28 October – 1pm – The Learning Room of the Hatton Gallery
In relation to artists’ placements and the role of artists in urban and rural planning this talk will explore what we might mean by ‘practice’ and the potential of practice(s). To trace practice as it takes place in different formations and scales this storied session will draw from ethnographic collaborations between artists, academics and planners in Berwick upon Tweed and The Holy Island of Lindisfarne amongst other examples.
Dr Crawshaw holds an undergraduate in Fine Art and PhD in Planning and Landscape. Her interdisciplinary research combines the fields of art and planning and increasingly art and organisation also. She is Associate Professor in the Department of Arts at Northumbria University where she is Head of Subject for Arts Practice and Conservation. She is author of ‘Art Worlding: Planning Relations’ (2022) published by Routledge.
If you are interested in attending, please email hatton.friends@btinternet.com.
Please note, the talk is free for members and £5 for non-members.

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