Video essays: Curating and transforming film education through artistic research
Video essays: Curating and transforming film education through artistic research
This article seeks to foster reflection on film pedagogy and research, encouraging academics to engage in artistic research and teaching methods. It specifically focuses on the video essay as a teaching and learning method, one that requires the willingness to take risks, but also, that can lead to a transformative experience in a still hierarchical educational system. The increasing openness to video essays in film journals shows an awareness of the way in which artistic research may contribute to decolonise academia. The practice of video essays leads to an inclusive, collaborative and polyphonic research environment, which dismantles the idea of a film canon. It contests the privileged position of the written ‘text’, when this is just understood as the written word. It also contributes to blurring the distance between the status of students and that of researchers. It invites them to assimilate work practices, curating and filmmaking, which sometimes happen simultaneously, curating through filmmaking. This article shares the example of the design of the video essay as a creative assessment method for two film modules in the MA Global Cinemas and the BA Creative Arts at SOAS, University of London. It stresses the importance of connecting research, practice and teaching, that is, the recursive study of film through film. It suggests that through making video essays class members become co-curators of the course, where learning is a multi-directional and collaborative experience.
Artistic Research, Audiovisual Criticism, Decolonial, Pedagogy, Reflexivity, Video Essay
65-81
Sendra Fernandez, Estrella
649e182a-2efe-4202-bef9-cbd28bc6f496
13 November 2020
Sendra Fernandez, Estrella
649e182a-2efe-4202-bef9-cbd28bc6f496
Sendra Fernandez, Estrella
(2020)
Video essays: Curating and transforming film education through artistic research.
International Journal of Film and Media Arts, 5 (2), .
(doi:10.24140/ijfma.v5.n2.04).
Abstract
This article seeks to foster reflection on film pedagogy and research, encouraging academics to engage in artistic research and teaching methods. It specifically focuses on the video essay as a teaching and learning method, one that requires the willingness to take risks, but also, that can lead to a transformative experience in a still hierarchical educational system. The increasing openness to video essays in film journals shows an awareness of the way in which artistic research may contribute to decolonise academia. The practice of video essays leads to an inclusive, collaborative and polyphonic research environment, which dismantles the idea of a film canon. It contests the privileged position of the written ‘text’, when this is just understood as the written word. It also contributes to blurring the distance between the status of students and that of researchers. It invites them to assimilate work practices, curating and filmmaking, which sometimes happen simultaneously, curating through filmmaking. This article shares the example of the design of the video essay as a creative assessment method for two film modules in the MA Global Cinemas and the BA Creative Arts at SOAS, University of London. It stresses the importance of connecting research, practice and teaching, that is, the recursive study of film through film. It suggests that through making video essays class members become co-curators of the course, where learning is a multi-directional and collaborative experience.
Text
Video Essays: Curating and Transforming Film Education through Artistic Research
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 26 September 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 November 2020
Published date: 13 November 2020
Keywords:
Artistic Research, Audiovisual Criticism, Decolonial, Pedagogy, Reflexivity, Video Essay
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 446255
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/446255
ISSN: 2183-9271
PURE UUID: d5574551-870c-4010-8802-9014fb4130c4
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 01 Feb 2021 17:32
Last modified: 05 Jun 2024 19:19
Export record
Altmetrics
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics