical dimensions; various different approaches to the philosophy of nature (environmental philosophy, animals rights, thinking boundaries etc.). He also runs a series of philosophy talks at the Nashville Downtown Public Library. David Wood is also an environmental artist and stages Art Events from time to time. › Mirror Infractions in the Yucatan, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 9.1, 69-86. John Wood Goldsmiths University, Lewisham, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Keywords four-fold logic, relational (nature of design), writing, tetrahedronauspicious reasoning, design-thinking John Wood is Professor of Design at Goldsmiths, University of London. Before that he was Deputy Head of Fine Art. He has launched several unique and innovative design degrees, including the BA (Hons) Design and the MA in Design Futures. He was co-founder of the ‘Attainable Utopias’ network (http://attainable-utopias.org), and has published over a hundred articles and papers about aspects of environmental damage, consumption and design. An important aspect of his (re)search was driven by the need to enable designers to think more innovatively and responsibly about the implications of their practice. One outcome was the ‘IDEAbase’ authoring software application that was completed in 1994. His first book The Virtual Embodied was published (Routledge) in 1998, and his second, Designing for Micro-Utopias was published 2007 by Ashgate/Gower. He is Principal Investigator of an EPSRC and AHRC-funded study into new ways › The tetrahedron can encourage designers to formalize more responsible strategies, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 3.3, 175-192. › Reviews, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 7.2, 121-128. › Editorial – The ethical purpose of writing in creative practice, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 5-12. › Editorial, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 113-116. › Editorial, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 201-204. › Auspicious Reasoning: Can metadesign become a mode of governance?, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.3, 301-316. Richard Woodfield Keywords research-based imagery, Mark Walport, critical response, disseminating research Richard Woodfield is Emeritus Professor of Asethetics and Art Theory at Nottingham Trent University. Prior to retirement he was School Research Professor for the Nottingham Trent School of Art and Design and Chair of relevant committees. Prior to that, and for many years, he had been in charge of the School’s programme of cultural studies. His special research interests are in art historiography and art theory, particularly in the theory of the image. He is currently working on the Vienna School of Art History in the context of its contemporary philosophy and psychology. He is also interested in the history of art theory and the emergence of aesthetics in eighteenth-century Britain. His current interest in this area is the English reception of Leonardo’s Trattato della Pittura. Having completed books on Riegl and Warburg he is now engaged in a book on German philosophy and art historiography. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 2.3, 116-118. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.1, 3-6. › Editorial, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 3.3, 163-164. Paul Woodrow Keywords hypermorphism, parallaxic remix, bioelectrical body, technologized body, visualizing the invisible Paul Woodrow is Professor of Fine Arts, Department of Art, University of Calgary, Canada. Paul's work in Art Theory complements his creative work, which can be seen in collections ranging from Tate Gallery in London, the Canada Council Art Bank, and Radio Vision Inc. of Los Angeles. In the past few years, Paul has lectured at Karlstad University in Sweden and the Royal College of Art (2000), the The University of Western Sydney, Australia (1998), the University of Wales and the Chicago Art Institute (1977), and at the First Congress of Virtual Reality, and the University of Valencia, in Spain (1995). › Electric flesh - the electromagnetic medium, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 3.3, 155-168. Trish Woods South Devon College, Art, design & media, 15 Pennsylvania Road, Torquay, Devon, TQ1 1NX, United Kingdom Keywords patination, collaboration, industry, science, craft Trish Woods is a teacher and metal-smith. She studied jewellery and silversmithing at Loughborough University and was Head of Metals at the Appalachian Centre for Craft, United States. She is currently a fulltime lecturer in Three Dimensional Design and Design History at South Devon College and is studying for a Ph.D. in Design at the University of Plymouth, researching processes for colouring tin and pewter and applying these to new design products for the pewter industry. She has presented numerous papers on the potential for colour on tin and pewter, and continues to exhibit her work as a designer-maker. › Crossing boundaries: A partnership of craft, industry and science through practice-led research into the patination of pewter, Craft Research, 1.1, 133143. Natalie Woolf Keywords design modes, organic framework, intuition, thesis writing Natalie Woolf grew up in Buckinghamshire where she began professional training in the arts at the age of sixteen on the BTEC industry-approved Art and Design education programme at Amersham EF, FE college. She moved on to specialize in painting at Leeds Polytechnic (now Leeds Metropolitan University) and after graduating, remained in Yorkshire to continue painting and to set up her own practice as a designer/maker specializing in flooring. Over the next twelve years her company developed and moved into designs for vinyl which were exhibited at 100% Design and internationally. In 1999, she moved to London to undertake research at the RCA in order to explore the more creative and conceptual aspects of design practice. Since completing her Ph.D. in 2004, Natalie has been both working as an artist consultant specializing in works in the public realm and continuing her creative and research practice. › Design research by practice: modes of writing in a recent Ph.D. from the RCA, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.1, 53-68. Martin Woolley Coventry University, Coventry School of Art and Design, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords sustainability, product semantics, user research, craft, product semantics, design Martin Woolley's interests encompass sustainability, product semantics, user research, the crafts, product semantics and designrelated aspects of the innovation process. He moved into a research project management role, initially as Director of the HEFCE/TLTP funded 'demi' Project which established web-based learning and teaching resources for UK design courses, and more recently he was principal investigator on both the EU Framework 5 'AGORA Cities for People' project and on the 'Emotional Wardrobe' Designing for the 21st Century EPSRC/AHRC cluster project. › Book Review, Journal of Writing in Creative Practice, 1.2, 191-193. › Beyond control: Rethinking industry and craft dynamics, Craft Research, 2.1, 11-36. Roger Wooster The University Of Wales, Newport, Performing Arts, City Campus, Usk Way, Newport, NP20 2BP, United Kingdom Keywords TIE, health, education, drama, theatre Roger Wooster worked in Theatre In Education as a founder member of Open Cast Theatre and as part of Theatr Powys where he helped develop the company’s participatory approach to TIE. Since 1990, he has worked in Further and Higher Education, contributing to a number of journals and publishing Contemporary Theatre in Education in 2007. He is currently at The University of Wales Newport where he is Senior Lecturer in Performing Arts and Applied Drama. › Theatre in education: More than just a health message, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 281-294. Pete Worrall Keywords art education, digital technology, new media, intercultural dialogue, teacher training, information and communication Pete Worrall is an artist, writer, teacher and consultant, currently employed by UniServity, a leading learning platform company, based in the United Kingdom, United States and Australia. During his professional career he has taught Art and Design at school and university levels. In addition to his role as a teacher, he is a practicing multimedia artist, freelance 'creative arts' consultant and writer. A range of publications include Electric Studio (postgraduate students workshop practice), Cultural Identity, Digital Media and Art (a project developed in Brazil), ‘A Critical Context: Art and Design Education on the Edge' (International case studies) and Art through IT (Creativity and IT in a Primary School context). His current research involves exploring the 'interfaces of creative practice' through intercultural dialogue and exchange, with artists and teachers in Europe. › Towards the development of electronic learning and 'online' tools: An experimental approach to specialist teacher education (Art and Design), Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.1, 37-49. Victoria Worsley Keywords contemporary art, creative process, documentation, Helen Chadwick, memory Victoria Worsley is Archivist at the Henry Moore Institute Archive, a specialist repository holding papers relating to British sculpture. She has a particular interest in artist’s books and concrete poetry, the display and exhibition of archives and meaning and memory in archives. › Collecting the traces: an archivist's perspective, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 6.3, 175-190. Christine Woywod University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Department of Art and Design, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Art Education, Peck, School of the Arts, P.O. Box 413, Milwaukee, WI 53201, United States of America Christine Woywod is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Art Education, Peck School of the Arts, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She previously taught art in elementary and high school settings. From her experiences and research, she believes it is important to take issuebased approaches to art instruction and is passionate about collaborating with other educators to create interdisciplinary learning experiences for students. Keywords art education, interdisciplinary learning › Objects of amplified context: an interview with artist-teacher Pepón Osorio, Visual Inquiry: Learning & Teaching Art, 1.1, 21-32. Debao Xiang Shanghai International Studies University, School of Journalism and Communication, Shanghai, 200083, China Keywords problems, status quo, family planning, slogans, posters Dr. Debao Xiang is presently a lecturer at the School of Journalism and Communication, Shanghai International Studies University. He completed his doctoral work at the School of Journalism and Communication, Tsinghua University, China and the Centre for International Communication, Macquarie University, Australia. His research interests include international communication, political communication and journalism studies. › Transition of Chinese family planning slogans and posters, The Poster, 1.1, 95-119. Gu Xiong University of British Columbia, Department of Art History, Visual Art, and Theory, 403 - 6333 Memorial Road, Vancouver, British Columbia, BC, V6T 1Z2, Canada Keywords embodied heteroglossic spaces, immigration, identity, practice-based research, arts-based research Gu Xiong is an associate professor in the Department of Art History, Visual Art, and Theory at The University of British Columbia. His work is represented in the collections of the National Gallery of Canada, the China National Museum of Fine Arts among many other museums and private collections. His focus on hybrid-identity creation arising from the integration of different cultural origins has received significant critical recognition including reviews in international art magazines, Flash Art, Art in America, and The New York Times. › Research and creation: Socially-engaged art in The City of Richgate Project, International Journal of Education through Art, 6.2, 213-227. › Rendering Embodied Heteroglossic Spaces, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 129-146. Chen Xu Chen Xu has an MA in Cultural and Creative Industries from King’s United Kingdom College London (United Kingdom). Chen Xu has worked with the leading creative economist John Howkins as the Country Manager (China) since 2006 and later joined BOP Consulting to help to implement the company’s international research and consulting projects. She is now a co-founder of Shanghai 3S Creative Management and an associate of BOP Consulting. Chen Xu worked as a researcher on the revision of John Howkins’s book on the global creative economy. She has also worked with Film London, Arts & Business and China Shanghai International Arts Festival. Keywords creative business park, creative management, urban study, industrial heritage, Chinese culture › Ecstaquarter on Huang Pu River: an interview with the director of one of Shanghai's most innovative creative clusters, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 275-282. Karen Yair Keywords cultural policy, craft, glass-making Dr. Karen Yair is an independent consultant with experience in a range of research and cultural policy roles. Initially trained as a glass maker, Karen’s doctoral research explored the craft – design dynamic through the experiences of makers and industrial manufacturing companies engaged in new product development. Karen participated in the ICDHS 2010 Conference in her capacity as Research and Information Manager at the UK Crafts Council, a role she held between 2008 and 2010. Karen is co-author of Making Value: craft & and the economic and social contribution of makers and a number of peer-reviewed publications. › CONFERENCE REVIEWS, Craft Research, 2.1, 185-194. Liu Yan United Kingdom Keywords creative business park, creative management, urban study, industrial heritage, Chinese culture Liu Yan, MA studied Arts and Media Management at the Utrecht School of Arts (the Netherlands) and holds a postgraduate diploma in marketing from the CharteredInstitute of Marketing (London). Liu Yan is a cultural entrepreneur who co-founded Shanghai 3S Creative Management and Da-Tong China Desk Creative Industry, which provide professional services and co-working office space to creative professionals, entrepreneurs and organizations to establish collaboration in China. Liu Yan has been a guest lecturer and consultant in the creative industry and clustering, arts marketing and audience development for several Chinese and Dutch art academies and art organizations. Prior to her career in the art and culture sector, she worked for six years in Shanghai as an account director of Pathways marketing consultancy. › Ecstaquarter on Huang Pu River: an interview with the director of one of Shanghai's most innovative creative clusters, Creative Industries Journal, 1.3, 275-282. Ming-Ying Yang National United University, Department of Industrial Design, National United University, Taiwan Dr. Yang is an Associate Professor of Industrial Design at the National United University in Taiwan. She holds a doctoral degree of Design Studies from the National Yunlin University of Science and Technology in Taiwan. Her research interests include gender and design, design education and e-portfolios. Keywords gender and design, design education, industrial design › A study of industrial design students' employment preparation and choices in Taiwan, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 21-40. Sarah