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Consuming Craft Conference - Latest information Just What is it that Makes the Craft Object to Different, So Appealing?

Latest information on Consuming Craft - International Conference to be held 19 - 21 May 2000 at BCUC, Chalfont St Giles, Bucks UK
the following key aims:


Themes
Institutions of Craft

Supported by
to establish a Centre for Contemporary Crafts

Places are still available.

Full conference fee: £165
Members of Design History Society: £150
Special rate for makers/independent professionals/postgraduate students without institutional support: £85
Conference fee includes reception Fri, and lunch and refreshments Fri-Sun
Conference Dinner (Sat 20th): £35 (places limited to 100 - early booking advised)  

Booking will be confirmed on receipt of payment.



Please check our website:  www.consumingcraft.co.uk for a faxable booking form and details on accommodation.

or contact Mel Brooks on [log in to unmask], tel. 01494 603048



[Updated 2/5/00­ all details subject to change]

CONSUMING CRAFT

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME


Friday 19 May

11.00    Registration

11.30 - 12.00    Welcome, Ian Barker,
Dean of  BCUC

The MOMC Project, David Kay, Crafts Officer, Southern Arts.

Introduction, Kate McIntyre,
Convenor, Consuming Craft

12.00 - 13.20    Lunch
 

Institutions of Craft

13.20 - 13.40    Prof. Jonathan Woodham,
Director, Design History Research Centre, University of Brighton
ŒPassing the Buck? The Council of Industrial Design and the Crafts¹

13.40 - 14.00    Jeremy Theophilus,
Senior Visual Arts Officer,
with lead responsibility for national crafts policy at theArts Council of England
ŒInstitutions of Craft:  locating the crafts in a new geography for visual culture¹

14.00 - 14.20    Janet Barnes,
Director, Crafts Council
Title tbc

14.20 - 14.40    Discussion

14.40 - 15.10    Tea/Coffee

15.10 - 15.40    Kate McIntyre,
Convenor, Consuming Craft
ŒCraft and Consumerism:  Just what is it that makes the Craft Object so Different, so Appealing?¹

15.50    
Coaches depart for London

16.45 - 17.45    
Visit 'Three Decades', an exhibition on the Crafts Council Collection at the London Institute Gallery, Davies Street.
Introduction by Amanda Fielding,
Curator of the Crafts Council Collection.

18.30 - 20.00    Reception at the Crafts Council and Private Viewing of 'tectonic'

20.00 - 23.00    Free time. There is a wide selection of restaurants in Islington.
The coaches will depart at 23.00. Map and details of 'pick-up' point in conference pack.


Saturday 20 May

09.50    Introduction, Kate McIntyre

10.00 - 10.30    Dr. Colin Campbell,
University of York, author 'The Romantic Ethic and the Spirit of Modern Consumerism'
ŒCulture, Craft and Consumption¹

10.30 - 11.00    Prof. Eugene Halton,
University of Notre Dame,
co-author 'The Meaning of Things: Domestic Symbols and the Self'
ŒThe Art and Craft of Home¹

11.00 - 11.20    Discussion

11.20   Introduction to the Academic Sessions, Mel Brooks,
Conference Organiser

11.20 - 11.40    Coffee

11.40 - 13.00    Academic Session 1  (12 papers)
 

Identity

Lisa Norton, Chair, Graduate Division, Art Institute of Chicago
ŒA Plea for Individuation and Difference/Craft and Utility¹
Liz Lydiate,
London College of Printing, The London Institute
ŒReceived buying In/Selling Out ­ the identity crisis of the contemporary maker¹
Janet Floyd,
Cultural Studies Department, King Alfred's College, Winchester
ŒConsuming Quilts: the Display at the American Museum at Bath¹

National Identity

Philis Alvic, Independent,
ŒMarketing production Crafts: similarities between early 20th century Appalachia and developing countries¹
Clare Fisher,
University of Wales, ŒCrafting Wales¹
Ritva Koskennurmi-Sivonen,
Department of Home Economics and Craft Science, University of Helsinki
ŒA Reflection of Handcrafted Fashion in the Finnish Press¹

Amateur Practice

Jo Turney, Winchester School of Art,
ŒMaking it Better: Home Craft as Catharsis¹
Fiona Hackney,
Independent,
ŒUse Your Hands for Happiness: Home and Housecraft in women¹s magazines¹
Prof. Julia Bettinotti and Marie-Francoise Truel
Département d'études littéraires, University of Québec, Montréal, Canada
ŒFrom Miss Marple to Alexander McQueen: the evolution of "granny-craft" knitting

