Artivismo y compromiso social: Transformar la formación del profesorado desde la sensibilidad
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Abstract
Este artículo consiste en una investigación sobre comisariados de carácter artivista y pedagógico (2007-17) que ha sido desarrollada
por artistas contemporáneos, profesores universitarios y estudiantes de la facultad de educación, docentes en activo y alumnado
de infantil, primaria y secundaria. Pretende visibilizar una serie de proyectos de investigación artística financiados por instituciones
públicas, con el reto de modificar la formación del profesorado. Uno de los resultados de esta experimentación se ha
plasmado en exposiciones en museos y centros de arte contemporáneo de reconocido prestigio. Estos proyectos, basados en el
artivismo contemporáneo, rompen las barreras académicas y las rutinas obsoletas en la formación del profesorado. Han conseguido
expandir los modelos docentes más allá del espacio del aula, como emergencia de lo colectivo y del interés educativo en
lo procomún. Se empleó la artografía como una metodología de investigación que desvela las tres identidades interconectadas del
«artista, investigador y profesor», como aquella persona que, en su acción docente, es capaz de desarrollar una práctica creadora
con su alumnado a través de procesos experimentales en la investigación artística. La artografía genera un espacio de aprendizaje
para el quiebre de significados educativos. Es en esta zona intermedia de provocación intelectual, en donde los comisarios plantean
proyectos artivistas capaces de generar tácticas de proximidad entre dos campos aparentemente separados, el del arte y la
educación
This article incorporates research involving artivist and pedagogical curatorships (2007-17) that were developed by contemporary artists, university professors, students from the Faculty of Education, practising teachers and students from nursery, elementary and secondary school. It intends to showcase a series of artistic research projects financed by public institutions, facing the challenge of transforming teacher training. These contemporary artivism-based projects have been able to break academic barriers and obsolete routines in teacher training. One of the results of this experimentation has been materialised in exhibitions at renowned museums and contemporary art centres. They have managed to expand teaching models beyond the classroom space, as the emergence of the collective and the educational interest in the commons. A/r/tography was used as a research methodology that unveils the three interconnected identities of the “artist, researcher and teacher” as the person who, in his or her teaching practice, is capable of developing a creative practice with students through experimental processes in artistic research. A/r/tography generates a learning space where educational concepts can be broken. It is in this intermediate zone of intellectual incitement that curators propose artivist projects capable of generating tactics of proximity between two apparently separate fields: art and education
This article incorporates research involving artivist and pedagogical curatorships (2007-17) that were developed by contemporary artists, university professors, students from the Faculty of Education, practising teachers and students from nursery, elementary and secondary school. It intends to showcase a series of artistic research projects financed by public institutions, facing the challenge of transforming teacher training. These contemporary artivism-based projects have been able to break academic barriers and obsolete routines in teacher training. One of the results of this experimentation has been materialised in exhibitions at renowned museums and contemporary art centres. They have managed to expand teaching models beyond the classroom space, as the emergence of the collective and the educational interest in the commons. A/r/tography was used as a research methodology that unveils the three interconnected identities of the “artist, researcher and teacher” as the person who, in his or her teaching practice, is capable of developing a creative practice with students through experimental processes in artistic research. A/r/tography generates a learning space where educational concepts can be broken. It is in this intermediate zone of intellectual incitement that curators propose artivist projects capable of generating tactics of proximity between two apparently separate fields: art and education