Gibson Yates Anglia Ruskin University, Department of English, Helmore 327, Department of English, Communications, Film and Media, Faculty of Arts, Law and Social Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge CB1 1PT, United Kingdom Sarah Gibson Yates is a writer, filmmaker and educationalist with an interest in narratives and self-representation in social media, and networked publics. Sarah has written, produced and directed a number of short films that have been exhibited internationally at various festivals and online. She currently teaches film and scriptwriting at Anglia Ruskin Universirty. › User: Reflections on the narrativization of self within social networking sites: A presentation and discussion of the processes involved in the development of a creative work-in-progress, Book 2.0, 1.1, 31-37. Keywords Heidi Yeo London Metropolitan University, 59 – 63 Whitechapel High Street, London, E1 7PF, United Kingdom Keywords jewellery, silversmithing, product design Heidi Yeo graduated with a BA (Hons) in Jewellery, Silversmithing and Allied Crafts in 1986. She ran a studio practice as a designer/maker between 1986 and 2002. Since 2002, Yeo has been Senior Lecturer and Course Leader for Jewellery and Silversmithing at London Metropolitan University. Between 1998 and 2005, Yeo undertook various architectural metalwork and public art projects. She coconvened ‘Carry the Can’ (2004–2006, with Helen Carnac and Elizabeth Callinicos), which culminated in a jewellery conference in July 2006 by London Met and the Association for Contemporary Jewellery. In 2010, Yeo moved on to become Course Leader, Furniture and Product Design at London Met. In 2011, she completed an MA in Architectural History, Theory and Interpretation. › EXHIBITION REVIEWS, Craft Research, 2.1, 161-178. Joonsung Yoon Keywords photography, writer, design Born in Seoul, Korea, Joonsung Yoon received a BSc from Sogang University (Seoul, Korea) and earned an MFA in photographic Design at Hongik University (Seoul, Korea). In 1996 he got an MA from New York University/ International Center of Photography Graduate Program. Yoon has taught photography at a National University in Korea and he is also a writer for the Korean Monthly Photographic Magazine. Joonsung Yoon explores the dichotomy of identity and appearance with computer manipulated photographs. Yoon is his own subject, portraying himself both with and without glasses as a visual representation of his two psychological extremes. He is identifying today’s medium, the computer, comparing it with photography in the avant-garde period. › SEEING HIS OWN ABSENCE: Culture and Gender in Yasumasa Morimura's Photographic Self-Portraits, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 1.3, 162-169. Mantz Yorke Lancaster University, Educational Research, 4 St Aldwyns Road, Didsbury, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M20 3JF, United Kingdom Keywords student experience, National Student Survey, assessment, retention Mantz Yorke spent nine years in schools and four in teacher education at Manchester Polytechnic before moving into staff development and educational research. He then spent six years as a senior manager at Liverpool Polytechnic, after which he spent two years on secondment as Director of Quality Enhancement at the Higher Education Quality Council. He returned to his institution (by then Liverpool John Moores University) as Director of the Centre for Higher Education Development, where he has researched and reflected on various aspects of the student experience. He has published widely, and his recent work has covered widening participation, student retention, assessment and employability. › The student experience in Art and Design – some issues arising from research on non-completion, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 1.2, 115-118. Yukihiko Yoshida Yukihiko Yoshida is dance critic, researcher, and educator. He is committee member of Dance Critics Society of Japan and has written Keio Research Institute at SFC numerous reviews and articles for dance magazines and newspapers. Additionally, he works for network divisions of some academic organizations and constructing research grid on dance. He studies and teaches Media Studies, Information Processing, Theatre Research, Cognitive Science (Cognition Studies), Linguistics (English), Film Studies and Dance Studies. Hence, He studies dance and technology and has worked for the International Advisory Boards of the Digital Community Division, Prix Ars Electronica (2005-2009) and as assistant of Prof. Ted Nelson and Project Xanadu, the original Hypertext project. Keywords dance and ballet, research grid, dance and technologies, criticism › Leni Riefenstahl and German expressionism: research in Visual Cultural Studies using the transdisciplinary semantic spaces of specialized dictionaries, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 6.3, 287309. Toru Yoshikawa Keywords exhibitions, artist Toru Yoshikawa was born in 1964 in Kawasaki, Japan and currently lives in Tokyo. During the 1980s, Yoshikawa studied art and design in the United States and has been participating in many collaborative projects with a multi-disciplinary design and art cooperative, ‘tomato’ including the UK band Underworld’s ‘ARTJAM’ project. As well as being a collaborator with ‘tomato’, Yoshikawa also specializes in planning book, magazine, exhibitions and retail spaces in Tokyo. › Project profiles, Design Ecologies, 1.1, 153-. Manlai You National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Department of Industrial Design, Taiwan Keywords employment choices, employment preparation, industrial design, higher education, design education Dr. You is a Professor of Industrial Design at the National Yunlin University of Science and Technology in Taiwan. He holds a doctoral degree of System Design from the University of Waterloo, Canada. He has published over 50 journal papers in national and international journals such as Design Studies, Applied Ergonomics and the International Journal of Design. His research interests include ergonomics, e-learning and design education. › A study of industrial design students' employment preparation and choices in Taiwan, Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, 9.1, 21-40. Christoph Zellweger Sheffield Hallam University, Art and Design Research Centre, Room 9104, Furnival Building, 153 Arundel Street, Sheffield, S1 2NU, United Kingdom Keywords jewellery, metalwork, design Christoph Zellweger (born 1962, lives in Switzerland/United Kingdom) started as a trained craftsman and maker of fine jewellery and metalwork for the high-end market in Germany and Switzerland. After going through a rigorous phase of questioning his role as an artistmaker he developed a ‘critical edge’, which was manifested in his degree work at the Royal College of Art, where he qualified with distinction. In addition to exhibiting internationally and running his Zurich-based studio, he holds a professorial research post at Sheffield Hallam University, is a visiting professor at the University of Ulster and lectures at Europe’s leading design and art colleges and in America. › THE PORTRAIT SECTION, Craft Research, 2.1, 143-160. Brigitta Zics Newcastle University, Digital Media, Culture Lab, Grand Assembly Rooms, King's Walk, Newcastle, Tyne and Wear, NE1 7RU, United Kingdom Keywords interactive art, affective art, art and science, human-computer interaction, affective computing, philosophy of mind, creative practice, experimental visualization, visual arts, human perception Dr. Brigitta Zics is an artist, media philisopher and interaction designer with particular interest in emerging technologies and their impact on creative practises and human cognition. She is a Lecturer in Digital Media in Culture Lab at University of Newcastle and Senior Lecturer in Design at University of Wales. › Engineering experiences in biofeedback interfaces: Interaction as a cognitive feedback loop, Journal of Visual Art Practice, 10.1, 71-82. Helen Zigmond Keywords power, hope, community, health, perception Helen Zigmond has an extensive background in education and the arts, working as a practitioner and consultant in training and policy development in schools, universities and community institutions. She believes health to be a cultural context. Helen has worked in the health sector since 1995. Creative Well was developed as a sustainable hospital arts programme in 1997 at The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, New South Wales. Subsequently the arts in community health program Clacia was trialled in regional NSW for two years from 2001. Helen is currently in partnership with the Starlight Children’s Foundation. She is also a consultant to the Adolescent Medicine Unit at the Children’s Hospital at Westmead and a member of the recently formed Arts in Health Foundation, Australia. › Not all ill – The arts as counterpoint, Journal of Arts & Communities, 1.2, 169-176. Malin Zimm Stockholm, Sweden Keywords architecture, dreams, narrativity, virtuality, virtual reality, spatiality, fiction, plotless, nineteenthcentury media culture, domestic interior, virtual travelling, interactive environment, moving image technology, proto-cinematic, kinetoscope, immersion, spectator, sensation, imagination, consumption Malin Zimm, architect and writer, published her Ph.D. thesis 'Losing the Plot - Architecture and Narrativity in Fin-de-Siècle Media Cultures' in 2005. The thesis investigates the role of the term plot in mediating relations between architecture and narrativity and concludes a five year research programme as a part of the group xakt – critical theory in architecture at the School of Architecture, Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, from where she graduated in 1999 as an architect, after diploma studies at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London. Zimm’s professional background includes production design for film, architectural and product design and freelance writing. Since completing her Ph.D., Zimm has been editorin-chief of the Swedish architecture magazine , and is currently Senior Advisor in Architecture at the Swedish Museum of Architecture, Stockholm. › The dying dreamer: architecture of parallel realities, Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research, 1.1, 61-68. Maxa Zoller › Round table discussion: The affects of the abstract image in film and video art, Moving Image Review & Art Journal MIRAJ, 1.1, 79-87. Keywords Tomaz Zupancic University of Maribor, Faculty of Education, Koroska 160, Maribor, 2000, Slovenia Keywords contemporary, art, education, postmodernism, interculturalism Tomaz Zupancic (b. 1962) has worked as a secondary-school art teacher in Slovenia and as an art therapist for children with special needs. He is currently Assistant Professor of art education in the Department of Fine Arts, Faculty of Education, University of Maribor. He is also head of the Department of Pre-school Education. His research is mainly oriented toward contemporary art education and to introducing postmodern, conceptual, works of art into educational practice at different educational levels. He has written books on preschool and primary art education. › Contemporary artworks and art education, International Journal of Education through Art, 1.1, 29-42. 3D virtual world Lilly (Li-Fen) Lu active notation Alice Fox A Harlots Progress Roberto Bartual Active Notation Phil Legard Nigel Morgan Matthew Robinson a/r/tography Jill Smith Abdessemed Giovanni Aloi activity theory Nicolette Lee Stella Tan Aboriginal Australians Ian Henderson activity theory academic literacy Gavin Melles abstract film Michael Betancourt actor Jack Klaff abstraction Deborah Robinson actor training David Grant abstraction as representation Mick Finch actor-network theory Sara Malou Strandvad academic entrepreneurship Tim Vorley actors' involvement Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway academic literacies Darryl Hocking adaptation Paul Atkinson Claire Hind Claire Hind James Reynolds academic writing Dipti Bhagat Peter O'Neill Stanislav Roudavski academic writing in fine art Joan Turner achievement Robyn Gibson adaptive capacity Juan Carlos Pacheco Contreras adolescent women Madeleine Brens adolescents Marjorie Cohee Manifold acting Sean Aita Fred McVittie Adorno Andy Hamilton active learning Geraldine Biddle-Perry advertising Suzanne Barnes Ken Garland Victor I. Ukaegbu advocacy Mofizur Rhaman Prabha Sahasrabudhe aesthetic Åsa Andersson James Elkins aesthetic experience Nicholas Davey Bjarne Sode Funch Kerstin Mey aesthetic preferences Katherina Danko-McGhee aesthetic studies Scott Rettberg aesthetic thought Jeremy Spencer aesthetic understanding Kerstin Mey aesthetics Beatriz Acevedo Joe Adu- Agyem Susan Best Emily Brady Clive Cazeaux Gerald Cipriani Mavis Enti Jill Franz David Gall Julia Jansen Y.S. Peligah Wood Roberdeau John Roberts William P. Seeley Janez Strehovec aesthetics and politics Malcolm Quinn aesthetics of immersion Jinsil Seo aesthetics of nature Andy Hamilton Alfred Hitchcock Nick Haeffner ancient schema Mel Alexenberg affect Bridget Crone a-life Joseph Nechvatal Anglo-American subculture Mark Leckey affect studies Susan Best Alison Bechdel Christian W. Schneider Miriam Brown Spiers Angola Jorge Gumbe affective art Brigitta Zics affective computing Brigitta Zics alternative media Rosie Meade alternative models of writing Cecilia Häggström African art Jacqueline Chanda Nana Afia Opoku–Asare Alzheimer's disease Santiago Navarro ageing Hilary Bungay Paul G. Dempster agility Nicholas Tresilian aging Laura Hurd Clarke AHRB Euan McArthur AI Bill Seaman Alain Badiou Bridget Crone Alan Moore Ian Dawe Jochen Ecke A. David Lewis Andrés Romero-Jódar aletheic imagination Derek Whitehead Amergent music Norbert Herber America Suhail Malik American art Roger M. Buergel American literature David Simmons Amnesty International Rosemary Burnett analogy Barbara Lasserre anamorphosis Peter Stott anarchism James Reynolds Ancient Near Eastern studies Shelby Moser animal Steve Dutton Rikke Hansen Steve Swindells animalization Rikke Hansen animals Emily Brady animation Rose Bond Peter Bosma Simon Downs Piotr Dumala Alice Gambrell Neil Henderson Michael Keane Clare Kitson Aki Koike Hye-Kyung Lee Lei-Lei Li Sarah Lightman Daisuke Okeda Marco Pellitteri anime Rayna Denison Hye-Kyung Lee Anish Kapoor Mike King anthropology Leila Amaral apocalyptic moment Rikke Platz Cortsen apparel Veena Chattaraman apparel design Jonathan Gander Alison Rieple appearances Joanne Finkelstein applied arts Carolina Marielli Barreto Rejane Galvão Coutinho applied drama David Grant applied theatre Teresa A Fisher Katharine Low applied visual art Glen Coutts appreciation skills Kazuhiro Ishizaki Wenchun Wang Apse of Lascaux Joseph Nechvatal archaeology Gillian Robertson archeology Cordelia Hanel archetypes Giorgio Alberti architectural design education Jamal Al-Qawasmi Buthayna Eilouti Janne Morton architectural theory Sana Murrani architecture Peter Anders Rachel Armstrong Kim Berman Simon Chadwick Joanna Crotch Kate Davies Tania Fraga Mario Gerosa Cordelia Hanel Edward Hollis Ted Krueger Jonas Major Stanley Mathews Greg More Stuart Munro Shaun Murray Sylvia Nagl Fabian Neuhaus J. Fiona Peterson Mike Phillips Felix Robbins Elizabeth Sikiaridi Emmanuel Vercruysse Karen Wilson Baptist Malin Zimm archives Sue Breakell Argentina Laura Malosetti Costa Ariella Azoulay Daniel Palmer Jessica Whyte Arnheim Shilpa Venkatachalam art Beatriz Acevedo Naren Barfield Carolina Marielli Barreto David Bell Kim Berman Roger M. Buergel Pavel Büchler David Campany Susan Carden Oron Catts Catalina Cepeda Veena Chattaraman Danielle Child Tara Chittenden