Cultures of Collecting

David Jeremiah, University of Plymouth,
ŒObjects of Trade¹
Frances Lord,
Independent, ŒFetishism and the Crafts¹
Rob Burton, Margot Baird
School of Textiles, Heriot Watt University
and Chrissie White,
Glasgow School of Art
ŒThe Church of Scotland as patron of late C20th Visual Art, Craft and Design¹

13.00 - 14.20    Lunch

14.20 - 14.50    Dr. Milena Lamarova,
Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague, author 'Signum Design - Czech Design 1980-1991'
ŒCraft and Czech National Identity¹

15.00 - 16.00    Academic Session 2  (8 papers)

Education

Claire Dean, Bradford College
ŒCraft and its Educational Role and Function in the Primary School Curriculum¹
Kate Schofield and Lesley Burgess,
Institute of Education
ŒCoining Craft: An action research project with Art and Design PGCE students

Craft Values in Product Design

Karen Yair, Design & Innovation Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University
ŒThe contribution of crafts knowledge to design for evolving user relationships¹
Mirja Kalvianinen,
The Kuopio Academy of Crafts and Design, Finland
ŒThe experiential qualities of the crafted object¹

New Audiences

Jacqueline Yallop, Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust
Crafts with Cred: creating contexts for the next generation¹
Carol Littlefair,
Hampshire County Museums Service
ŒMaking Contemporary Craft Accessible¹

Amateur Practice

Clive Edwards, Loughborough University
ŒSelf-expression or need? The creation and consumption of craft by women in the 18th and 19th centuries
Greg Votolato,
Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College
Do-It-Yourself in America


16.00 - 16.20    Tea/Coffee


16.20 - 16.50    Ronald Kuchta,
Editor, American Ceramics, former Director, Everson Museum, Syracuse, New York
ŒCeramics and the US Art Market¹

16.50 - 17.20    Grayson Perry,
Artist
ŒFlogging Myself: a personal relationship with consumption¹
17.20 - 17.40    Discussion


   
Bar open from 17.30

20.00 - 22.00    
Conference Dinner
The conference dinner extends the theme of consumption into the realm of dining - using artefacts made in the BCUC studios and featuring a video of Place SetTing, an installation by Peter Ting, Professor of Design at the University of Central Lancashire

Sunday 21 May

10.00 - 11.20    Academic Session 3   (11 papers)

Identity

Prof. Peter Ting and Fiona Candy, University of Central Lancashire
ŒChoosing Lifestyles¹
Alison Shreeve,
London College of Fashion, The London Institute
ŒFashioning Craft¹
Tony Howe and Patrick Dillon,
University of Reading,
ŒCultural niche and the contexts of craft, design and fine art¹

New Audiences

Phillipa Aitken and Julian Malins,
Centre for Research in Art and Design, Gray's School of Art, Aberdeen
ŒThe Global Gallery ­ from studio to cyberspace¹
Jacqueline Jeynes,
Independent,
ŒConsumer Motivations or Craft and the Entrepreneur¹
Griff Bond and Anoush Waddington,
Independent,  
ŒCreating Opportunities for Craftmanship"

Education

Anton Reijnders, European Ceramic Work Centre, s¹Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands
ŒStimulating Developments¹
Maria Georgaki,
Camberwell College of Arts, The London Institute
ŒTeaching the Modern: Assessing the Aesthetic and Educational role of the Crafts in the ILEA/Camberwell Collection¹

Craft Values in Product Design

Penny Macbeth, University of Huddersfield,
ŒIdeas of Exchange¹
Mila Marlia
School of Cultural Studies, Sheffield Hallam University,
and Lily Wulandari
,
ŒSpinning and Weaving the Wild Silkworm Cocoon using a "Green-Craft" concept
Stuart Walker,
Faculty of Environmental Design, University of Calgary, Canada
ŒWhen Worlds Collide: Craft Design, Mass Production and Sustainability¹

11.20 - 11.40    Coffee

11.40 - 12.10    Reyer Kras,
Curator, Stedelijk Museum Industrial / Designer, Aurelius, Amsterdam
ŒThe Firm Conference Dinner Project:  craft objects as unique carriers of meaning and function¹

12.10 - 12.40    Dr. Kevin Murray,
Artistic Director, Craft Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
ŒBack to Nowhere: Craft and the Open Source Movement¹

12.40 - 14.50    Lunch

14.00 - 14.30    Jane Adam,
Jeweller
ŒUsing Craft: The Fulfilment of Potential¹

14.30 - 15.00    Prof. Ken Baynes,
Gallery of the Future, Loughborough University
ŒCraft Futures¹

15.00 - 15.30    Plenary    

15.30    Conference Ends