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DIGITAL-ARTS-FORUM  April 2022

DIGITAL-ARTS-FORUM April 2022

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Subject:

TrACEY cfp - Drawing Anthropocene

From:

Deborah Harty <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 6 Apr 2022 17:01:23 +0100

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Call for Journal Articles: Drawing Anthropocene 
TRACEY Drawing and Visualisation Research 
Guest editors – Sarah Casey & Gerry Davis 
Deadline - Friday 8th July 2022

This edition proposes an examination of the relationship between drawing – a practice of traces – and the concept of Anthropocene. This is a timely lens through which to examine research engaging drawing in relation to current debates on environmental crisis and invite reflection on the value of drawing in the context of deep time.
The term Anthropocene, coined at the start of the new millennium by geochemist Paul Crutzen, denotes a new period of geological time, reflecting the extent to which human activity is making its mark on geologic stratigraphy. Essentially, for geologists, the legacy of the Anthropocene will be the traces that our existence will leave in the geologic record in times to come. We might even see this as a collaborative durational drawing spanning the development and demise of human existence! 
While there remains debate about the precise starting point of the Anthropocene (and it has yet to be formally acknowledged by the International Committee on Stratigraphy), the concept is now widespread and in common usage as a byword for human impact on the environment. This tension provides a useful provocation, one that prompts questions about how drawing might function in relation to climate crisis and what knowledge it might produce. For example, drawing may examine areas of contention: petrochemicals and carbon release, resource extraction, more than human agency, migrations, or post-human and planetary futures. 

Drawing is an activity of tracing, layering, erasure, the drawn mark often belies the process of its making. It has been called a “trace fossil” (Halperin, 2013). Over the course of the twentieth century tenets of drawing - arguably the trace of an action made over a surface – have been tested, stretched and exploded as artists embraced performance, land art, soundscapes as forms of drawing. Drawing now has many identities, from lines in sand, footprints in the snow, or vapor trails in the sky (Dexter, 2005: 6). Acknowledging, as many do, that environmental traces - foot prints, tidelines – are a form of drawing, what might this offer for using drawing as a lens through which to enter critical debates on environment? Conversely, how might new thinking emerging from earth sciences and geo humanities reveal new insights into what it means to make a drawing be it conventional or expanded? 

Particular areas of interest include, but are not limited to, the following questions:
•	How might drawing help us position ourselves in relation to changing ecologies?
•	What contemporary or historic strategies does drawing offer for bearing witness to environmental change?
•	The Anthropocene reflects changes in global cultures. How can drawing alert us to such changes? 
•	What does thinking through the lens of deep time offer for understanding drawing and vice versa? Equally, what does this lens of time and change offer to our speculations of futures?
•	How might drawing bring us closer to activity in the deep past or timescapes remote from our own lifetimes? 
•	What geopolitical questions does the concept of Anthropocene raise for ethical practices of drawing? Of how drawing is conducted, who draws, where and for whom? 
•	How might thinking through the concept of Anthropocene revitalize the traditional field of landscape drawing?

Responses are sought from outside and on the fringes of the arts – all rigorous research related to drawing or the ideas mentioned above, whatever your field, will be warmly welcomed.

TRACEY would like to invite the following submissions in response to the theme:
Full academic papers between 4500 –6000 words to be submitted through TRACEY’s online submission portal: https://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/TRACEY/about/submissions 

Please ensure that you use the template for your submission, which can be downloaded from the submissions link above.
Deadline for all submissions: Friday 8th July 2022

Please include the following information for papers:
Author(s)
Institutional Affiliation (if appropriate)
50word biography

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
www.digitalartsforum.org.uk
The Digital Arts Forum Website is a new site which offers its members the
opportunity to publish news, events and weblogs, as well as take part in
discussions, forums and online chat.
The Digital Arts Forum is aimed primarily at digital artists and arts
workers in the East Midlands region of the UK, although we welcome input
from members elsewhere. The Forum is managed by Anna Petry, Digital Arts
Development Officer at Broadway Cinema and Media Centre in Nottingham.
The Digital Arts Forum provides a meeting ground for digital artists and
arts professionals to discuss work, strategy and development. Through its
regular meetings and email discussion lists, it aims to bring together a
network of artists to develop collaborations and partnerships which will
build the quality and profile of digital arts in the region
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

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