Sheila de Rosa Çigdem Demir María Del Río Diéguez Hendrik Folkerts Richard Forster Rejane Galvão Coutinho Jillian Hamilton Andy Hewitt Barbara Howey Luke Jaaniste Mel Jordan Iryna Kuksa Marius Kwint Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen José María Mesías Lema Shu-Ying Liu Yorgos Loizos Yve Lomax Hans Maes Francesco Mariotti Christian Mieves Max Moswitzer Toshio Naoe Selavy Oh Martina Paatela-Nieminen Brian Reffin Smith Hannele Weir Mike White David Wood Tomaz Zupancic art and design Amanda Bill Daniela Büchler Ruth Dineen Julia Gaimster Gill Greaves Richard Heatly Marie Jefsioutine David Richmond Jules Dorey Richmond Keith Trigwell art and design curriculum John Steers art and design education Glen Coutts Darryl Hocking art and design participatory research Bob Jerrard art and politics Toni Ross art and science Brigitta Zics art and social engagement Mel Jordan art and technology Tania Fraga art appreciation Clovis Blackwell Makoto Ishikawa Kazuhiro Ishizaki Wenchun Wang art curriculum Jorge Gumbe Adetty Pérez Miles Malcolm Miles Kathryn Moore Judith Mottram Nana Afia Opoku–Asare Willy Oud Kyong-Mi Paek Maria Jesús Agra Pardiñas Analice Pillar Eliza Pitri Antti Raike Joanna Rees Rebecca Reynolds Susan Sinkinson Jill Smith Deborah L Smith-Shank Ismail Özgür Soğancı Robert W. Sweeny Cheung-on Tam Rachel de Sousa Vianna Pete Worrall Christine Woywod art development Lesley Seeger art education in Australia Robyn Gibson art education Anne Bamford Ruth Beer Erik Borg Madeleine Brens Martha Christopoulou Glen Coutts Hillary Cunliffe-Charlesworth Marie-Louise Damen Belidson Dias Adele Flood Bjarne Sode Funch Clayton Funk David Gall Mette Gårdvik Ken Garland Robyn Gibson Jeffrey B. Grubbs Folkert Haanstra Kai Hakkarainen Andy Hewitt Richard Hickman Lin Holdridge Edward Hollis Marjo van Hoorn Zhifan Hu Michael I. Jackson Albert Jewell Ami Kantawala Lisa Kay Ourania Kouvou Sheng Kuan Chung George Kyeyune Vasiliki Labitsi Nancy Lampert Angélica Lima Cruz Katy Macleod Rachel Mason Mike McAuley art encounter Bjarne Sode Funch art as cognition Ourania Kouvou art as research Robyn Gibson art critic Martin Patrick art expression Jhong Sook Oh art history David Bell Jacqueline Chanda Hendrik Folkerts Nick Haeffner Shelby Moser Stephanie Shestakow Shepherd Steiner Blake Stimson Hilde Van Gelder ShiPu Wang Nigel Whiteley art installation Francesco Mariotti art installations Yorgos Loizos art into life Graham Coulter-Smith art materials Biljana C Fredriksen art object Åsa Andersson art pedagogy Howard Riley art practice Silke Dettmers Andrew Hunt Georgina Jackson Sarah Lightman Chris Smith art research Jennifer Kanary Nikolov(a) Art Spiegelman Nicole McDaniel art student Clovis Blackwell art study Hideshi Uda art technology Sherry Mayo art theory Nicholas Davey Kerstin Mey Wood Roberdeau art therapy María Del Río Diéguez Marián López Fernández-Cao Matilde Mollá Giner Gill Greaves Albert Jewell Lisa Kay Anne Lanceley Usha Menon Miguel Domínguez Rigo Julio Romero Rodríguez Ana Eva Iribas Rudín Rosaura Navajas Seco Lesley Seeger Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic Catalina Rigo Vanrell art writing Silke Dettmers Mary O'Neill art. transience Jane Darke art/life divide Martin Patrick art-based research Tiiu Poldma Mary Stewart artefacts Kristina Niedderer artistic research Jean-Paul Fourmentraux artist's book Mark Leahy artists books Pascal Lefevre art-school critique Mary Anne Francis artographic enquiry Mel Alexenberg artwork Nicholas Davey Chris Smith artificial intelligence Carlos Castellanos Soichiro Tsuda arts based research Barbara Bickel artificial intelligence (AI) Fred McVittie artificial life Bruce Damer Martin M. Hanczyc Takashi Ikegami Joseph Nechvatal artist Mick Wilson Toru Yoshikawa artist book Jen Webb artistic practice Ruth Pelzer-Montada artistic project Carl-Peter Buschkühle arts-based research Ruth Beer Kit Grauer Kathryn Ricketts Pauline Sameshima Anniina Suominen Gu Xiong artist-practitioners Julia Moszkowicz arts Sophia Krzys Acord Kim Charnley Antonia Clews Yassaman Imani Andrew Pickering artful visual analysis Tiiu Poldma Mary Stewart Joaquín Roldán Ramírez artworks Katherina Danko-McGhee Anja Kraus artworld Howard Riley artwriting Neil Mulholland arts education Maria Flôr Dias Christopher Klopper Elisa Lessa arts management John Elsom assessment Doug Boughton Rob Cowdroy Ruth Dineen Dita Judith Federman Chris McKillop Anthony Williams Mantz Yorke arts marketing Chris Hand arts research Margarete Jahrmann Anita Sinner arts therapy Hod Orkibi arts-based education Cynthia M. Morawski arts-based educational research Ricardo Marín Viadel art-writing Mary Anne Francis assessment for learning Erik Bohemia Kerry Harman Assessment for Learning Liz McDowell assessment of reflection Christine Hardy assessment task Mark Evans aura Roy Boyne auto-ethnography Cynthia M. Morawski associative media Dew Harrison Australia Stuart Cunningham Graeme Harper Peter Higgs automotive mechanics Rita Marcalo astrophysics Donna J. Cox atelic realism Matthew Poole Athens Myrto Tsilimpounidi Atlantic World Stephanie Shestakow Australian cinema Ian Henderson Australian landscape Julia Peck Australian literature Ian Henderson authentic learning Folkert Haanstra autonomous agent Mark A. Bedau avant-garde Marina Vishmidt avant-garde book arts Sheena Calvert avant-gardes Andrés Romero-Jódar attachment Sara Malou Strandvad attitude Bjarne Sode Funch avatar Elif Ayiter Gregory P. Garvey Max Moswitzer Selavy Oh author John Fox Jack Klaff avatars Michael R. Solomon audience A.B.D Nadja Masura audience behaviour Chris Hand audio art Joseph Nechvatal audio-visual David Harte Augé Mary Maclean augmented reality Peter Stott augmented reality architecture Peter Anders authenticity Christian W. Schneider authoritarian H. L. Hix awkwardness Hannah Jones author's right Veronique Chossat ballet Bill Ribbans autism Melissa Trimingham bamboo Rebecca Reubens autobiography Rea Dennis Elisabeth El Refaie Alexander Kelly Tahneer Oksman Christian W. Schneider Nicholas Theisen bar codes Matteo Ciastellardi Andrea Cruciani autoethnography Mel Alexenberg Anniina Suominen barkcloth Catherine Gombe barriers to reflection Christine Hardy basic fashion Francesco Morace battlefields Paul Gough beach Joana Duarte Bernardes Peter Burleigh Jane Darke Christian Mieves beauty Laura Hurd Clarke Hans Maes Bec Matthew Fuller becoming Steve Swindells becoming-animal Ruth Jones behaviour Ray Gallon behavioural spaces Sana Murrani being Kate McGowan Benjamin Emily Orley bereavement Paul G. Dempster Bertolt Brecht Andrés Romero-Jódar bigheads Maria Flôr Dias Bigheads Elisa Lessa Angélica Lima Cruz Bill Viola Mike King binary logic Joseph E. Brenner bio-art Eduardo Kac bioelectrical body Paul Woodrow bio-electricity Nina Czegledy biographical inquiry Brent Wilson biography Alexander Kelly biology Ian Dawe Christian Kerrigan bio-magnetism Nina Czegledy biomedia Natasha Vita-More biometrics Monika Codourey biomorphology Inês Secca Ruivo biophotonics Zachary Jones bio-poetry Eduardo Kac biopsychology Linda J. Thomson bipolar Peter Amsel Birmingham Lisa De Propris bisociation Hannah Jones blogging Alison Hsiang-Yi Liu blogs Tara Chittenden Chris Speed Boal Teresa A Fisher body Amos Bianchi Ruth Pelzer-Montada Mofizur Rhaman body image Michael R. Solomon body interaction Diane Gromala body interface Jinsil Seo body Jacques Rancière Bridget Crone body representation Fernando Hernandez Judit Vidiella body-ground Gillian Robertson book art Johanna Drucker built environment education Rachel de Sousa Vianna book arts Mark Leahy bureaucracy Alan Collins book-making Shei-chau Wang business Paul Trott bottom-up Ellen K. Levy business development Ellen O’Hara boundary Fernando Leal Audirac Byzantine Katerina Karoussos boundary organizations Jean-Paul Fourmentraux CAAD Jamal Al-Qawasmi boundary representation (BRep) Alexander Pasko Turlif Vilbrandt Carl Vilbrandt camera designer Maarten Vanvolsem brainflowing Gloria Gómez-Diago brainstorming Çigdem Demir Gloria Gómez-Diago British Guyana Paul Buhle British studies Marius Kwint broadcasting Clare Kitson broadsheet Roberto Bartual Buddhism Ren-Lai Hwang Stanley Mathews censoring and veiling Simon Morley ceramic Imogen Racz ceramics M. James C. Crabbe Anita Ng Heung Sang Dr Graham McLaren CETL Dipti Bhagat Karen Bull Peter O'Neill Jane Osmond Mike Tovey CETL projects Terry Finnigan Canada Adam Lauder Joanna Rees change Lewis Elton cannabis Peter Stott change initiatives Terry Finnigan capital Marina Vishmidt charity Michael I. Jackson capitalism Jim McGuigan Marina Vishmidt Charlotte Salomon Griselda Pollock Carl Gustav Jung Giorgio Alberti cartoon Hans Maes Cheddi Jagan Paul Buhle chemical computing Martin M. Hanczyc Takashi Ikegami case study Leslie Cunliffe Joachim Kettel Virginia Lowe chemotaxis Martin M. Hanczyc Takashi Ikegami Cedric Price Gonçalo Furtado child art Joe Adu- Agyem Mavis Enti Y.S. Peligah children Jiří Barta Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic children's books Vasiliki Labitsi childrens cognitive development Eliza Pitri children's drawing Vasiliki Labitsi children's drawings Ourania Kouvou children's literature Jerome Fletcher childrens play Ruslan Slutsky China John A. Lent Lei-Lei Li Lucy Montgomery Jason Potts Chinese creative industries John Elsom Chinese culture Chen Xu Liu Yan Chinese teenagers Zhifan Hu Chinese traditional culture Christopher Crouch Chinese visual culture Christopher Crouch choral singing Gunter Kreutz Don Stewart Chris Ware A. David Lewis Christianity Robert A. Erlewine chronometry Alexander Sekatskiy cinema Peter Bosma Sean Cubitt cinematic languages Tara Chittenden city Karolina Breguła city growth Susan Bagwell civil contract of photography Daniel Palmer Jessica Whyte civilizing process Ana Marta González classroom-based research Christopher Klopper climate adaptation and mitigation Michael Evan Goodsite Ole John Nielsen Alison Rieple Coates Ron Broglio Matthew Fuller co-creation Vuk Uskoković code Lucía Ayala codes Joel Cahen co-evolution Joel Cahen Carlos Castellanos cognition Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Clive Cazeaux Solange Coutinho Bernard Darras Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta Eva Miranda Jan-Henning Raff Prabha Sahasrabudhe cognitive framework Peter Stott cognitive metaphor Barbara Lasserre cognitive neuroscience William P. Seeley cognitive science Mark Johnson clothing Ryan Shin Steve Willis cognitive systems Soichiro Tsuda clusters Susan Bagwell Jonathan Gander coherence Carlos Augusto Moreira da Nóbrega coherent design curriculum Elson Szeto college students Shei-chau Wang communications Christine Geraghty Cold War Paul Buhle comic book Andrés Romero-Jódar communicative interaction Darryl Hocking cold war masculinity Dirk Gindt comics Rikke Platz Cortsen Elisabeth El Refaie John A. Lent Sarah Lightman Chris Murray Tahneer Oksman Marco Pellitteri Julia Round Marc Singer Ian Williams Communities of Practice Alison Shreeve collaboration Dipti Bhagat Barbara Bickel Johannes Birringer Ben Calvert Bernadette Casey Andrea Holland Javier Abad Molina Peter O'Neill Robert Wilsmore Trish Woods collaboration between school and museum Makoto Ishikawa collaborative creative processes Mogens Jacobsen Morten Søndergaard collaborative design pictorial representation diagram Buthayna Eilouti collaborative designing Kai Hakkarainen Henna Lahti Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen comics studies Adrielle Mitchell commemoration Paul Gough commercial H. L. Hix commercial space Sharon Irish commodification Amanda M. C Brandellero Robert C. Kloosterman communication Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Astrid Ensslin Stephen Farthing Gloria Gómez-Diago Jung A. Huh Marco Pellitteri Elizabeth Sikiaridi Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic Frans Vogelaar collective knowledge sharing of professional practice Christopher Klopper communication design Sandra E. Hoffmann Robbiani collaborative learning Erik Bohemia Kerry Harman Liz McDowell collectivity Sana Murrani communication problems René Stettler community Mirja Hiltunen Rita L. Irwin Colin Murrell Helen Zigmond community art Glen Coutts Alfredo Palacios Garrido Pia Smith Theodore Stickley community arts Bess Frimodig Cindy Hasio Martin Mulligan community development Rosie Meade Mae Shaw community groups Helen Turner community music Ross W. Prior community perception Malaika Sarco- Thomas community theatre Fiona Graham John Somers community worker Mae Shaw community-based art education Anita Ng Heung Sang comparative religion Rob Harle computer vision Max B. Kazemzadeh competencies Anja Kraus computer-generated art Michael Betancourt complex adaptive systems Gilbertto Prado Clarissa Ribeiro computers Paul Hamilton complex systems Sana Murrani complexity Rachel Armstrong Harry Jamieson Sylvia Nagl Cláudia Martin Nascimento complexity and organization Gilbertto Prado Clarissa Ribeiro composition Peter Amsel computational art Murat Germen computational model Peter Stott computer Brian Reffin Smith computer art Tania Fraga computer modeling Seth Bullock computer simulation Seth Bullock Bruce Damer Computer Supported Collaborative Learning Antti Raike computing Soichiro Tsuda concept design Stephen Thompson concept development Anne Lord concept mapping Margo Blythman Joan Mullin Susan Orr conceptions of reality René Stettler conceptual architecture Sana Murrani conceptual art Michael Betancourt Karolina Breguła conceptual intrigue Howard Riley conceptual issues Kristina Niedderer conceptual responses Sue Bailey Linda Drew Alison Shreeve conflict resolution Keren Barzilay-Shechter connected design Matteo Ciastellardi Andrea Cruciani connection A.B.D Nadja Masura connectivity Simon Roodhouse conscious art Robert Pepperell consciousness Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Joseph E. Brenner Isabelle Choinière Rob Harle John Harvey Stephen Jones Joseph Nechvatal Adrian Page conservation Emily Brady constituent orientation Brynjulf Tellefsen constraint Brian Reffin Smith constraints Martin Pichlmair constructed and manipulated imagery Anne Bamford Adele Flood construction of meaning Cláudia Martin Nascimento constructionism James Edward Clayson constructivism Barbara de la Harpe J. Fiona Peterson constructivist approach Julian Malins Chris McKillop Daniel Rubinstein consultation Mike White contemporary experimental music Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta consum-authors Francesco Morace contemporary jewellery Jessica Turrell consumer behaviour David Leaver contemporary literature Marc Singer consumer culture Toni Ryynänen contemporary novel David Simmons consumerism Sharon Irish contemporary photography Nick Haeffner consumption Malin Zimm context Lindsay Hughes Mara Martnez Lirola contemplation Shilpa Venkatachalam contemporary Lindsay Hughes Tomaz Zupancic contemporary art Jorella Andrews Susan Best Bridget Crone Alan Dunn Kenneth G. Hay Murat Germen Riikka Haapalainen Young Imm Kang Song Marius Kwint Suhail Malik Malcolm Miles Maria Jesús Agra Pardiñas Matthew Poole Wood Roberdeau Hilde Van Gelder Victoria Worsley contemporary arts Peter Dallow contemporary culture Greg More contextual studies Erik Borg continental philosophy Deneb Kozikoski Valereto convergence Neil Mulholland David Walker Barker conversation Ian Heywood correspondence Rodrigo Velasco cortex Steve Grand cosmology David McConville cosmopolitanism Myrto Tsilimpounidi counterfeit crochet Otto von Busch country music history Daniel T. Stein craft Marjorie Cohee Manifold Keith Cummings Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen Dr Graham McLaren Francesco Morace Christine Ballengee Morris Robert Pulley Rebecca Reubens