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Paek, Kyong-Mi
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Communing with Nature: The Collective Journey of Yatoo Artists and its Pedagogical Potentials

Author(s)
Paek, Kyong-Mi
Issued Date
2019-02
DOI
10.1111/jade.12182
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/22837
Fulltext
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jade.12182
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ART & DESIGN EDUCATION, v.38, no.1, pp.240 - 255
Abstract
Increasing concern over environmental sustainability and socioecological well-being has motivated people to consider ways to reconnect humans with the natural world through lifestyle changes that integrate well with natural systems. Educators who share environmental concerns have explored diverse aspects of ecological art practices to envision an extended and socially relevant role of art. Accordingly, the present study aims to bring educators' attention to a collective journey of artists who have immersed themselves in making an affective relationships with nature. Regarding the journey as an invaluable cultural resource that holds the potential to extend the horizon of how we may live with nature, it examines the collective journey of the artists in Yatoo, an artist association based in Gongju, a greenery city in the southwest region of South Korea. The guiding questions set for the contextual analysis are: 'how do Yatoo artists become native to their place?' and 'what can be learned from their collective journey?'. First, the collective journey of the artists is examined based on four major factors: regionality, positioning, methodology and networking. This is followed by discussions focusing on the value of the collective identity shaped by bioregionally conscious art practices and the pedagogical potentials arising from the collective journey. This paper suggests that the collective journey of Yatoo's life-sustaining practice, operating in an era of environmental crisis, contributes to the recently developing alternative pedagogical discussions by opening up dialogues that navigate ways to encourage more sustainable practices for the future.
Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL
ISSN
1476-8062
Keyword (Author)
environmental concernbioregional art practicepedagogical potentialcase studyYatoo artists
Keyword
ART EDUCATIONPLACE

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