Art Meets Consumer Culture -seminar

13.06.2013 / 10:00 - 14:00
Sijainti: Yliopistonkatu 8, Lecture hall 16, Yliopistonkatu 8, 96100, Rovaniemi, FI

The aim of Art Meets Consumer Culture is to initiate a multidisciplinary dialogue on the role of art and the artist in consumer culture. 

The seminar is organized in collaboration with the University of Lapland, Faculty of Social Sciences, and it is free-of-charge.

All faculty and students are warmly welcome!

Time: June 13, 2013, 10-14

 

Program and schedule 

10.00-10.15 Opening and welcome, Prof. Anu Valtonen

Chair Prof. Anu Valtonen

10.15-11.00 Linda Lewis “The artist in the modern market”

11.00-11.45 Maria Huhmarniemi “Art as activism in the North”

11.45-12.30 Lunch

Chair Prof. Johanna Moisander

12.30-13.15 Fuat Firat “Art and the Modern Market”

13.15-14.00 Francis Joy “Selling Sámi culture and history to the tourist industry in Lapland”

 

Keynotes:

Linda Lewis received a Master of Fine Arts in 1997 from Arizona State University, USA. She is the recipient of a Fulbright Scholarship and a Nathan Cummings Foundation Fellowship. She has an extensive exhibition record that includes national and international juried exhibitions. She has had solo exhibitions at Blue Star Contemporary in San Antonio, TX, the Bath House Cultural Center in Dallas, Texas, the University of Arizona and Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, among others. Her work has been included in international juried exhibitions in Australia, Mexico, Japan, Denmark, England, France, Italy, and Romania, and national exhibitions throughout the United States. Lewis has had articles and reviews published in the Surface Design Journal, Fiberarts and American Craft. She currently owns and directs Santa Anita Gallery in McAllen, Texas and writes for her art blog Hidalgo Art Online and Olé Decor Magazine.

Maria Huhmarniemi is a lecturer in University of Lapland, Faculty of Art and Design. In her work as a visual artist, she engages with questions concerning the North, multiculturalism and community as well as environmental issues such as the relationship between people and nature and environmental responsibility. She makes use of old objects and textiles in her artworks, as well as recycled and natural materials. Research and art are intertwined in her work. The theme of her ongoing research for doctoral studies is integration of art, science and activism.

A Fuat Firat is professor of marketing at the University of Texas—Pan American, and Aalto Distinguished Visiting Professor of the Department of Communication at Aalto University School of Business. He completed his Ph.D. degree in marketing at Northwestern University. His research interests cover areas such as macro consumer behavior and macromarketing; postmodern culture; brands and branding; transmodern marketing strategies; gender and consumption; marketing and development; and interorganizational relations. His has won the Journal of Macromarketing Charles Slater Award for best article with co-author N. Dholakia, the Journal of Consumer Research best article award with co-author A. Venkatesh, and the Corporate Communications: An International Journal top ranked paper award with co-authors L.T. Christensen and J. Cornelissen. He has published several books including Consuming People: From Political Economy to Theaters of Consumption, co-authored by N. Dholakia, and is the founding editor of Consumption, Markets & Culture

Francis Joy, originally from Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, is currently a PhD student at the Faculty of Art and Design at the University of Lapland Arctic Centre. Francis, who has a background in religious studies and history, will bring his contribution to the seminar by combining the themes of religion, and religious experience expressed through Sámi shaman drum symbolism which has been cultivated through extensive research into Sámi history, cultural practices and history in northern Scandinavia. The presentation introduces a number of reproductions of the artwork on old Sámi shaman drums from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in Lapland, which were used by Sámi shamans for divination, healing and fortune-telling, as well as new inventions, which are marketed to souvenir shops and the tourist industry throughout Finland. Francis has had several scholarly articles published concerning Sámi shamanism, cultural history and religion. 

For more information, please contact anu.valtonen@ulapland.fi

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