James H. Sanders III Kirsten Scott Jessica Turrell Trish Woods Martin Woolley Karen Yair craft and wellbeing Sinikka Hannele Pöllänen craft business models Ellen O’Hara cooperative learning Kerrie Corcoran Toshio Naoe Cheryl Sim craft education Kristina Niedderer co-production Sara Malou Strandvad copyright Veronique Chossat craft exhibition Otto von Busch craft in special education Sinikka Hannele Pöllänen craft research Kristina Niedderer creative citizenship Caroline Chapain craft science Sinikka Hannele Pöllänen creative class Caroline Chapain Lisa De Propris craft theory and practice Kristina Niedderer craft-based design Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen crafts Juan Carlos Pacheco Contreras Nithikul Nimkulrat Otto von Busch creation strategies Kjell Yngve Petersen creative Rob Huddleston Paul Whittaker creative and knowledge economy Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway creative arts Christopher Crouch Peter Dallow Janey Gordon Silvia Sovic creative arts research Estelle Barrett creative briefs Darryl Hocking creative Britain Alan Collins creative business park Chen Xu Liu Yan creative cluster Lisa De Propris Michael Keane creative industry Aki Koike Hye-Kyung Lee Lei-Lei Li creative labour Daniel Ashton creative management Chen Xu Liu Yan creative collaboration Tilmann Lindberg Christoph Meinel Christine Noweski creative networks Karin Drda-Kühn Dietmar Wiegand creative companies Nick Barnes Adele Reid creative pedagogy K. W. Lau P. Y. Lee creative districts Michele Trimarchi creative practice Nigel Green Edward Hollis Barbara Howey Jess Moriarty Brigitta Zics creative economy Rachel C. Granger Christine Hamilton Tiina Rautkorpi Nick Wilson creative expression Stanislav Roudavski creative industries Susan Bagwell Katherine Champion Shaun Chang Caroline Chapain Roberta Comunian Rayna Denison Jo Foord David Harte Colette Henry Michael Keane Bastian Lange Hélène Martin-Brelot Lucy Montgomery Jason Potts Pauline White Nick Wilson creative industries policy Alan Collins creative process Sue Breakell Val Diggle Rebecca Fortnum Clarissa Ribeiro Nigel Whiteley Victoria Worsley creative processes Kyong-Mi Paek creative regions Nick Clifton creative teaching practices Robyn Gibson creative thinking Dew Harrison Barbara Rauch creative work Roberta Comunian creative writing Matthew Bushell Mark Evans Jess Moriarty crit Simon Chadwick Joanna Crotch Christine Percy creative writing therapeutic writing Kate Evans criteria Daniela Büchler creative-thinking techniques K. W. Lau P. Y. Lee creativity Joe Adu- Agyem Peter Amsel Amanda Bill Amanda M. C Brandellero Veronique Chossat Phil Cooke Kerrie Corcoran Graham Coulter-Smith Rob Cowdroy Leslie Cunliffe Peter Dallow Çigdem Demir Anna M Dempster Rayna Denison Ruth Dineen Lewis Elton Mavis Enti Kate Evans Biljana C Fredriksen Hilda Ho Darryl Hocking Andrea Holland Robert C. Kloosterman Elaine Lally K. W. Lau P. Y. Lee Anne Massey Francesco Morace Y.S. Peligah Giovanni Piazza Natascha Radclyffe-Thomas Anna Reid Karen Richard Olivia Sagan Cheryl Sim Ian Solomonides Vuk Uskoković Anthony Williams Crime and Punishment Piotr Dumala crises Clive Dilnot critic Claudia Sandoval critical Val Diggle Clive Dilnot Marina Vishmidt critical distance Simon Chadwick Joanna Crotch critical listening skills Andrew Dubber critical media practice Daniel Ashton critical pedagogy Adetty Pérez Miles critical reflection Lynette Sheridan Burns critical response Richard Woodfield critical review Simon Chadwick Joanna Crotch critical studies Rachel de Sousa Vianna critical theories Jeremy Spencer critical theory Nick Haeffner Suhail Malik Sunil Manghani Toni Ross Blake Stimson critical thinking Geraldine Biddle-Perry Nancy Lampert Jenny Moon critical views Ana Marta González criticism Andy Hewitt Neil Mulholland Yukihiko Yoshida critique Mary Anne Francis cross-art form Helen Turner cross-border circulation Monika Codourey cross-cultural M. James C. Crabbe Maria Fulkova Makoto Ishikawa Teresa Tipton cross-culturalism Yang Liu crossing values Jean-Paul Fourmentraux cross-media adaptation Julia Round cross-national survey Gunter Kreutz Don Stewart crossovers Brian Chalkley Marcus Verhagen Cubism Kenneth G. Hay cultural memory Barbara Howey culture tourism in rural areas Dietmar Wiegand cultural and creative clusters Caroline Chapain cultural plurality Ajay Kumar culture-led regeneration Roberta Comunian cultural anthropology Martha Blassnigg cultural awareness Suzan Duygu Eristi cultural policy Jo Foord Michael Keane Iryna Kuksa Michele Trimarchi Karen Yair cultural clusters Lisa De Propris cultural politics of resistance Rosie Meade cultural communities Marjorie Cohee Manifold cultural practices Efrat Tseëlon curating Clive Adams Erica E. Ander Roger M. Buergel Brian Chalkley Hendrik Folkerts Mario Gerosa Nick Haeffner Andrew Hunt Georgina Jackson Anne Lanceley Adam Lauder Sarah Lightman Paul O'Neill Lawrence Rinder Marcus Verhagen Mick Wilson cultural economics Chris Hand Michele Trimarchi cultural producer Andrew Gryf Paterson cultural economy Karin Drda-Kühn Dietmar Wiegand cultural exchange programmes Ismail Özgür Soğancı cultural good Veronique Chossat cultural identity Robin M. Chandler cultural industries Amanda M. C Brandellero Shaun Chang Robert C. Kloosterman Marco Pellitteri cultural industry reforms Shaun Chang cultural intermediary Paul Clements cultural studies Christine Geraghty Sunil Manghani Nicky Ryan Jane Tynan cultural tension Karolina Breguła cultural theory Malcolm Miles culture Simon Downs Maria Flôr Dias Marjo van Hoorn Elisa Lessa Laura Malosetti Costa Jim McGuigan Hala F. Nassar Nana Afia Opoku–Asare Nicole Porter Tiina Rautkorpi Hilde Van Gelder culture studies Marius Kwint curator Rebecca Coates curatorial studies Matthew Poole curriculum Themina Kader Angélica Lima Cruz Prabha Sahasrabudhe Pauline Sameshima curriculum aims and intention Silvia Pizzocaro curriculum design Katja Fleischmann curriculum development Toshio Naoe cyber space-time Joseph E. Brenner cyber-archaeology Maurizio Forte Gregorij Kurillo cybernetic observatory Luiz Velho data visualization Nina Czegledy denial of black presence Daniel T. Stein cybernetics Andrew Pickering database aesthetics Bill Seaman de-personalization Gregory P. Garvey cyberspace Peter Anders database cinema Anna Laskari Iro Laskari depression Kate Evans cybrids Peter Anders Czech animation Jiří Barta dada Sheena Calvert Dada Victoria de Rijke dance Johannes Birringer Isabelle Choinière Shu-Ying Liu Rita Marcalo Bill Ribbans Pia Smith Malaika Sarco- Thomas dance and ballet Yukihiko Yoshida dance and technologies Yukihiko Yoshida dance of agency Andrew Pickering dance therapy Nancy Beardall Danish film industry Chris Mathieu dark play Claire Hind David Mazzucchelli Paul Atkinson David Small Øyvind Vågnes daydream Dew Harrison Barbara Rauch death Paul G. Dempster Karen Wilson Baptist decentralization Galina Gornostaeva deception Joanne Finkelstein deconstruction Francis Halsall Jeremy Spencer deep Joseph Nechvatal definition Chris Smith Deleuze/Guattariritual Ruth Jones democracy Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta de-realization Gregory P. Garvey design Nick Barnes Suzanne Barnes Dipti Bhagat Sue Breakell Minacha Camino Veena Chattaraman Teena Clerke Christopher Crouch Hillary Cunliffe-Charlesworth Stephen Farthing Catherine Gombe Gloria Gómez-Diago Cecilia Häggström Jillian Hamilton Richard Hickman Rob Huddleston Yassaman Imani Luke Jaaniste Bob Jerrard Iryna Kuksa Marius Kwint Barbara Lasserre Yorgos Loizos Jonas Major Anne Massey Dr Graham McLaren Hala F. Nassar Darren Newbury Peter O'Neill J. Fiona Peterson Nicole Porter Jan-Henning Raff Adele Reid Rebecca Reubens Felix Robbins Inês Secca Ruivo Chris Rust Toni Ryynänen Chetan S. Sankar Cal Swann Emmanuel Vercruysse Paul Whittaker Martin Woolley Joonsung Yoon Christoph Zellweger design activities Nicolette Lee Gavin Melles Stella Tan design history D. J. Huppatz design activity Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen design intelligence Ingrid Böck design and architecture Barbara de la Harpe Design Jury Helena Webster design and healthcare Chris Rust design knowledge Elson Szeto design articulation Julieanna Preston design cognition Tilmann Lindberg Christoph Meinel Christine Noweski design communication Shaun Murray design discourse Jurgen Faust Elson Szeto design discourses Tilmann Lindberg Christoph Meinel Christine Noweski design education Noam Austerlitz Erik Borg Katja Fleischmann Henna Lahti Barbara Lasserre K. W. Lau P. Y. Lee Kathryn Moore Christine Percy Pamela Schenk Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen Elson Szeto Ming-Ying Yang Manlai You design experiment Kai Hakkarainen Henna Lahti Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen design learning and teaching Philippa Lyon design media Julieanna Preston design methodology Jill Franz design modes Natalie Woolf design pedagogy Erik Bohemia Kerry Harman Liz McDowell design philosophy Stephen Thompson Alison Shreeve design research David Durling Gavin Melles Antti Raike Abhigyan Singh design solutions Cecilia Häggström design students Christina Reading design studio Simon Chadwick Joanna Crotch design thinking Julian Malins design writing Julieanna Preston designers thinking Marlene Ivey Louise Valentine designing design Jurgen Faust designing media Jurgen Faust design practice Dipti Bhagat Mike McAuley Peter O'Neill design process Nicolette Lee Gavin Melles Julieanna Preston Pamela Schenk Stella Tan desire Kate McGowan design project Helena Webster design projects Sue Bailey Linda Drew design-thinking John Wood deterritorialization Monika Codourey development Nana Afia Opoku–Asare development education Catherine Gombe digital culture Andrew Dubber Daniel Rubinstein developmental theory Kazuhiro Ishizaki Wenchun Wang digital design Jamal Al-Qawasmi developmental typeface testing Robert Hillier devising Alexander Kelly dialogical studies East/West Gerald Cipriani dialogue Laura Chessin Gregg Garfin Marlene Ivey Cathy Turner Louise Valentine differentiation Chris Mathieu digital Chris Byrne digital art Naren Barfield Rob Harle Talan Memmott Joseph Nechvatal Alexandra Saemmer digital art installations Gilbertto Prado Clarissa Ribeiro digital arts Johannes Birringer digital craft Katherine Townsend digital creation Serge Bouchardon digital design practice Felix Robbins digital domain Martin Pichlmair digital economies Yasmin Ibrahim digital fiction Zuzana Husárová James Pope digital image Peter Osborne digital imagery Kenneth G. Hay digital imaging Murat Germen Dr. Beth Harland Sherry Mayo digital literature Laura Borràs Castanyer Alexandra Saemmer digital literature and theory Astrid Ensslin digital media Lily Díaz Bex Lewis Talan Memmott Alexandra Saemmer digital painting Margaret Dolinsky digital photography Antonia Bardis Daniel Rubinstein digital studio Buthayna Eilouti digital technologies Katherine Townsend digital technology Pete Worrall digital visual culture Lilly (Li-Fen) Lu digitality Gordon Calleja Christian Schwager dine Robert Hillier directional perception Arnold Cusmariu director Jack Klaff disability Rita Marcalo disaffect Bridget Crone disciplinary status Christine Geraghty discourse Ingrid Böck Angela Devas H. L. Hix Barbara Lasserre Christine Percy Adele Senior discourse analysis Darryl Hocking Julia Round discoveries Christoph Bartneck Matthias Rauterberg discovery Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta discussion Curtis Tappenden disguise Mary Stokrocki displacement Anja Kraus dispositif Guillaume Paris disseminating research Richard Woodfield dissertation Margo Blythman Richard Heatly Joan Mullin Susan Orr Keith Trigwell dissociative-identity disorder Gregory P. Garvey distance learning Laura Borràs Castanyer distractive interventions Sue Hacking diverse learners Terry Finnigan domestic interior Malin Zimm diversity Karolina Breguła domesticity Wood Roberdeau diversity education Anniina Suominen drama Anne Fenech Hilda Ho Hod Orkibi Karen Richard John Somers Roger Wooster DIY culture Otto von Busch DMT Dita Judith Federman DNA Catalina Cepeda doctoral education Darren Newbury Doctoral education Michael Kroelinger doctoral programme planning Michael Kroelinger doctoral programme structure Michael Kroelinger doctoral supervision Linda Drew documentary Murat Germen distributed cognition Jan-Henning Raff documentation Sue Breakell Shezad Dawood Rebecca Fortnum Mary Maclean Rita Marcalo Chris Smith Victoria Worsley disturbance Jane Graves dome David McConville distractor Ellen K. Levy dramatic literature Beverly Redman dramaturge as midwife Fiona Graham dramaturgy Cathy Turner drawing Ricardo Marín Viadel Kathy Ring Michael Schwab Curtis Tappenden Monika Weiss drawing process Solange Coutinho Bernard Darras Eva Miranda drawing research Pamela Schenk dreams Malin Zimm dream-work Jane Graves dress Emil Gaul dwelling Lily Markiewicz Andrea Thoma dyeing processes Nana Afia Opoku–Asare dyes Nana Afia Opoku–Asare dynamic curricula Biljana C Fredriksen dynamic design Buthayna Eilouti dyskinesia Debbie Green Clare Park dyslexia Harriet Edwards Julia Lockheart Christoph Raatz Maziar Raein dyslexic Robert Hillier early childhood Biljana C Fredriksen early childhood education Ruslan Slutsky early cinema Michael Punt Eastern Europe Marian Mazzone Eastern philosophy Semi Ryu eco-art Peder Anker ecological art Emily Brady ecology Peder Anker Kate Davies Cordelia Hanel Malaika Sarco- Thomas economic evolution Lucy Montgomery Jason Potts economic impact Roy Boyne economic policy Christine Ballengee Morris James H. Sanders III economic restructuring Katherine Champion economics Lloyd Chilvers Clive Dilnot Ellen O’Hara economy outcomes Nick Clifton Phil Cooke ecotones Anita Sinner education Joe Adu- Agyem David Bell Mie Buhl Pavel Büchler Catalina Cepeda Kim Charnley Veena Chattaraman Helen J. Chatterjee Danielle Child Lloyd Chilvers Antonia Clews Nina Czegledy Kate Davies Çigdem Demir María Del Río Diéguez Mavis Enti Stephen Farthing Marián López Fernández-Cao Maria Fulkova Ray Gallon Matilde Mollá Giner Fernando Hernandez Mirja Hiltunen Ren-Lai Hwang Iryna Kuksa Samantha Lawrie José María Mesías Lema Bex Lewis Yvonne Lincoln Shu-Ying Liu Yve Lomax Dr Graham McLaren Maria Mendona Javier Abad Molina Tony O'Connor Y.S. Peligah Tiina Rautkorpi Ricardo Reis Miguel Domínguez Rigo Julio Romero Rodríguez Ana Eva Iribas Rudín Prabha Sahasrabudhe Rosaura Navajas Seco Mae Shaw Teresa Tipton Catalina Rigo Vanrell Emmanuel Vercruysse Judit Vidiella Mick Wilson Roger Wooster Tomaz Zupancic educational discourses Erik Bohemia Kerry Harman Liz McDowell educational intervention Magouliotis Apostolos Moraiti Tzeni educational research Ricardo Marín Viadel Edward Casey Judith Tucker efficacy Lynette Sheridan Burns electrochemistry Zachary Jones electro-magnetic art Nina Czegledy electro-magnetism Nina Czegledy electron microscopy Vuk Uskoković electronic learning contracts Marie Jefsioutine electronic literature Serge Bouchardon Talan Memmott Scott Rettberg electronic margin Matteo Ciastellardi Andrea Cruciani Julia Moszkowicz Steve Swindells emergent behavior Clarissa Ribeiro energy Carlos Augusto Moreira da Nóbrega emerging artists Tyler Denmead Ricardo Peach emotion Michael J. Lowis Olivia Sagan engagement Anne Fenech Julia Moszkowicz Anna Reid Ian Solomonides engineering Andrew Pickering e-literature Jerome Fletcher emotions Noam Austerlitz Julia Gaimster Alison James e-literature criticism Janez Strehovec empathy Dita Judith Federman engraving Roberto Bartual embodied cognition Sophia Krzys Acord Fred McVittie Ian Sutherland employability Katja Fleischmann Sophie Harbour Jason Lee enquiry based learning Kirsten Hardie embodied