This practice led-research proposes an investigation into our relationship with the viewing screen – the typically rectangular form used to access digital media. This agenda is realised through an experimental body of fine art practice, centered on video artworks and digital installations that seek to disrupt perceptual and spatial conventions when viewing screen-based digital image.
The viewing screen is a ubiquitous tool in our everyday, a formal presence in the workplace, at home, and in public spaces. The result of this ubiquity is a desensitisation towards the screens presence. Instead, a hierarchy of viewership is formed – focus on images preceding focus on the screen structures that deliver them. Furthermore, the use of the screen in an assortment of contexts results in the dissolution of public and private spatial binaries.
These notions support the practice-led nature of the research investigation. Challenging the viewers established relationship with the screen, provoking a re-evaluation of the way they engage with it both from a spatial and perceptual standpoint may encourage a change in viewership of screen-based image in a society increasingly entwined with digital imagery.
This PhD is a combined practice and theoretical exploration that aims to identify and document photographically the nature and consequences of this economic decline in the form of a visual narrative that will raise awareness of these problems and the potential for regeneration.
This research project seeks to interrogate and reframe the thinking of horror through a rigorous engagement with its formal limits.
Jonathan P. Watts (he/him) is a fully-funded PhD candidate at Norwich University of the Arts supervised by Professor Simon Willmoth and Professor Jo Melvin at Chelsea College of Arts, University of the Arts London.
A love of secondhand clothing lies at the core of this research project.
This PhD by curatorial practice focuses on a group of embroidered textile testimonies made at the turn of the twentieth century by an inmate of the Female Lunatic Ward of Great Yarmouth Workhouse.
Roger Ackling – Work and Teaching 1969 to 2014 This PhD by curatorial practice focuses on the work of British artist Roger Ackling (1947 – 2014). Ackling’s career is notable for his artistic practice and his long and influential teaching career. The research aims to understand his work in relation to Land Art, Minimalist and Conceptual Art movements and the impact of his practice on artists he worked with and taught.
New perspectives on VJ practice: The art of performing moving image
The Work of Richard Seifert & Denys Lasdun: A Comparative Study of Their Buildings and Reputations.
Interrogating Artist-Teacher identity formation in Adult Community Learning
Spectral Shores: vanishing places and haunted spaces. Coastal Erosion and its effect on perceptions of time and the cultural construction of coastal landscapes
In Transition: People, landscape and nature in the East Anglian edgelands