Online Only Poster Session


You must sign in to view content.

Sign In

Sign In

Sign Up

Moderator
Yeohyun Ahn, Assistant Professor, Art, University of Wisconsin Madison, Indiana, United States

The Malonga Casquelourd Center for the Arts and Arts Hospitality in Oakland, California View Digital Media

Poster Session
Selena Chau  

The 1927 Oakland Women's City Club has endured for over 90 years. Tracing its cultural and performing arts history considers its use within the local context of population and economic fluxes, and questions the future sustainability of arts organizations. This building was not built exclusively for the arts but was reimagined in the 1980s as a city-owed arts center that housed the Oakland Ensemble Theatre: the city's first and only professional black theater company. Now called the Malonga Casquelourd Center for the Arts, its new identity as an arts center persists owing to the advocacy of community performing arts groups who used the building. Currently, city financial support and grants helps prevent the displacement of its current residents, the Malonga Arts Collective. Hospitality, belonging, and gathering are themes that are reflected in the changing views and uses of this Oakland, California building. The city of Oakland promotes its vibrant arts community as a way to welcome new business and residents, while arts groups with a sense of belonging in this building and city must continuously find ways to work and live in their city.

Space as Kant’s a Priori Categories in Wilhelm Worringer’s Methodology : Influence on the German Expressionists View Digital Media

Poster Session
Roksana Gumerova  

In his 1908 book “Abstraction and Empathy: A Contribution to the Psychology of Style”, Wilhelm Robert Worringer sets out his methodology. According to Worringer, all art is divided into two types: figurative, the creation of which is preceded by the impulse to empathy, and non-figurative, the aesthetic prerequisite of which is the will to abstraction. The book is often associated with German Expressionism. However, the prevailing scholarly consensus on the influence of Worringer on German Expressionism remains contentious. While Ursula Helg, Thomas Röske, Richard Hamann, Ulrich Weisstein contend for the substantiated influence of Worringer on German Expressionism, David Morgan, Michael Jennings demure, asserting that attributing Worringer to the primary ideologues of German Expressionism is misguided. In order to answer the question of whether Worringer could have been an influence on German Expressionism, it is necessary to turn to the conceptual origins of the will to abstraction. The will to abstraction is preceded, according to Worringer, by an immense spiritual fear of space, and one of the conceptual origins of the formation of the will to abstraction is the understanding of space as an a priori category of contemplation set out in the teachings of Kant. Another conceptual source of the will to abstraction is fear as understood by Kierkegaard. Consideration of the conceptual origins leads to the conclusion that German Expressionism, based mainly on Nietzsche, Schopenhauer and Bergson, and Worringer's methodology have different foundations.

The Interweaving of Culture and Religion: A Deep Analysis of Medieval Art and Thought View Digital Media

Poster Session
Jiahui Zhao  

This study discusses the relationship between art and religion, focusing on the analysis of artistic emotions and aesthetic experiences in the context of medieval religion, and the influence and evolution of Christianity on medieval music. The research aims to re-examine the interplay between religious beliefs, cultural practices and artistic creations, emphasising their profound influence on the structure of society. It first describes the close relationship between art and modes of production, social order and religion. Then, the emotional changes in the aesthetic of medieval art under the intertwining of different cultural, philosophical and religious ideas were analysed, emphasising the profound influence of religion on artistic expression, especially the understanding of beauty within the theological framework of Christianity. Finally, taking the field of medieval music as an example, the evolution of medieval music from monophony to polyphony is discussed, and how Christianity promoted the development of music and its important role in church services is analysed. The research results show that Christianity has had a profound influence on shaping Western culture, moral systems and art forms. This study, which is based in the fields of art history and philosophy, provides a new academic perspective on the period by re-examining the way in which religion and culture shaped medieval art. The research methods include literature review, text analysis and theoretical re-construction, combined with the study of medieval religious texts and works of art, to analyse their role in artistic creation.

Digital Media

Discussion board not yet opened and is only available to registered participants.