experience Sandra Alexander employment choices Manlai You embodied heteroglossic spaces Kit Grauer Kathryn Ricketts Pauline Sameshima Gu Xiong employment preparation Manlai You embodiment Carlos Castellanos Rea Dennis Paul Duncum Mark Johnson Ruth Jones Ted Krueger Samantha Lawrie Melissa Trimingham embody Peter Stott emergence António Cerveira Pinto Anna Laskari Iro Laskari employment statistics Stuart Cunningham Peter Higgs empowerment Cindy Hasio Mirja Hiltunen enactive interface Luisa Paraguai encaustic Fernando Leal Audirac encounter Steve Dutton Emily Orley English for specific purposes Joan Turner enquiry-based learning Lewis Elton entrepreneurship Anna M Dempster Colette Henry Bastian Lange entropy generation Andreas Schiffler environment Jale Erzen Kathy Miraglia Ricardo Reis Cathy Smilan Matt Smith environmental art Young Imm Kang Song environmental arts Andrew Gryf Paterson environmental control Will Thorne ethical art Jorella Andrews environmental controlcybernetics Stephen A. Gage ethical phenomenology Gerald Cipriani environmental education Young Imm Kang Song ethics Emily Brady Ken Garland Stephen Jones Chris Mathieu Colin Murrell Deneb Kozikoski Valereto environmentalism Peder Anker ethics and bias Natasha Vita-More ephemerality Mary O'Neill ethnic minority enterprise Susan Bagwell epilepsy Rita Marcalo ethnographical inquiry Brent Wilson Erasmus Ismail Özgür Soğancı ethnography Noam Austerlitz Jorge Gumbe environmental design Shaun Murray Eros Giorgio Alberti erotic art Hans Maes eroticism Isabelle Choinière Ian Dawe essayist Lawrence Rinder essence Julia Moszkowicz Estonia Peeter Linnap e-studio Jamal Al-Qawasmi Europe John A. Lent Evaristti Giovanni Aloi everyday aesthetics Wood Roberdeau everyday culture Francesco Morace everyday design Jan-Henning Raff evidence Elaine Lally evidence-based policy Alan Collins evolution Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Bruce Damer Raquel Paricio Garcia Nicholas Tresilian excavation Gillian Robertson excess Joseph Nechvatal exegesis Jillian Hamilton Luke Jaaniste exhibition phenomenology Julia Moszkowicz exhibitions Imogen Racz Toru Yoshikawa expanded body Lucía Ayala expanded cinema David McConville Duncan White expeditionary learning Kathy Miraglia Cathy Smilan experience Lindsay Hughes Luisa Paraguai experience of art Cheung-on Tam experience of time Maarten Vanvolsem experiential Kirsten Hardie experiential knowledge Kristina Niedderer Linden Reilly experiment Michael J. Lowis Curtis Tappenden façade Stephen A. Gage Will Thorne facilitation Teresa A Fisher experimental Jale Erzen Marina Vishmidt failure Emma Cocker experimental poetry Eduardo Kac family Seija Ulkuniemi experimental visualization Brigitta Zics family planning Debao Xiang expertise Michael Jarvis fan art Marjorie Cohee Manifold expressive arts Keren Barzilay-Shechter fandom Rayna Denison Hye-Kyung Lee expressive arts therapies Mitchell Kossak expressivity Nithikul Nimkulrat extended perception Diana Reed Slattery extended science ontology René Stettler exteroception Isabelle Choinière extra-curricular activities Leslie Cunliffe extreme environments Ted Krueger Fab at Home (FaH) Alexander Pasko Turlif Vilbrandt Carl Vilbrandt feedback Stephen Jones feeling at home Lily Markiewicz feelings Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic femininity Laura Hurd Clarke Maarit Mäkelä Mofizur Rhaman feminism Barbara Bickel Sheila de Rosa Belidson Dias Susan Sinkinson Marina Vishmidt feminist art Ruth Pelzer-Montada fashion Zygmunt Bauman Sheila Cliffe Colette Henry Laura Hurd Clarke Simona Segre Reinach Kirsten Scott Mary Stokrocki feminist post-structuralism Jennifer Elsden-Clifton fashion and homosexuality Dirk Gindt feminist theory Julia Jansen fetish object Jen Webb fashion design Katherine Townsend fiction Murat Germen Martha Patricia Niño Mojica Malin Zimm fashion industry Jonathan Gander Alison Rieple field Carlos Augusto Moreira da Nóbrega fashion theory Efrat Tseëlon fear Peeter Linnap field telephones Kieran Lyons figurative realm Adrielle Mitchell film Roy Boyne Pavel Büchler Jane Darke Piotr Dumala Neil Henderson Jason Lee Chris Murray film and cinema studies Martha Blassnigg film and television industry Galina Gornostaeva film and video Bridget Crone film industry Chris Hand Jason Lee film studies Antti Raike finance Marina Vishmidt fine art Minacha Camino Jane Charlton Paul Coldwell Hillary Cunliffe-Charlesworth Mary Anne Francis Sophie Harbour Mel Jordan Judith Mottram Ken Neil flock behaviour Anna Laskari Iro Laskari flow of energy Diane Gromala Jinsil Seo fluxus Marian Mazzone food Ryan Shin Steve Willis Forbes Burnham Paul Buhle forensic psychiatry Hilda Ho Karen Richard forgetting Jane Graves formalist aesthetics Tim Stephens formative assessment feedback Bernadette Blair foundation degree Jane Tynan fine arts curriculum Derek Whitehead four-fold logic John Wood first cell Martin M. Hanczyc Takashi Ikegami fractal art Mehrdad Garousi first–order and third–order design Jurgen Faust flânerie Rodrigo Velasco fragmentation Sally J. Morgan fragmented meanings of design Elson Szeto frame René Berger free writing Kate Evans freedom Zygmunt Bauman Jane Graves freedom and dignity Carl-Peter Buschkühle freelance writer Jack Klaff freeze-frames Sarah Tremlett French corporals Kieran Lyons Fun Home Miriam Brown Spiers Fun Palace Stanley Mathews function representation (FRep) Alexander Pasko Turlif Vilbrandt Carl Vilbrandt functional-emotional Inês Secca Ruivo future Fernando Leal Audirac future of craft Kristina Niedderer future practice Stephen Thompson future studies Natasha Vita-More futurism Roy Boyne gender and higher education Katharine Sarikakis galleries Judith Mottram gender equity María Del Río Diéguez Marián López Fernández-Cao Matilde Mollá Giner Miguel Domínguez Rigo Julio Romero Rodríguez Ana Eva Iribas Rudín Rosaura Navajas Seco Catalina Rigo Vanrell gallery education Maria Fulkova Makoto Ishikawa Teresa Tipton geography Lei-Lei Li Andrea Polli geology David Walker Barker gesture prediction Max B. Kazemzadeh generative Max Moswitzer Ghana Joe Adu- Agyem Mavis Enti Y.S. Peligah generative text Bill Seaman Gilles Deleuze Bridget Crone game physics Andreas Schiffler generator Gonçalo Furtado glass Keith Cummings Riikka Latva-Somppi Dr Graham McLaren gamelan Maria Mendona genetic algorithms Ingrid Böck games Claire Hind genetic information Jane Coad gastronomy Veronique Chossat genetics Catalina Cepeda gaze Kathy Mackey genomics Zachary Jones gender Carolina Marielli Barreto Teena Clerke Rejane Galvão Coutinho Colette Henry Angélica Lima Cruz Maarit Mäkelä Chris Mathieu Nana Afia Opoku–Asare Hod Orkibi Mofizur Rhaman genre analysis Darryl Hocking Joan Turner game culture Margarete Jahrmann game design Martin Pichlmair Andreas Schiffler gender and design Ming-Ying Yang genre theory Darryl Hocking gentrification Katherine Champion geographic and cultural transitions Ruth Beer glass-making Karen Yair global Frans Vogelaar global space Malcolm Miles Global Studio Erik Bohemia Liz McDowell global warming social application Christoph Bartneck Matthias Rauterberg global Xenakis Elizabeth Sikiaridi globalization Sheila Cliffe Sean Cubitt Rosie Meade Martin Mulligan Hala F. Nassar Simona Segre Reinach John Steers Stella Tan glossary Mark Leahy graphic medicine Ian Williams group Dita Judith Federman gnostic Joel Cahen graphic memoir Miriam Brown Spiers Øyvind Vågnes group psychotherapy Keren Barzilay-Shechter Gnostic Francesco Monico Goat Island Robert Wilsmore Gothic Christian W. Schneider governance Bastian Lange Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway governance-specific factors Tommaso Cinti governmentality Amanda Bill governor Stephen A. Gage gradual Nicholas Tresilian grapheme-colour Sandra E. Hoffmann Robbiani graphic components Solange Coutinho Bernard Darras Eva Miranda graphic design Ken Garland Cal Swann graphic design practice Nicolette Lee graphic memoirs Adrielle Mitchell graphic novel Andrés Romero-Jódar graphic novels Paul Atkinson Charlie Blake Cyril Camus Michel De Dobbeleer Jochen Ecke Adrielle Mitchell Chris Murray Ian Williams graphics Simon Downs Mehrdad Garousi Greater Manchester Katherine Champion Greece Magouliotis Apostolos Martha Christopoulou Georgia Kakourou Chroni Vasiliki Labitsi Moraiti Tzeni groundcourse Elif Ayiter group singing Hilary Bungay Stephen Clift groups Angus Phillips Guyana Paul Buhle gynaecology Anne Lanceley Usha Menon H.G. Wells Mike Starr habitus Sophia Krzys Acord Ian Sutherland hallucination Ted Hiebert Diana Reed Slattery handicraft skills Mette Gårdvik green architecture Michael Evan Goodsite Ole John Nielsen haptic Dr. Beth Harland grief Karen Wilson Baptist hard and soft location factors Hélène Martin-Brelot grotesque Ian Dawe HCI Zachary Jones health Erica E. Ander Hilary Bungay Stephen Clift Jane Coad Colin Murrell Linda J. Thomson Mike White Roger Wooster Helen Zigmond health sciences Theodore Stickley hegemony Paul Clements hidden fragments Jane Graves hospital Erica E. Ander higher education Amanda Bill Ann-Mari Edström Bess Frimodig Sophie Harbour Sherry Mayo Christina Reading Simon Roodhouse Brynjulf Tellefsen Tim Vorley Nick Wilson Manlai You housing oneself Lily Markiewicz Heidegger Andrea Thoma Shilpa Venkatachalam 'higher' order Peter Stott Helen Chadwick Victoria Worsley helmsman Stephen A. Gage heritage Erica E. Ander Christine Ballengee Morris James H. Sanders III heritage education Alfredo Palacios Garrido heritage marketing David Leaver HermAfrEros Giorgio Alberti hermeneutic method Jhong Sook Oh hermeneutics Nicholas Davey heterogeneity Guillaume Paris human histories David Walker Barker human perception Brigitta Zics human realnessaction Kjell Yngve Petersen Hirst Giovanni Aloi human rights Rosemary Burnett Raja Shehadeh historiography D. J. Huppatz human-computer interaction Brigitta Zics history Carolina Marielli Barreto Roger M. Buergel Rejane Galvão Coutinho Riikka Latva-Somppi Bex Lewis Maarit Mäkelä Laura Malosetti Costa Dr Graham McLaren Martin Patrick humanitarian Colin Murrell history of science Lucía Ayala historygraphic design Samantha Lawrie HIV/AIDS Katharine Low humanities Sophia Krzys Acord Charlie Blake humanity H. L. Hix hybrid identity Rayna Denison hybrid invention Bill Seaman hybrid spaces Adriana de Souza e Silva holism Colin Murrell Stephen Thompson hybrid terrain Stephen A. Gage hope Helen Zigmond HyperFun Alexander Pasko Turlif Vilbrandt Carl Vilbrandt hypermedia Cláudia Martin Nascimento hypermorphism Paul Woodrow hypertext Chris Byrne Gordon Calleja Cláudia Martin Nascimento Christian Schwager Robert W. Sweeny iconic solidarity Adrielle Mitchell iconoclasm Simon Morley iconography Francis Halsall ICRL Zachary Jones ICT Abhigyan Singh identity Joanne Finkelstein Kit Grauer Kathryn Grushka Rita L. Irwin Joachim Kettel Christine Ballengee Morris Anna Reid Kathryn Ricketts Olivia Sagan Pauline Sameshima James H. Sanders III Linda Sandino Ian Solomonides Mary Stokrocki Anniina Suominen Nathan Wiseman-Trowse Gu Xiong ideologem James Reynolds illustration Suzanne Barnes Simon Downs Vasiliki Labitsi Virginia Lowe Mike McAuley Kathryn Ricketts Pauline Sameshima Gu Xiong implicit Michael Jarvis image Amos Bianchi Bridget Crone Joanne Finkelstein Jane Graves implicit assumptions René Stettler image and text Adrielle Mitchell image media neutral Sunil Manghani image theory Peeter Linnap images Zhifan Hu images and identity Carl-Peter Buschkühle imagination Margaret Dolinsky Mark Johnson Malin Zimm immanence Guillaume Paris immateriality Martha Patricia Niño Mojica immersion David McConville Joseph Nechvatal Diana Reed Slattery Malin Zimm immersive Joseph Nechvatal immigration Kit Grauer Laura Hurd Clarke impossibility Ted Hiebert impression management Michael R. Solomon improvisation Rea Dennis Malaika Sarco- Thomas improvisation cybernetics Stanley Mathews inattention blindness Ellen K. Levy inclusion Antti Raike inclusive pedagogic practices Terry Finnigan independant researcher Andrew Gryf Paterson independent artist Jennifer Kanary Nikolov(a) indigenous modernity Ian Henderson individualization Ana Marta González industrial design Karen Bull Jane Osmond Mike Tovey Ming-Ying Yang Manlai You industrial heritage Chen Xu Liu Yan industrial innovation Jean-Paul Fourmentraux industrial location Katherine Champion industrialization Rebecca Reubens industry Trish Woods infinite regression Robert Pepperell informal curriculum Brent Wilson informatics Lily Díaz information Ray Gallon information and communication Pete Worrall information processing Soichiro Tsuda informed consent Teresa A Fisher inhabitants Mike Phillips injuries Bill Ribbans innovation Amanda M. C Brandellero Caroline Chapain Anna M Dempster Andrea Holland Rob Huddleston Robert C. Kloosterman Jessica Turrell Paul Whittaker innovation management Paul Trott innovation projects Willy Oud innovator companies Tim Vorley inquiry oriented learning Kyong-Mi Paek inscription Charlie Blake inspiration Christina Reading installation Rose Bond Mark Leckey installation art Graham Coulter-Smith Adam Kossoff Ruth Pelzer-Montada Michael Schwab Keith Trigwell institutional thickness Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway institutions Silke Dettmers instrumentalism Paul Clements intangible value Michele Trimarchi integrated curricula ShiPu Wang integration Chris Mathieu Kathy Miraglia Cathy Smilan intellectual history Malcolm Quinn intellectual property Lucy Montgomery Jason Potts intelligence Kathryn Moore intelligent Mike Phillips installation design Kjell Yngve Petersen intelligent architecture Gonçalo Furtado installation/performance Steve Dutton intent Max B. Kazemzadeh institute Steve Swindells intentionalism Hans Maes Institute for the Advancement of University Learning at the University of Oxford interaction Stephen Jones Giovanni Piazza Victor I. Ukaegbu interactions Julia Gaimster interactive art Graham Coulter-Smith Carlos Augusto Moreira da Nóbrega Brigitta Zics interactive art education Suzan Duygu Eristi interactive arts Tania Fraga interactive environment Malin Zimm interactive fiction James Pope interactive immersive environment Jinsil Seo interactive installation Gilbertto Prado intercultural dialogue Pete Worrall intergenerational difference Mary Stokrocki intercultural learning Ryan Shin Steve Willis interior architecture Cordelia Hanel interculturalism Tomaz Zupancic interdisciplinarity Sophia Krzys Acord Jacqueline Chanda M. James C. Crabbe Jean-Paul Fourmentraux Ajay Kumar Yang Liu Andrew Pickering interdisciplinary Geraldine Biddle-Perry Laura Chessin Maria Flôr Dias Gregg Garfin Fernando Hernandez Elisa Lessa Judit Vidiella interdisciplinary approaches Kyong-Mi Paek interdisciplinary art Ruth Beer interactive media Chris Rust Semi Ryu interdisciplinary learning Christine Woywod interactivity Serge Bouchardon Lily Díaz Norbert Herber Ajay Kumar Yorgos Loizos interconnectivity Isabelle Choinière intercultural communication Yasmin Ibrahim Natascha Radclyffe-Thomas interdisciplinary research Santiago Navarro interdisciplinary work Leslie Cunliffe interface Laura Beloff Gonçalo Furtado interface research Bill Seaman interior design Jill Franz Cordelia Hanel D. J. Huppatz intermedia Marian Mazzone internally persuasive writing Erik Borg international comparative mapping Stuart Cunningham Peter Higgs International Creative Industries Alliance Beijing (ICIA) Shaun Chang international law Raja Shehadeh international students Harriet Edwards Julia Lockheart Angus Phillips Christoph Raatz Maziar Raein Silvia Sovic Internet Sheila Cliffe Andrew Dubber Internet of things Margarete Jahrmann inter-organizational relations Tommaso Cinti Interplay A.B.D Nadja Masura interpretation Hans Maes intertextuality