Writing PAD

Writing PAD Writing-PAD offers an arena in which to explore and develop the notion of ‘thinking through writing’ as a parallel to visual discourse in A&D.

Very interesting thread on being a writer and the purposes of writing.
20/04/2026

Very interesting thread on being a writer and the purposes of writing.

I was a theoretical physicist from 1992 to 2007. It was a romantic activity, exploring the fundamental nature of the cosmos! I became a university professor, wrote papers and books, and got to explore some of the most beautiful ideas ever discovered. In parallel, I also developed a fascination with....

Presented ‘Writing Joyishly’ with fabulous UWE (WoW) and Sheffield Hallam colleagues yesterday at the 50th Annual Confer...
04/04/2024

Presented ‘Writing Joyishly’ with fabulous UWE (WoW) and Sheffield Hallam colleagues yesterday at the 50th Annual Conference of the Association for Art History https://forarthistory.org.uk/conference/2024-annual-conference/ Interestingly, concerns around students reading and writing are still very much a focus for educators and we had a lively discussion.

The Association for Art History's 2023 Annual Conference call for papers is live!

Call for Contributions:Artistic Research in Practice We are calling for contributions to an edited book exploring the im...
13/12/2023

Call for Contributions:
Artistic Research in Practice

We are calling for contributions to an edited book exploring the impacts of artistic research and practice-based research PhDs upon creative practice. This book will be edited by Brad Haylock, Jessica Wilkinson, and Charles Anderson of RMIT University, and published by Valiz.
A research turn
In the last three decades, creative practice disciplines, such as art, design, architecture, creative writing, fashion, and others, have undergone a ‘research turn’ through their integration into the academy. The rise of artistic research or practice-based research is subtly transforming these disciplines. The integration of research into practice, however, has not always been smooth, and the transformations not unequivocally positive.
There are many reasons why an individual practitioner might decide to undertake a PhD: a desire to uplift one’s practice, to contribute to the intellectual climate of one’s discipline, to teach, to pursue an academic career, or some combination of these, or other reasons besides. Upon graduating, and beyond, the value of the PhD experience may have shifted significantly from these initial desires, intentions, and expectations. What are the impacts, urgency, and significance of the PhD for creative practitioners? How are these understood, captured, communicated?
Of course, one might even ask: should creative practitioners undertake a PhD in the first place? We tackle this question in an open way, to acknowledge, equally, the advantages and disadvantages of the creep of the PhD into practice.
Across disciplines
Whereas most discourse on practice research is siloed by discipline, this book will offer a cross-disciplinary view by capturing a range of reflections by creative practitioners on the value that has emerged, for them, from their PhD research. We focus on the impact of the PhD for practitioners who are not principally academics and seek to draw out patterns and important differences across diverse fields of creative practice.
We are calling for contributions from practitioners who have undertaken a PhD from across a variety of creative disciplines including art, design, architecture, writing, music, performance, fashion, and beyond. We welcome contributions from practitioners who undertook a practice-based or artistic research PhD as well as from creative practitioners who undertook a ‘traditional’ thesis-mode PhD.
Audience
This book will be of value to creative practitioners currently undertaking a PhD and those who are considering it, to supervisors of practice research, and to graduate research leaders and educational policymakers who are concerned with the ways in which ecologies of and infrastructures for practice research training might be designed, implemented, and sustained, and why.

As a starting point for your thinking, we offer a number of prompts, as follows. (We don’t expect all contributions to tackle all of these questions.)
On the background for your undertaking a PhD: Why did you choose to enrol in a PhD? What were your initial motivations? When in your practice career did you undertake the PhD?
On the model of PhD you undertook: What was the model of PhD? What were the institutional expectations and/or guidelines for how the examinable submission was to be presented, and how did these affect the work you did? Are there aspects of the model that worked for you? What could have been better? What would you have changed? Are there things that didn’t work? If so, what were your workarounds?
On the impact of the PhD on your practice: What do you do differently in your practice now, or what can you do now that you couldn’t do beforehand? Are there projects you do now that you wouldn’t have done before the PhD? Or vice versa? Has your community of practice changed? Do you now speak about your practice differently? Or position it differently?
On the word ‘research’ in your practice: How do you describe ‘research’ concisely in your own way? And is this description now different from how you perceived it before starting your PhD? Did you identify ‘research’ as one of your capabilities before the PhD? Do you do so now? If you did beforehand, how has your understanding of research changed? How does ‘research’ now play out in your everyday practice?

Abstracts
Proposed chapter/contribution title.
Contribution type [single-authored chapter, multi-authored chapter, interview, conversation, etc.].
250–500w abstract.
An indication of what images, if any, your contribution might include.
Contributor bio of 100–150 words (given the nature of this book, please expressly mention in your bio where and when you undertook your PhD).
Please email submissions or questions to:
[email protected]

Final contributions
2,000–3,000 words in length.
Contributions may be single-authored reflective texts, or may be interviews, conversations, or group discussions.
Contributions may be illustrated, including documentation of process documents, diagrams, before/after comparisons, and so on.
Upon selection for publication, you will grant us permission to use your text and any images under the Creative Commons 4.0 license CC-BY-NC-ND.

