Sustained connection through material dialogue: International collaborative painting during the COVID-19 pandemic

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Title

ACUADS/DDCA 2021: Conference New Networks

Publisher

The Australian Council of University Art and Design Schools

School

School of Arts and Humanities

Comments

See, H. (2021, October). Sustained connection through material dialogue: International collaborative painting during the COVID-19 pandemic. ACUADS/DDCA 2021: Conference New Networks, Online. Sustained Connection through Material Dialogue: International collaborative painting during the COVID-19 pandemic – The Australian Council of University Art and Design Schools (acuads.com.au)

Abstract

This paper discusses early findings from cross-cultural collaborative research that initially proposed travel to South-East Asia prior to the advent of COVID-19. This practice-led research (PLR) explores emergences between diverse positions through the material practice of collaborative painting. This PLR is dialogic in its approach, engaging with collaborative practice as a process of intersubjective meaning-making through reciprocated utterances. Although utterances are traditionally conceived as units of speech, this PLR has extended this concept to also include written and material units of language within a space that embraces the plurality of meaning. The PLR project began with a prescribed model of face-to-face collaboration in mind, which due to COVID-19 quickly became an impossibility. In the face of social distancing and international border restrictions this initial approach to collaboration was adapted to include postage-based exchanges. Although this was an initially reluctant adaptation, postage proved an effective tool for keeping both local and international networks connected and active in ways that online communication lacked. This paper specifically discusses two international postage-based collaborations that took place between artists living in Perth, London and Hong Kong. The artists in these two projects pursued the material exchange of painting and also negotiated the lag and limitations of snail-mail.

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