Martina Paatela-Nieminen intuition David Gall Michael Jarvis Deborah Robinson Natalie Woolf Hideshi Uda Japanese art Daisuke Okeda journals Themina Kader Japanese art history Kazuji Mogi Miho Shimohara Juárez murders Adetty Pérez Miles Japanese collection Jungwon Lee inventions Christoph Bartneck Matthias Rauterberg Jeff Koons Clovis Blackwell Irish social movements Rosie Meade Irma Stern Griselda Pollock irony Clovis Blackwell Islam Hala F. Nassar isonomy Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta Israel Georgia Kakourou Chroni Israeli – Palestinian youth Keren Barzilay-Shechter J. Espen Aarseth A. David Lewis Janet Rosenberg Jagan Paul Buhle Japan David Bell Aki Koike Toshio Naoe journalism Lynette Sheridan Burns Jeremijenko Matthew Fuller jewellery Jo Pond Heidi Yeo Christoph Zellweger jewellery industry Lisa De Propris Jewish identity Tahneer Oksman Joan Littlewood Stanley Mathews John and Julia Frazer Gonçalo Furtado John Dewey Derek Whitehead jokes Hans Maes journal Christine Hardy journaling Val Diggle Judaism Robert A. Erlewine Jura-Paris road Kieran Lyons Kabbalah Mel Alexenberg Kafka Adrian Page Kant Andy Hamilton Ken Friedman Marian Mazzone key skills Alison James kimono Sheila Cliffe kindergarten Shu-Ying Liu kinesthetic ability Dita Judith Federman kinetoscope Malin Zimm knowing Kristina Niedderer Linden Reilly knowledge Amanda Beech Carl-Peter Buschkühle labour Danielle Child Marina Vishmidt leadership Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway Brynjulf Tellefsen knowledge and understanding Linden Reilly Laibe Imogen Racz leading scholars Joanna Rees knowledge communication Kristina Niedderer Linden Reilly landscape Iain Biggs Nicole Porter Judith Tucker David Walker Barker learner Ruth Dineen knowledge creation Yassaman Imani knowledge economy Nick Clifton Phil Cooke knowledge industries Bastian Lange knowledge management Yassaman Imani knowledge production Sophia Krzys Acord knowledge transfer Tim Vorley knowledge-in-action Kerrie Corcoran Cheryl Sim knowledges Jane Graves Korean Ancestor Worship service Ryan Shin Steve Willis Kristeva Sheila de Rosa Kyoto School Gerald Cipriani landscape architecture Hala F. Nassar Karen Wilson Baptist landscapes Richard Forster language Sheena Calvert Nicholas Davey Andrea Holland Samantha Lawrie Cal Swann language development Ruslan Slutsky Lascaux D. J. Huppatz lasers Rob Huddleston Paul Whittaker Latin American art Laura Malosetti Costa learning Brian Chalkley Jacqueline Chanda Julia Gaimster Richard Heatly Jenny Moon Anna Reid Ian Solomonides Keith Trigwell Marcus Verhagen Hannele Weir learning and teaching Christina Reading learning and teaching pool Katja Fleischmann learning contracts Marie Jefsioutine Bob Jerrard learning culture Natascha Radclyffe-Thomas learning environments Anja Kraus law Amanda Beech learning styles Harriet Edwards Julia Lockheart Christoph Raatz Maziar Raein layered identity Peter Hatton lecturer Rebecca Coates Le Corbusier Ingrid Böck Lee Smith Daniel T. Stein legibility Robert Hillier legitimacy Paul Clements leisure Anne Fenech Leningrad James Elkins María Mencía Adrian Page Deneb Kozikoski Valereto living architecture Michael Evan Goodsite Zachary Jones Ole John Nielsen living technologies Sylvia Nagl Lev Vygotsky Derek Whitehead living technology Martin M. Hanczyc Takashi Ikegami liberal arts James Edward Clayson Livingston Hans Maes life stories Linda Sandino local and regional development Caroline Chapain Lisa De Propris life story Angélica Lima Cruz light Margaret Dolinsky Zachary Jones Jinsil Seo liminal state Dew Harrison Barbara Rauch literary hypermedia Talan Memmott literary science Zuzana Husárová literary studies Scott Rettberg literary theory Laura Borràs Castanyer literature Cyril Camus Jochen Ecke local art Folkert Haanstra local communities Martin Mulligan local economic development Roberta Comunian local system governance Tommaso Cinti location Nick Clifton Phil Cooke location-aware technologies Adriana de Souza e Silva locative media Andrea Polli logic Sheena Calvert Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta logo James Edward Clayson London Galina Gornostaeva Louise Bourgeois Sheila de Rosa Lourdes Portillo Adetty Pérez Miles Luce Irigaray Ruth Jones Lucy Gunning Ruth Jones ludic interfaces Margarete Jahrmann machine learning Max B. Kazemzadeh machinic genetics Bill Seaman made in Italy Simona Segre Reinach Maffesoli Riikka Haapalainen making Ian Heywood managed learning environment Julian Malins Chris McKillop management Anne Massey Nick Wilson managers Hélène Martin-Brelot Marxist theories Jeremy Spencer materials and processes Ian Heywood mangle Andrew Pickering mash-up Robert W. Sweeny mathematics Zachary Jones mapping Donna J. Cox Stuart Cunningham Val Diggle Peter Higgs Jung A. Huh Mogens Jacobsen Morten Søndergaard mass communication Katharine Sarikakis Matrix Francesco Monico mass media Marco Pellitteri matternal narrative Sarah Tremlett Massively Multiplayer Online Games Gordon Calleja mature students Harriet Edwards Julia Lockheart Christoph Raatz Maziar Raein Marcel Duchamp Lin Holdridge Katy Macleod Marcel Proust Nicholas Theisen Marianne Hirsch Judith Tucker marine James Elkins Mark Walport Richard Woodfield marked typography Pascal Lefevre market forces Clive Dilnot marketing Veena Chattaraman Lloyd Chilvers markets Amanda M. C Brandellero Robert C. Kloosterman Marx Marina Vishmidt materia poetica Milan Jaros material artefacts Efrat Tseëlon material computing Rachel Armstrong material culture Clayton Funk Deborah L Smith-Shank material-based art Maarit Mäkelä materialism Jeremy Spencer Marina Vishmidt materiality Laura Beloff Alice Fox Phil Legard Nigel Morgan Nithikul Nimkulrat Matthew Robinson materiality of art Ruth Pelzer-Montada meander art Yang Liu meaning Samantha Lawrie Tiina Rautkorpi meaning making Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Biljana C Fredriksen Jhong Sook Oh meaning-making Paul Martin Kathy Ring media Amos Bianchi M. James C. Crabbe Hillary Cunliffe-Charlesworth Ray Gallon Janey Gordon Jillian Hamilton Luke Jaaniste Marius Kwint Kazuji Mogi Angus Phillips Nicole Porter Toni Ryynänen Miho Shimohara Kaye Shumack media art Sophie Jung Andrew Gryf Paterson Greg Shapley Elizabeth Sikiaridi media culture Marjorie Cohee Manifold media designer Jurgen Faust media industries Daniel Ashton media literacy Martin Barker Ernest Mathijs media philosophy Martha Blassnigg media studies Ben Calvert Bernadette Casey Bex Lewis media violence Sheng Kuan Chung mediated ritual Luisa Paraguai mediation Sara Malou Strandvad medicine Theodore Stickley Ian Williams medicine sales Victor I. Ukaegbu memorials Paul Gough Merleau-Ponty Clive Cazeaux memory Iain Biggs Sue Breakell Rea Dennis Elisabeth El Refaie Laura Malosetti Costa Rita Marcalo Nicole McDaniel Linda J. Thomson Victoria Worsley metadesign Hannah Jones memory prosthetic Alexander Sekatskiy memory-mapping Griselda Pollock mental health Sue Hacking Hilda Ho Mitchell Kossak Jo Pond Karen Richard Nick Rowe Helen Turner mental illness Peter Amsel mental image Alexander Sekatskiy mental imagery Bjarne Sode Funch William P. Seeley mental well-being Kate Evans meta-discipline Tilmann Lindberg Christoph Meinel Christine Noweski metafiction Paul Atkinson metalwork Christoph Zellweger metaphor Donna J. Cox Elisabeth El Refaie Mark Johnson Fred McVittie Gillian Robertson metaphor and empowerment Fiona Graham metaphysics Joel Cahen meta-space and sciences of complexity Gonçalo Furtado metaverse Maurizio Forte Murat Germen Gregorij Kurillo Max Moswitzer Selavy Oh medium Mick Finch mentally disordered offenders Hilda Ho Karen Richard medium specificty Mick Finch mentoring Tiina Rautkorpi memoir Nicole McDaniel mereotopology Arnold Cusmariu Methodism Albert Jewell meteorology Andrea Polli method Daniela Büchler methodology Keren Barzilay-Shechter methods for supporting learning Jenny Moon mitogenetic radiation Carlos Augusto Moreira da Nóbrega mixed media Jiří Barta Barbara Howey modern languages Dunja Dogo modern painting James Elkins mixed reality Peter Anders modernism Paul Duncum James Elkins Patricia Macdonald mixed-methodology Darryl Hocking modernity John Elsom MMORPG simulation Robert W. Sweeny modes of address Dr. Beth Harland mobile art Laura Beloff moistmedia Roy Ascott mobile devices Luisa Paraguai montage Guillaume Paris mindfulness Marlene Ivey Louise Valentine mobile interfaces Adriana de Souza e Silva moral argumentation Chris Mathieu mobile media Norbert Herber moral controversies Martin Barker Ernest Mathijs Michael Foucault Helena Webster Michael Winterbottom Nick Haeffner Middle East Raja Shehadeh milieu- and scene research Bastian Lange military failure Kieran Lyons mindset Barbara Rauch mineralization David Walker Barker ministry Michael I. Jackson mirror David Wood mirror neuron Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta mise-en-scène Neil Mulholland mistakes/failure Alissa Clarke mobile phones Adriana de Souza e Silva mobile technology Rita Marcalo model Mike Phillips modelling Zachary Jones modern art Susan Best Sue Breakell Joachim Kettel George Kyeyune Adam Lauder morality Suhail Malik motherhood Sheila de Rosa motion graphics Michael Betancourt motivation Robyn Gibson movement Clare Park movement therapist Nancy Beardall moving image Bridget Crone Adam Kossoff moving image technology Malin Zimm moving-image Marina Vishmidt Musango George Kyeyune music destination marketing David Leaver museum Hannele Weir music industry Andrew Dubber Jonathan Gander museum collection Makoto Ishikawa myth Cyril Camus multicultural Themina Kader museum education Stephanie Shestakow Rachel de Sousa Vianna mythological synesthesia Zachary Jones multiculturalism Rachel Mason museum environment Jungwon Lee multidisciplinary collaboration Katja Fleischmann museum experience Jungwon Lee multi-disciplinary healthcare Bill Ribbans museum learning Jungwon Lee multimedia Johannes Birringer Kenneth G. Hay museum pedagogy Martina Paatela-Nieminen multimodal semiosis Janne Morton multimodal texts Mara Martnez Lirola multi-perspectives Darryl Hocking multisensory interfaces Luisa Paraguai multi-sensory perception medium Francis Halsall multi-site performance A.B.D Nadja Masura mural painting Katerina Karoussos museum studies Rebecca Reynolds museum websites Alison Hsiang-Yi Liu museums Robin M. Chandler Tommaso Cinti Katherina Danko-McGhee Riikka Haapalainen mythology Christian Kerrigan Cláudia Martin Nascimento myths Yang Liu myths and mythology Giorgio Alberti nanobots James K. Gimzewski Victoria Vesna nanometre James K. Gimzewski Victoria Vesna nanotechnology James K. Gimzewski Christian Kerrigan Neil Spiller Paul Thomas Victoria Vesna music Sophia Krzys Acord Iain Biggs Johannes Birringer Michael J. Lowis Mike McAuley Maria Mendona Stuart Munro Colin Murrell Elizabeth Sikiaridi Pia Smith Ian Sutherland narratability Milan Jaros narrative D. J. Huppatz Alison James Mary O'Neill Jo Pond narrative erotics Øyvind Vågnes narrative polyphony A. David Lewis negotiation Marie Jefsioutine new consciousness Diane Gromala narrative research Linda Sandino neo- or post-colonialism Sharon Irish new humanism movement Raquel Paricio Garcia narratives Cláudia Martin Nascimento neo-pragmatism Matthew Poole narrativity Malin Zimm Neosentience Bill Seaman narratology A. David Lewis net politics Otto von Busch natal memory Griselda Pollock net.art María Mencía new media Ruth Beer Kenneth G. Hay Nick Haeffner Rob Harle Yasmin Ibrahim Katerina Karoussos Iryna Kuksa Adam Lauder Anne Lord Sunil Manghani María Mencía Stuart Munro Daniel Rubinstein Michaela Vamos Pete Worrall national identity Simona Segre Reinach Netherlands Peter Bosma National Student Survey Mantz Yorke network arts Andrew Gryf Paterson nationalism Graeme Harper network development Karin Drda-Kühn Dietmar Wiegand new media content as a ride Janez Strehovec Native American Sweat Lodge Ryan Shin Steve Willis networked identity Robert W. Sweeny new media design Abhigyan Singh networks Seth Bullock Chris Byrne Rachel C. Granger Christine Hamilton new product development Nick Barnes Adele Reid natural architectures Seth Bullock natural dyes Catherine Gombe naturalized epistemology Chris Smith nature Clive Adams Nicole Porter NBIC technologies Natasha Vita-More neural networks Max B. Kazemzadeh neuroaesthetics William P. Seeley neuroscience Anne Fenech new media art Michael Betancourt new media art theory Janez Strehovec new world border Martha Patricia Niño Mojica New Zealand Andrew Dubber Jill Smith new-media design tools James Pope nexus principle Mike McAuley Nicolescu Joseph E. Brenner novelist Lawrence Rinder nineteenth-century media culture Malin Zimm novelty books Pascal Lefevre Nobel Prize in Physics Christoph Bartneck Matthias Rauterberg noise Joseph Nechvatal nomadic space Andrea Thoma non-idealist materialism Matthew Poole non-linear narrative Anna Laskari Iro Laskari non-linear reading Adrielle Mitchell non-linearity Gordon Calleja Christian Schwager non-representational theory Tim Stephens non-sites Francis Halsall non-traditional Sarah Tremlett non-traditional students Jane Tynan non-verbal communication Margo Blythman Joan Mullin Susan Orr nursery Victoria de Rijke nursing Anne Lanceley object Gillian Robertson Melissa Trimingham object handling Helen J. Chatterjee object relations Jen Webb observation Curtis Tappenden obsolescence Claudia Sandoval online web-based tools Julian Malins Chris McKillop ontology Graeme Harper onto-poetics Milan Jaros open source software Alice Fox Phil Legard Nigel Morgan Matthew Robinson open/closed consciousness Nicholas Tresilian operating system Mike Phillips oppression Sharon Irish oral assessment Heather Symonds occupation Nick Wilson oral history Geraldine Biddle-Perry Linda Sandino ocean Richard Forster organic framework Natalie Woolf oil painting Eliza Pitri organic interface Jinsil Seo older people Hilary Bungay Stephen Clift organisms Oron Catts online community Alison Hsiang-Yi Liu online learning Christine Percy organizational studies Beatriz Acevedo orientalism Sheila Cliffe origin Fernando Leal Audirac parody Nicholas Theisen peak experiences Michael J. Lowis origins of life Bruce Damer participants A.B.D Nadja Masura pedagogic research Karen Bull Jane Osmond Mike Tovey ornament Ruth Pelzer-Montada participation Bridget Crone Matt Smith Mike White orthopaedics Bill Ribbans outdoor performance Rita Marcalo outreach Bess Frimodig outsider research Philippa Lyon participatory Curtis Tappenden participatory environment Anna Laskari Iro Laskari participatory research Nick Barnes Adele Reid painting Joana Duarte Bernardes Stephen Farthing Mick Finch Kenneth G. Hay Mehrdad Garousi Jeffrey B. Grubbs Dr. Beth Harland Ricardo Marín Viadel Judith Mottram Ken Neil Anne Robinson Michael Schwab Judith Tucker pataphysics Neil Spiller pata-physics Milan Jaros patination Trish Woods pedagogical reasoning Kerrie Corcoran Cheryl Sim pedagogy Naren Barfield Robin M. Chandler Maria Fulkova Nick Haeffner Paul Hamilton Anne Lord Claire MacDonald Colin Murrell James Pope Nick Rowe Teresa Tipton peer review David Durling Peoples Progressive Party (PPP) Paul Buhle Paul Cézanne Sandra Alexander perception Bernadette Blair Isabelle Choinière Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta Jale Erzen Murat Germen Harry Jamieson Zachary Jones Ted Krueger Paul Martin Sandra E. Hoffmann Robbiani Alexander Sekatskiy Rachel de Sousa Vianna Helen Zigmond Paul Karasik Paul Atkinson perceptual constancy Stuart Medley parallaxic remix Paul Woodrow peace Georgia Kakourou Chroni perceptual intrigue Howard Riley panels Neil Cohn panoramic image Luiz Velho paradigm shift Arnold Cusmariu Patricia Macdonald Sally J. Morgan pattern