Timeline
Deadline for abstracts of 250–500 words: 1 February 2024
Authors notified: 1 March 2024
Deadline for full contributions (2,000–3,000 words): 1 June 2024
Editing: June–July 2024
Anticipated publication date: December 2024

Fees
Abstracts selected to proceed to full draft stage will receive a flat fee of €100.00.
Published contributions will receive an additional flat fee of €150.00

Taken from: http://www.research-in-practice.com/ - cut and paste into your browser - facebook is blocking a lot of links xx

There are many reasons why an individual practitioner might decide to undertake a PhD: a desire to uplift one’s practice, to contribute to the intellectual climate of one’s discipline, to teach, to pursue an academic career, or some combination of these, or other reasons besides. Upon graduating...

With the well-earned retirement of co-founder and co-editor Emeritus Prof John Wood the Journal of Writing in Creative P...
13/07/2023

With the well-earned retirement of co-founder and co-editor Emeritus Prof John Wood the Journal of Writing in Creative Practice is seeking to create a new ‘editorial team’ for the JWCP. We are creating five new team roles: Associate Editor; Submissions Editor; Social Media Editor; Books Review Editor & Photo and Image Editor.

Please note: To create the team I will be matching the short ‘visions’ and seeing how they complement each other.

These are unpaid roles usually supported by institutions with research time.

Please see the call https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-writing-in-creative-practice
The deadline is 11th September-

Journal of Writing in Creative PracticeCall for papers: Ways of Writing in Art and Design, Special Issue 2 We are inviti...
12/01/2023

Journal of Writing in Creative Practice
Call for papers: Ways of Writing in Art and Design, Special Issue 2

We are inviting responses to the first Special Issue on ‘Ways of Writing in Art and Design’ (https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/jwcp/15/2), which is guest edited by Clare Johnson and Rachael Miles at the University of the West of England, Bristol (UWE).
The first Special Issue explores ways of writing in/through/alongside/with art and design as opposed to writing ‘about’ it. Rooted in Visual Culture pedagogy and inflected with the experience of writing during the COVID-19 pandemic, the contributions predominantly arose from a series of three workshops held during June 2021 to launch the Ways of Writing in Art and Design (WoW) research network, which is part of the Visual Culture Research Group at UWE.

The first Special Issue is a collaborative constellation of articles, polemic, reflection, visual essay and illustrations produced by colleagues at (or affiliated with) Visual Culture at UWE, including speakers at the inaugural WoW workshops. Framed by ideas of provisionality, openness and hope, and drawing on the work of Lauren Berlant, Arturo Escobar, Ivor Goodson and bell hooks amongst others, the contributions speak of the precarious time in which they were produced. Authors reflect on issues such as the relationship between writing, labour and the material conditions of working-class life; nourishment and hope in the experience of teaching and learning visual culture online; care, ongoingness and repair; and writing, temporality and loss.

In this second Special Issue, we invite submissions that extend, challenge, debate and examine the issues raised in the first Special Issue, specifically what it means to write in/through/alongside/with art and design practice in the context of Visual Culture pedagogy. This includes how Visual Culture is assessed as a component of studio-based programmes in art and design Higher Education. Our aim is to look towards writing as a practice of care as it emerges in and through creative practice.

Contributions might consider, but are not limited to, the following:
writing experiments and/as visual practice
creative allyship
writing as an expression of hope
working beyond the writing/making binary in art and design HE
transgressional acts of writing the visual
writing, visuality and class
writing and ongoingness
writing as a practice of care
the visuality of writing

We encourage a diverse range of outputs including, but not limited to, visual essays, critical reviews, reflection pieces, scripto-visual works, interviews, conversation pieces and journal articles. Please send 5000-6000-word articles, or other forms of contribution, to [email protected] by April 1st 2023. Further information about JWCP, including Notes for Contributors, can be found at https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-writing-in-creative-practice

Many Thanks,
Dr Clare Johnson

Associate Professor and Research Lead in Art & Design (she/her)
Department Research Degrees Coordinator for Art & Design
Member of DRAW https://www.drawuwe.com/ and the Visual Culture Research Group http://www.vcrg.co.uk

Current Events Undergraduate Research Symposium 2022 Deuce 2 (Rachael Miles & Tom Marshman performance) Ways of Writing in Art and Design (WOW) Current VCRG activity is organised into four strands:

04/01/2023

Happy New Year WritingPAD people. Many journal issues are ready for the coming year. Please let us know your views here and in articles for the journal.

15/12/2022

Discussions taking place with Scandinavian institutions re guesting JWCP. All very exciting.

Look what arrived today! 20th year of WritingPAD. JWCP 15:1 dedicated to the memory of John Chris Jones.
17/09/2022

Look what arrived today! 20th year of WritingPAD. JWCP 15:1 dedicated to the memory of John Chris Jones.

17/09/2022

JWCP 15:1 has just been delivered! Have a look what’s in it!

Self-portrait in a squashed tuba
11/09/2022

Self-portrait in a squashed tuba

05/09/2022

JWCP 15.1 coming to you quite soon!

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