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Browsing by Subject "tekstiilitaide"

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  • Oivo, Marja (2020)
    The objective of this research was to describe autoethnographically the intecration points on my personal history´s narrative identities. Material comprises of work plans and work diaries, and the resulting artworks. The scope of the study reference frame was set around narrative identity consepts, integrated with the narrative identity of personality psychologist Dan McAdams (1995) and narrative identity theories of hermeneutic philosopher Paul Ricoeur (1992). The reference frame concerning the craft science was practice-led research where artist acts as researcher of his/her own work. Maarit Mäkelä´s dessertation (2003) ” Memories on Clay” has influenced this work. Mäkelä studied representations of subjective creating process and gender, and verbally described the creative process and the resulting artworks. Research questions: 1. How integration points of my personal history´s narrative identity are materializing into textile art? What kind of process it is? 2. How this research process is shaping my narrative identity? Methods The research material was composed of autoethnographical processing of my personal history´s narrative identity integration points. The work plans and work diaries material comprised 85 pages and included photographs from different stages of the process. During my research process, I created five piece of textile art based on the fragments of my personal narrative identity. I interpreted and analysed the process in the course of it (reflection-in-action) and retrospectively (reflection-on-action) applying to the practice-led research. Results and conclusuions The outcome of this study were five textile art works.
  • Kumpulainen, Saara (2012)
    The purpose of the study was to research miniature textiles as to their history and development as art objects. The study of history focused on the definition of miniature textile, explanation of the phenomenon, and nature of the exhibitions. The data consisted of documents from the London exhibitions of 1974, 1976, 1978 and 1980, and from the Finnish exhibitions of 1984, 1986, 1989 and 2006. The documents were exhibition catalogs, press releases, and articles. The study of miniature textiles as art objects concentrated on the change of their technical and representational characteristics. The researcher documented 99 works of art shown at the Eighth International Baltic Mini Textile Triennial in Gdynia, in August 2010. They were compared with the miniature textiles as documented by the catalog of the First international exhibition of miniature textiles in London, in 1974. The only previous Finnish study on miniature textiles is a thesis written at the University of Art and Design, in 1985. The study follows the strategy of a historical case study. In the analysis, two different methodical approaches were used. Discourse analysis was applied to the study of written documents, while content analysis and typological analysis were used to study pictorial material. ATLAS.ti.6.1 was used as a software tool. The study showed that the definition of miniature textile was very similar in the London and Finnish data, although there were some differences of emphasis. A miniature textile is an object of textile art that can be made of any material with any technique and does not exceed 20 cm by 20 cm by 20 cm in size. The small amount of resources required to make a miniature textile has liberated the artist to experiment with something new, and that is seen to explain the strength of the phenomenon. Low transport costs have helped to arrange international exhibitions. The data revealed a conflict in the question if a miniature textile could be a scale model or not. There were altogether 221 participants in the London exhibitions and 87 in the Finnish exhibitions. In both series of exhibitions, there were persons who were both artists and jury members in the same year. According to the typological criteria developed in the study, there were 14 different types of miniature textile in the Gdynia exhibition. The scope of techniques and materials was larger than in the first London exhibition. The study showed that miniature textiles reflected trends in contemporary textile art.