Jung A. Huh Ruth Pelzer-Montada Paul Auster Paul Atkinson perceptual shift Margaret Dolinsky performer training Alissa Clarke Colin Murrell Wood Roberdeau performance Sean Aita Johannes Birringer Emma Cocker Bridget Crone Rea Dennis Graeme Harper Ted Hiebert Claire Hind Mark Leahy Claire MacDonald Andrew Pickering Brian Reffin Smith Adele Senior Malaika Sarco- Thomas Cathy Turner Victor I. Ukaegbu Monika Weiss Duncan White Robert Wilsmore performing arts Mark Evans phenomenology and design Tiiu Poldma Mary Stewart performance and cognition Valerie Ann Bugmann Téllez performance ritual Barbara Bickel performance studies Beverly Redman performative Steve Dutton Steve Swindells Jen Webb performative art Mirja Hiltunen performative objects Kristina Niedderer performativity Isabelle Choinière Sara Malou Strandvad performer knowledge Kjell Yngve Petersen perseverance Juan Carlos Pacheco Contreras phenomenology of media Janez Strehovec personal and professional development Noam Austerlitz phenomenology. nudity Rita Marcalo personal development Jess Moriarty Phillip Zarrilli Alissa Clarke personal development planning (PDP) Julian Malins philosophical analysis Arnold Cusmariu personal knowledge Estelle Barrett person-environment interaction Jill Franz perspective Paul Thomas Ph.D. Lin Holdridge Katy Macleod Ph.D. programme Silvia Pizzocaro phenomenography Ann-Mari Edström Richard Heatly Christina Reading Nicky Ryan Keith Trigwell phenomenology Sandra Alexander Carlos Castellanos Clive Cazeaux Matthew Fuller Diane Gromala Julia Jansen philosophy Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Sheena Calvert David Campany Johanna Drucker Robert A. Erlewine Nigel Green Rob Harle Julia Jansen Patrick Maynard Tony O'Connor Janez Strehovec Hilde Van Gelder philosophy and critical theory Matthew Poole philosophy of aesthetics Toni Ross philosophy of culture Gerald Cipriani philosophy of mind Brigitta Zics photographic form Peter Osborne photography Åsa Andersson Jorella Andrews Peter Burleigh Pavel Büchler Sheena Calvert David Campany Jane Coad Johanna Drucker Mehrdad Garousi Murat Germen Debbie Green Nigel Green John Harvey Neil Henderson Sophie Jung Cath Keay José María Mesías Lema Peeter Linnap Yorgos Loizos Patricia Macdonald Kathy Mackey Mary Maclean Ricardo Marín Viadel Patrick Maynard Darren Newbury Peter Osborne Clare Park Julia Peck Ruth Pelzer-Montada Olivier Richon Joaquín Roldán Ramírez Michael Schwab Kaye Shumack Shepherd Steiner Blake Stimson Andrea Thoma Myrto Tsilimpounidi Seija Ulkuniemi Hilde Van Gelder Maarten Vanvolsem Rodrigo Velasco ShiPu Wang Joonsung Yoon photography restrictions Daniel Palmer Jessica Whyte photography theory Tim Stephens photomedia Greg Shapley photorealism Ken Neil physical environment Peter Hatton physical interaction Jinsil Seo playwriting Cathy Turner physics of thought Jennifer Kanary Nikolov(a) plotless Malin Zimm picture books Pascal Lefevre Virginia Lowe poet John Fox Lawrence Rinder Pierre Bonnard Lin Holdridge Katy Macleod poetic singularity Ian Heywood pioneers John A. Lent Pistoletto Riikka Haapalainen place Emily Orley plaited mats Catherine Gombe plaited palm fibre Kirsten Scott play Victoria de Rijke play orbit Michael Punt poetics Rose Bond Giovanni Piazza poetry Victoria de Rijke Claire MacDonald María Mencía Polaroid Neil Henderson policies Hélène Martin-Brelot policy David Harte Pauline White political communication Yasmin Ibrahim player consciousness Margarete Jahrmann political economy of art and design Malcolm Quinn playful activity Hideshi Uda political history Michel De Dobbeleer playfulness Martin Pichlmair political metaphor Jiří Barta playwright David Greig Lawrence Rinder political theory Suhail Malik politics Yasmin Ibrahim Mel Jordan Jim McGuigan Malcolm Miles Marina Vishmidt politics song Iain Biggs polysensing Bill Seaman postcolonialism Linda Ashton post-critical Paul Duncum post-digital age realms of learning creativity Mel Alexenberg postdigital analogue Michael Punt pop culture Marius Kwint Mark Leckey post-digitalization Peter Osborne popular culture Paul Duncum Andy Hewitt Marc Singer Nathan Wiseman-Trowse popular fiction Cyril Camus popular music Nathan Wiseman-Trowse portfolio Doug Boughton Portuguese patrimony Maria Flôr Dias Elisa Lessa post-autonomy Mary Anne Francis post-Christianity Robert A. Erlewine post-colonial Donna J. Cox postcolonial encounters Adetty Pérez Miles posters Debao Xiang Postgraduate Diploma courses Brian Chalkley Marcus Verhagen postgraduate students Katharine Sarikakis posthumanism Gordon Calleja Andrew Pickering Christian Schwager post-mechanical age Milan Jaros postmedium Francis Halsall postmemory Judith Tucker postmodern art Shelby Moser postmodernism Linda Ashton Ted Hiebert David Leaver Sally J. Morgan Wood Roberdeau Andrés Romero-Jódar Tomaz Zupancic post-phenomenology Tim Stephens post-secular Mike King post-sixties and contemporary art Toni Ross post-structuralist philosophy Mike Starr pouring Deborah Robinson poverty Kim Berman power Angela Devas Debbie Green Clare Park Helena Webster Helen Zigmond practice Estelle Barrett Ben Calvert Bernadette Casey Kim Charnley Teena Clerke Mick Finch Rebecca Fortnum Janey Gordon Jane Graves Richard Heatly Ross W. Prior Jan-Henning Raff Chris Smith Keith Trigwell Hannele Weir Mike White practice and theory Minacha Camino practice-as-research Peter Dallow practice-based Daniela Büchler presence interactive art Diane Gromala practice-based research Margo Blythman Paul Coldwell Kit Grauer Iryna Kuksa Anne Lord Joan Mullin Susan Orr Kathryn Ricketts Anne Robinson Pauline Sameshima Gu Xiong pre-service teachers Anita Ng Heung Sang practice-led Daniela Büchler practice-led research Susan Carden Jillian Hamilton Luke Jaaniste Nithikul Nimkulrat Linden Reilly practitioner enquiry Christopher Klopper pragmatism Mark Johnson John Roberts Prague Marian Mazzone praxis Val Diggle preschool and primary education Vasiliki Labitsi primary Martha Christopoulou primary teacher training Joaquín Roldán Ramírez primordial digital soup Bruce Damer print culture Pascal Lefevre printed textile Katherine Townsend printmaker John Fox printmaking Catherine Gombe Jeffrey B. Grubbs Paul Hamilton Ruth Pelzer-Montada Michael Schwab prison Maria Mendona problem-based Kirsten Hardie problems Debao Xiang preschool children Magouliotis Apostolos Moraiti Tzeni procedure Michael Jarvis presence Bridget Crone process Michael Betancourt Michael Jarvis Claire MacDonald Mary Maclean Giovanni Piazza processes Clive Dilnot product design Heidi Yeo product development Paul Trott product semantics Martin Woolley Martin Woolley production Mie Buhl Greg Shapley Duncan White production manager Jason Lee production of culture Sara Malou Strandvad professional communication Darryl Hocking professional development Shu-Ying Liu Jenny Moon professional education Lynette Sheridan Burns professional identity Hod Orkibi professional training Carolina Marielli Barreto Rejane Galvão Coutinho progress Zygmunt Bauman progress files Alison James project management Colin Murrell projection Margaret Dolinsky propaganda Roy Boyne propoganda Dunja Dogo Bex Lewis proprioception Kieran Lyons prosthetics Ted Krueger protocell Mark A. Bedau protocells Christian Kerrigan proto-cinematic Malin Zimm psychedelics Diana Reed Slattery psychic John Harvey psychic photography Ted Hiebert psychoanalysis Malcolm Quinn psychodrama Keren Barzilay-Shechter psychodrama and dramatherapy Hod Orkibi psychogeography Norbert Herber psychological Gunter Kreutz Don Stewart psychological profiling Anne Massey psychophysical Alissa Clarke public art Alan Dunn Alfredo Palacios Garrido Young Imm Kang Song Javier Abad Molina Denitsa Petrova Ricardo Reis Helen Turner public choice Alan Collins public policies Caroline Chapain public sculpture Roy Boyne public space Rita L. Irwin public spaces Alan Dunn public sphere Paul Clements Sean Cubitt public support Roberta Comunian publication Teena Clerke publishing Colette Henry Angus Phillips Puerto Rico Sharon Irish punctuated Nicholas Tresilian pupils Michaela Vamos puppet Melissa Trimingham puppet animation Jiří Barta puppetry Matt Smith Puritanism Iain Biggs purposeless collaboration Lewis Elton QAA benchmarks Janey Gordon qualia Raquel Paricio Garcia qualifications Simon Roodhouse qualitative assessments Chris Mathieu qualitative research Minacha Camino Brent Wilson qualitative research methods Tiiu Poldma Mary Stewart qualitative variation Sue Bailey Linda Drew Alison Shreeve quality assurance Rob Cowdroy Anthony Williams quality culturecomplexity theory Lewis Elton quality of life Pauline White queer cinema Ricardo Peach queer relations/relationships Miriam Brown Spiers queer theory Belidson Dias Susan Sinkinson questions Linden Reilly race awareness Robin M. Chandler radio teaching Andrew Dubber RAE Euan McArthur Raindance Chris Speed random number generation Andreas Schiffler random order Peter Stott reflection and creation Carl-Peter Buschkühle rational H. L. Hix reflection and learning Christine Hardy reading Mark Leahy Adrian Page reflection and practice Ian Heywood real time René Berger realism Antonia Bardis Nick Haeffner Stuart Medley Marina Vishmidt reality Diana Reed Slattery reception Duncan White recipient design Mary O'Neill recognition Amanda Beech recombinant music Bill Seaman recombinant poetics Bill Seaman re-enactment Shezad Dawood reflection Noam Austerlitz Bernadette Blair Angela Devas Julian Malins Chris McKillop Jenny Moon David Richmond Jules Dorey Richmond reflective learning Helena Webster reflective practice Linda Ashton Minacha Camino Harriet Edwards Mark Evans Christine Hardy Julia Lockheart Nithikul Nimkulrat Christoph Raatz Maziar Raein Cheung-on Tam reflexivity Christopher Crouch David Richmond Jules Dorey Richmond regeneration Susan Bagwell Jo Foord Reggio Emilia Giovanni Piazza regional development Karin Drda-Kühn Dietmar Wiegand Regional Studies Association Nick Clifton rehabilitation Maria Mendona rehabilitation support Matthew Bushell rehearsal Emma Cocker repetition Ruth Pelzer-Montada research grid Yukihiko Yoshida reification Peter Stott reporting and proposing Denitsa Petrova research in education Analice Pillar relational (nature of design) John Wood representation Bridget Crone Murat Germen Paul Gough Christine Ballengee Morris Mofizur Rhaman John Roberts James H. Sanders III research into practice Rebecca Fortnum Ruth Pelzer-Montada relational aesthetics evolution Graham Coulter-Smith relational development Nancy Beardall relational mapping Rachel C. Granger Christine Hamilton relationships Harry Jamieson Zachary Jones relevance Hannah Jones representation of place Peter Hatton research Sue Bailey Amanda Bill Veena Chattaraman Silke Dettmers Linda Drew Colin Murrell Joanna Rees Chetan S. Sankar Alison Shreeve Jill Smith religion Leila Amaral Robert A. Erlewine Ren-Lai Hwang research and development Antonia Clews remembrance Paul Gough Renaissance Augustus Veinoglou Rendell Emily Orley renegotiating competences Mogens Jacobsen Morten Søndergaard repertoires Kazuhiro Ishizaki Wenchun Wang research and resource development Rebecca Reynolds research as art Robyn Gibson research degrees Darren Newbury research dissemination Stanislav Roudavski research education Kristina Niedderer research exhibition Kristina Niedderer research management David Durling research methodology Lin Holdridge Katy Macleod Stanislav Roudavski research methods Christopher Crouch Darren Newbury research network Nick Clifton research practice Maarit Mäkelä research skills development Silvia Pizzocaro research training Darren Newbury research/creation methodology Rita L. Irwin research-based imagery Richard Woodfield research-based practice Euan McArthur researcher Peter Dallow resilience Don Stewart Steve Grand responsive architecture Buthayna Eilouti role play Elif Ayiter David Grant retention Mantz Yorke Rothko Simon Morley rheomorphism René Berger rural communities Juan Carlos Pacheco Contreras rhetoric Marlene Ivey Inês Secca Ruivo Louise Valentine rural regions Pauline White rhizome Gordon Calleja Christian Schwager Jen Webb rhythm-analysis Norbert Herber risk Nick Barnes Anna M Dempster Adele Reid risk management Denitsa Petrova ritual Jorge Gumbe Robert Smithson David Wood robot Mark A. Bedau Will Thorne Soichiro Tsuda robotic art Tania Fraga robotics Valerie Ann Bugmann Téllez sacred Adele Senior sacred symbology Dunja Dogo sales-performers Victor I. Ukaegbu science Catalina Cepeda John Harvey Rita Marcalo Michael Punt Paul Thomas Vuk Uskoković Trish Woods science and art Ruth Beer science and technology Nina Czegledy science critic Margarete Jahrmann science fiction Mike Starr sculpture Arnold Cusmariu Silke Dettmers Santiago Navarro Augustus Veinoglou samizdat Laurence Figgis Stuart Murray Alex Pollard second life Gregory P. Garvey Gloria Gómez-Diago Sandra Reeve Alissa Clarke Second Life Iryna Kuksa Lilly (Li-Fen) Lu schizophrenia Nicholas Theisen scholarly teaching Barbara de la Harpe J. Fiona Peterson scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) Barbara de la Harpe J. Fiona Peterson school art Folkert Haanstra secondary colours Magouliotis Apostolos Moraiti Tzeni secondary education Marie-Louise Damen Joachim Kettel Kathy Mackey secondary school Emil Gaul secondary teacher education Toshio Naoe secondary-school Michaela Vamos seniors Elaine Lally sexuality Tara Chittenden second-order cybernetics Bill Seaman sensation Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Malin Zimm shamanism Mike King Semi Ryu Victor I. Ukaegbu security Zygmunt Bauman selection Ingrid Böck self and peer analysis Ajay Kumar self-concept Michael R. Solomon self-expression Ana Marta González self-organization Steve Grand Stephen Jones self-publishing Laurence Figgis Stuart Murray Alex Pollard sense activity Estelle Barrett sense of place Javier Abad Molina sense perception Sandra Alexander Clive Cazeaux Kerstin Mey Kathryn Moore senses Ted Krueger sensible John Roberts sensitivity Harry Jamieson sensoria Matthew Fuller self-reflection Val Diggle Robert Pepperell sensory Jale Erzen self-representation Adrielle Mitchell sensory substitution Ted Krueger semi-living Adele Senior sequential art Roberto Bartual semiotic Mary Stokrocki seriality Nicole McDaniel semiotics Kathrine Elizabeth Anker René Stettler sexual health Katharine Low siege narratives Michel De Dobbeleer sight Kerstin Mey silhouettes Stuart Medley silversmithing Heidi Yeo Simmel Zygmunt Bauman Simon Starling Peder Anker simulation Anne Bamford Antonia Bardis Adele Flood Steve Grand Zachary Jones Kate McGowan sincerity Clovis Blackwell singing Elaine Lally sinuosity Guillaume Paris Site-specificity; Performativity Ruth Pelzer-Montada site-writing Emily Orley situated learning Anja Kraus Kazuji Mogi Miho Shimohara situational aesthetics Riikka Haapalainen situationism Roy Boyne skill Harry Jamieson Imogen Racz Jessica Turrell skin Ron Broglio Rikke Hansen slamhound Neil Spiller Slavic languages Michel De Dobbeleer slogans Debao Xiang small business policy Susan Bagwell smart chemical agents Martin M. Hanczyc Takashi Ikegami social and cultural theory Andy Hewitt social awareness Cindy Hasio social capital Rachel C. Granger Christine Hamilton social care Jane Coad Paul G. Dempster social change Myrto Tsilimpounidi social change and inclusion María Del Río Diéguez Marián López Fernández-Cao Matilde Mollá Giner Miguel Domínguez Rigo Julio Romero Rodríguez Ana Eva Iribas Rudín Rosaura Navajas Seco Catalina Rigo Vanrell social constructivism Kazuji Mogi Miho Shimohara social conversation Ana Marta González social creativity Kaye Shumack Snaebjornsdottir and Wilson Ron Broglio social engagement Bess Frimodig snapshot Antonia Bardis social form Peter