1st Edition

For Creative Geographies Geography, Visual Arts and the Making of Worlds

By Harriet Hawkins Copyright 2014
    310 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    336 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book provides the first sustained critical exploration, and celebration, of the relationship between Geography and the contemporary Visual Arts. With the growth of research in the Geohumanities and the Spatial Humanities, there is an imperative to extend and deepen considerations of the form and import of geography-art relations. Such reflections are increasingly important as geography-art intersections come to encompass not only relationships built through interpretation, but also those built through shared practices, wherein geographers work as and with artists, curators and other creative practitioners.
     
    For Creative Geographies features seven diverse case studies of artists’ works and exhibitions made towards the end of the twentieth and the beginning of the twentieth-first century. Organized into three analytic sections, the volume explores the role of art in the making of geographical knowledge; the growth of geographical perspectives as art world analytics; and shared explorations of the territory of the body, In doing so, Hawkins proposes an analytic framework for exploring questions of the geographical “work” art does, the value of geographical analytics in exploring the production and consumption of art, and the different forms of encounter that artworks develop, whether this be with their audiences, or their makers.

    Introduction: For Creative Geographies.  Section One: Art and the Making/Transforming of Geography  1. Placing Art at the Royal Geographical Society: Creative Compass, Exhibition Imaginaries, and Cartographic Critiques   2. Connecting with Gertrude: Woven Threads and Written Traces: Crafting Disciplinary Histories  Section Two: A Geographical Turn? Placing Production: Producing Sites  3. Producing Sites: Michael Landy’s Break Down  4. Framing the World: Portraits of Place, Richard Wentworth’s Urban Imaginary  5. Insites: On Residency and Collaboration  Section Three: Remapping Bodies: Substances, Senses, Spaces and Encounters  6. The Argument of the Eye: Installation Art and the "Experience of Experience"  7. Points of Contact: The Geographies of Ana Mendieta’s Earth-Body Works.  By Way of Conclusion: Towards an Analytic Framework.

    Biography

    Harriet Hawkins is a Lecturer in Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London.

    "…the book treats the limits and possibilities of creative geographies with compelling seriousness, and the scholarship is impressive throughout. The imaginative picture of ramifying art-geography entanglements established here will prove an indispensable frame of reference to those forming perspectives on the nascent field. For Creative Geographies looms large in my footnotes already."

     – Simon Ferdinand, School for Cultural Analysis and Centre for Globalisation Studies, University of Amsterdam, in Antipode