Osborne social action Young Imm Kang Song social and cultural inequalities Jo Foord social inclusion Nick Rowe social interaction Sophia Krzys Acord Tarja-Kaarina Laamanen Ian Sutherland social navigation Chris Speed social network analysis Tommaso Cinti social networking Roy Boyne Ray Gallon social quality Michele Trimarchi social science Sue Hacking social values Peeter Linnap society Jaspar Joseph-Lester society and technology Monika Codourey socio-cultural narratives Kathryn Grushka socio-cultural studies Jill Franz socio-ecological systems Juan Carlos Pacheco Contreras sociology Roy Boyne Marie-Louise Damen Marco Pellitteri sociology of art Sara Malou Strandvad sociology of Labour Chris Mathieu sociology of organizations Chris Mathieu spaces Peter Burleigh spiritualism John Harvey sociology of religion Chris Mathieu spatial ontology Naren Barfield spirituality David Gall Andrew Pickering Semi Ryu socio-materiality Sara Malou Strandvad spatial practice Peter Hatton somatic Isabelle Choinière spatial sequence Sandra E. Hoffmann Robbiani sonification Andrea Polli spatiality Malin Zimm sound Victoria de Rijke Kenneth G. Hay specialist discourse Sally J. Morgan sound composing Joel Cahen sound-generated poems María Mencía status quo Debao Xiang stereotypes Natascha Radclyffe-Thomas stigma Nick Rowe stillness Emma Cocker spectacle Roy Boyne spectator Shilpa Venkatachalam Malin Zimm Stitches Øyvind Vågnes stochastic processes Andreas Schiffler South Africa Katharine Low spectatorship Belidson Dias Susan Sinkinson stop motion Alice Gambrell southern regionalism Daniel T. Stein Soviet Russia Dunja Dogo space Amos Bianchi Jung A. Huh Adam Kossoff Christian Mieves Joseph Nechvatal Olivia Sagan space of perception Raquel Paricio Garcia space of representation Raquel Paricio Garcia speculation Denitsa Petrova Marina Vishmidt speculative materialism Stephen Thompson speech Beverly Redman speed Deborah Robinson storytelling Cecilia Häggström Ryan Patrick strategic management Anna M Dempster strategic resources Jonathan Gander Alison Rieple strategies David Harte spiritual Isabelle Choinière Michael J. Lowis stress Silvia Sovic strip-photography Maarten Vanvolsem studio learning and teaching Barbara de la Harpe J. Fiona Peterson structure Jung A. Huh Cláudia Martin Nascimento studio practice Kenneth G. Hay student broadcasting Andrew Dubber style Virginia Lowe student engagement Robyn Gibson subcultures Emil Gaul student experience Bernadette Blair Chris McKillop Mantz Yorke subject Amanda Beech Bridget Crone student needs Jane Charlton student presentations Janne Morton student services Yvonne Lincoln student support Julia Peck student views Christine Geraghty student voices Heather Symonds student-centred Kirsten Hardie subjectivation Amos Bianchi subjectivity Kathrine Elizabeth Anker Angela Devas Jennifer Elsden-Clifton Martha Patricia Niño Mojica subjectivization John Roberts sublime Roy Boyne subtitle poetry Sarah Tremlett suburbs Galina Gornostaeva subversion Sally J. Morgan students art Jennifer Elsden-Clifton students' experience Noam Austerlitz studio art Ann-Mari Edström subversive Claudia Sandoval supervision Ben Calvert Bernadette Casey Ann-Mari Edström surface Ron Broglio surreal Neil Spiller surrealism Neil Spiller surveillance Monika Codourey Angela Devas Daniel Palmer Jessica Whyte survey Michaela Vamos sustainability Rachel Armstrong Laura Chessin Gregg Garfin Michael Evan Goodsite Faith Kane Kathy Miraglia Ole John Nielsen Rebecca Reubens Cathy Smilan Martin Woolley sustainable design Heather Symonds Suzanne Wasserman Paul Buhle Swedish sexual politics Dirk Gindt sylexiad Robert Hillier symbiogenesis Carlos Castellanos Sylvia Nagl symbol Jane Graves symbolism Nana Afia Opoku–Asare systems theory Zachary Jones symbology Dunja Dogo Cláudia Martin Nascimento tableau Mick Finch symmetry António Cerveira Pinto synaptic patterns Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta syncretic Francesco Monico syncretic reality Roy Ascott syncretism António Cerveira Pinto synnoetics Ross W. Prior synthesis Steve Grand synthetic biology Rachel Armstrong Mark A. Bedau tacit knowledge Sophia Krzys Acord Estelle Barrett Karen Bull Yassaman Imani Jane Osmond Ross W. Prior Anne Robinson Ian Sutherland Mike Tovey tacit learning Christine Percy tag clouds Chris Speed tangential visibility Kathryn Grushka tangible media Matteo Ciastellardi Andrea Cruciani taoism Andrew Pickering Taoism and Buddhism Simon Morley Systemic Functional Grammar (SFG) Mara Martnez Lirola taste culture Emil Gaul systemic measures Gilbertto Prado Clarissa Ribeiro systems architecture Michael Evan Goodsite Sylvia Nagl Ole John Nielsen systems of inquiry Julieanna Preston taxidermy Rikke Hansen teacher Maria Fulkova Ryan Patrick Teresa Tipton teacher education Linda Ashton Mette Gårdvik Cheung-on Tam teacher support Kathy Ring teacher training Alfredo Palacios Garrido Folkert Haanstra Ricardo Marín Viadel Maria Jesús Agra Pardiñas Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic Pete Worrall teaching Chetan S. Sankar Shei-chau Wang ShiPu Wang teaching film Martin Barker Ernest Mathijs teaching guidelines Hideshi Uda teaching strategy Brian Chalkley Marcus Verhagen team organization Brynjulf Tellefsen technics Adam Kossoff Technoetic Arts Kathrine Elizabeth Anker technoetics Roy Ascott technological adaptation Francesco Monico technologies Anne Bamford Adele Flood technologized body Paul Woodrow Nigel Morgan Matthew Robinson the body Jale Erzen technology Leila Amaral Johannes Birringer Doug Boughton Susan Carden Jacqueline Chanda Isabelle Choinière Sean Cubitt Suzan Duygu Eristi John Harvey Rob Huddleston Iryna Kuksa Rita Marcalo Francesco Mariotti Judith Mottram Paul Whittaker termite mounds Seth Bullock The Devil's Dream Daniel T. Stein terrorism Roy Boyne Daniel Palmer Jessica Whyte The Forest Piotr Dumala technology for education Greg More teen identity Tara Chittenden teen media Tara Chittenden telematic Kjell Yngve Petersen telematics Roy Ascott telematics bio-power Martha Patricia Niño Mojica teleonomy António Cerveira Pinto television Clare Kitson Julia Round temporal map Neil Cohn temporality Alice Fox Dr. Beth Harland Phil Legard tetrahedral relations Hannah Jones tetrahedronauspicious reasoning John Wood text Shezad Dawood Debbie Green Max Moswitzer Selavy Oh text as a loop Janez Strehovec text/image institute Steve Dutton text-based outcomes Jane Charlton textile art Barbara Howey textile design project Kai Hakkarainen Henna Lahti Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen textiles Susan Carden Veena Chattaraman Faith Kane Nithikul Nimkulrat textuality Nicholas Theisen the Global Studio Kerry Harman The Lad Lit Project Alexander Kelly the visual Andrea Holland theatre Sean Aita Johannes Birringer Shezad Dawood Debbie Green David Greig Hilda Ho Colin Murrell Clare Park David Richmond Jules Dorey Richmond Nick Rowe John Somers Cathy Turner Roger Wooster theatre and performance Katharine Low theatre history Beverly Redman theatre practice Aylwyn Walsh theatricality Bridget Crone theo-aesthetic Simon Morley theology Robert A. Erlewine Third Angel Alexander Kelly top-down Ellen K. Levy theories of spaces Bastian Lange third-site pedagogy Brent Wilson topological sculpting Mehrdad Garousi theory Ben Calvert Bernadette Casey Kim Charnley Mick Finch three-card Monte Ellen K. Levy touch Valerie Ann Bugmann Téllez Helen J. Chatterjee theory and practice Nicky Ryan theory/practice Shezad Dawood theory-practice interrelationship Ruth Pelzer-Montada therapeutic Melissa Trimingham therapeutic action Keren Barzilay-Shechter therapeutic massage Mitchell Kossak therapy Erica E. Ander Keren Barzilay-Shechter Anne Fenech Colin Murrell thesis writing Natalie Woolf thinking Rob Cowdroy Anthony Williams thinking through writing Cecilia Häggström three-dimensional design Robert Pulley toys Michael Punt threshold concepts Karen Bull Jane Osmond Mike Tovey trace Kate McGowan Monika Weiss Thunder in Guyana Paul Buhle traditional photograph Antonia Bardis ticker tape Sandra E. Hoffmann Robbiani tragic Amanda Beech TIE Roger Wooster training Dita Judith Federman Fred McVittie time Neil Cohn Kate McGowan Tim Stephens Maarten Vanvolsem time and space Rikke Platz Cortsen Jochen Ecke time and the image Maarten Vanvolsem time paths Monika Weiss time-based architecture Christian Kerrigan tissue culture Oron Catts Adele Senior transBioArt Natasha Vita-More transcendence Mike King transcendental imaging/CGI Peter Stott trans-cultural commonalities Solange Coutinho Bernard Darras Eva Miranda transdisciplinarity Kathrine Elizabeth Anker transdisciplinary Michael Punt trans-disciplinary domains Mogens Jacobsen Morten Søndergaard transferable skills Jason Lee typography Cal Swann ubiquity Lucía Ayala urban Jo Foord Frans Vogelaar urban art Tyler Denmead transformation Jennifer Elsden-Clifton Cindy Hasio Uganda Catherine Gombe Joachim Kettel George Kyeyune transformative learning Paul Martin ultimate gestalt Peter Stott transitional Olivia Sagan Umwelt Ron Broglio transnational Sean Cubitt unconscious Jane Graves urban environment Peter Hatton Fabian Neuhaus transnational cities Rita L. Irwin unconscious dream Barbara Rauch urban modernization Jaspar Joseph-Lester transvergence Fernando Leal Audirac António Cerveira Pinto underground Rachel C. Granger Christine Hamilton urban planning Jaspar Joseph-Lester trauma Lily Markiewicz Øyvind Vågnes understanding Åsa Andersson urban regeneration Jaspar Joseph-Lester Felix Robbins understanding art Kazuhiro Ishizaki Wenchun Wang urban study Chen Xu Liu Yan United Kingdom Stuart Cunningham Peter Higgs urbanism Malcolm Miles travel Rodrigo Velasco tribal marketing David Leaver triptychs Anita Sinner tutor-student interaction Joan Turner tutor-student relationship Helena Webster United States of America Themina Kader unity of knowledge Joseph E. Brenner unmediated mediation René Berger urban design Fabian Neuhaus urban development Jo Foord urban ecology Nina Czegledy user research Martin Woolley V For Vendetta James Reynolds Valazquez Machine Neil Spiller validity claims Christopher Crouch viral methods Ruth Pelzer-Montada value Marina Vishmidt virtual architecture Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta Murat Germen values Chris Mathieu Vargas Giovanni Aloi vernacular concepts Martin Barker Ernest Mathijs vessel Imogen Racz virtual collaborative systems Maurizio Forte Gregorij Kurillo virtual design studio Henna Lahti Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen virtual design studio accessibility Kai Hakkarainen video Johannes Birringer Jaspar Joseph-Lester Sophie Jung Adam Kossoff Monika Weiss Duncan White virtual design/architecture Elif Ayiter video art Michael Betancourt virtual music Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta video feedback Robert Pepperell video games Astrid Ensslin Greg More video painting Sarah Tremlett viewer Lindsay Hughes viewing Mie Buhl violence Hannele Weir Adele Flood virtual worlds Julia Gaimster Mario Gerosa Michael R. Solomon virtuality Malin Zimm virtual-real Dew Harrison vision William P. Seeley Linda J. Thomson visitor experience Jungwon Lee visitor studies Alison Hsiang-Yi Liu virtual learning environment Elif Ayiter Lilly (Li-Fen) Lu Visorama Luiz Velho virtual perspective Peter Stott virtual reality Lucía Ayala Donna J. Cox Lily Díaz Tania Fraga Murat Germen Francesco Monico Joseph Nechvatal Adrian Page Semi Ryu Luiz Velho Malin Zimm visual analysis Janne Morton visual and verbal language Philippa Lyon visual argument Joaquín Roldán Ramírez visual art Barbara Bickel Kerrie Corcoran Christopher Crouch Cath Keay Riikka Latva-Somppi Ken Neil Cheryl Sim virtual travelling Malin Zimm visual art practice Ann-Mari Edström virtual world Anne Bamford visual arts Gerald Cipriani Ourania Kouvou Anne Lord Stuart Munro Brigitta Zics visual intelligence Anne Robinson Nigel Whiteley visual arts philosophy Derek Whitehead visual language Neil Cohn David McConville visual closure Stuart Medley visual language/foreign language Mirjana Tomasevic Dancevic visual communication Georgia Kakourou Chroni Seija Ulkuniemi visual communications Yasmin Ibrahim visual culture Doug Boughton Mie Buhl Martha Christopoulou Belidson Dias Paul Duncum David Gall Fernando Hernandez Zhifan Hu Sheng Kuan Chung Sunil Manghani Susan Sinkinson Teresa Tipton Judit Vidiella Shei-chau Wang visual culture education John Steers visual design Kaye Shumack visual education Kathryn Grushka visual experience Åsa Andersson visual grammar Mara Martnez Lirola visual grammars Kaye Shumack visual literacy Kathy Mackey Ricardo Reis visual media Antonia Clews visual methodology Andrea Thoma visual modeling James Edward Clayson visual music Michael Betancourt visual narrative Vasiliki Labitsi visual storytelling Anne Lord visual studies Darren Newbury visual system Stuart Medley visual thinking James Edward Clayson Marlene Ivey Kathryn Moore Louise Valentine visual turn Alexander Sekatskiy visualization Yang Liu Lilly (Li-Fen) Lu Andrea Polli visualizing the invisible Paul Woodrow vitreous enamel Jessica Turrell vocational education Christine Geraghty visual poetry Johanna Drucker Eduardo Kac vocational qualifications Simon Roodhouse visual representation Robin M. Chandler visual representations Nicky Ryan visual reproducing Sue Bailey Linda Drew Alison Shreeve visual research Rodrigo Velasco vocationalism Andrew Dubber Jane Tynan voice Debbie Green Claire MacDonald Beverly Redman volumetric computation Alexander Pasko Turlif Vilbrandt Carl Vilbrandt vortex mechanics Zachary Jones web design Cláudia Martin Nascimento wireless wearable technology Laura Beloff VR Joseph Nechvatal web-based artefacts Alice Fox Phil Legard Nigel Morgan Matthew Robinson witnessing Lily Markiewicz Wabi-Sabi Jo Pond Wales Graeme Harper Walter Rodney Paul Buhle wandering Emma Cocker war Georgia Kakourou Chroni Watchmen Michel De Dobbeleer water Zachary Jones ways of seeing Patricia Macdonald wearable technology and prostheses Valerie Ann Bugmann Téllez wearables Laura Beloff Web 2 René Berger Web 2.0 Chris Speed web art Claudia Sandoval webs Cláudia Martin Nascimento well-being Hilary Bungay Gunter Kreutz Elaine Lally Don Stewart Linda J. Thomson well-being measures Usha Menon Welsh culture Graeme Harper West Midlands David Harte western region of Ireland Pauline White whole-person Ren-Lai Hwang WHOQOL-BREF Gunter Kreutz wicked problems Tilmann Lindberg Christoph Meinel Christine Noweski widening participation Terry Finnigan Jane Tynan William Hogarth Roberto Bartual women Teena Clerke Tahneer Oksman Seija Ulkuniemi women in prison Aylwyn Walsh womens lives Cynthia M. Morawski women's studies Julia Jansen word and image Chris Murray work Laura Hurd Clarke work-based learning Marie Jefsioutine Bob Jerrard workforce development Simon Roodhouse Working Peoples Alliance Paul Buhle workshops Kazuji Mogi Miho Shimohara World War II Bex Lewis World Wide Web Mark A. Bedau world-view Patricia Macdonald wow factors Janey Gordon writer Rebecca Coates Ryan Patrick Mick Wilson Joonsung Yoon writerly self Kate Evans Emil Gaul youth Hod Orkibi youths Marco Pellitteri Yucatan David Wood Zen Robert Pepperell writing Chris Byrne Claire Hind Alison James Yve Lomax Tony O'Connor Paul O'Neill Duncan White John Wood zine Laurence Figgis Stuart Murray Alex Pollard writing in creative practice Stanislav Roudavski Zulu Griselda Pollock Writing PAD Margo Blythman Joan Mullin Susan Orr writing process Fiona Graham written assessment Margo Blythman Joan Mullin Susan Orr young children Katherina Danko-McGhee Virginia Lowe Jhong Sook Oh Martina Paatela-Nieminen Kathy Ring young female offenders Madeleine Brens young people Jane Coad zombie Brian Reffin Smith