Improvisation as a sustainable approach in Service Design for Sensitive Contexts

Margin to Margin: Women living on the edges of the world is an art and research project that took place in 2016-2017 between four geographical margins: outback South Australia, Finnish Lapland, Russian Kola Peninsula and Namibia. The project is an art and research collaboration between artist commun...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Suoheimo, Mari Eveliina, Sarantou, Melanie
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/f20a4b8c-61fc-4bc1-b192-c5cb83892ecc
Description
Summary:Margin to Margin: Women living on the edges of the world is an art and research project that took place in 2016-2017 between four geographical margins: outback South Australia, Finnish Lapland, Russian Kola Peninsula and Namibia. The project is an art and research collaboration between artist communities with the goal to explore the relationship between art-making and empowerment of artefact makers living and working ‘on the edges’. The aims of the project include the understanding of realities marginalised communities face whilst giving voice to these communities by exhibiting their art in various formats. This paper explores the role of improvisation in art-based processes with Indigenous communities in Fowlers Bay, South Australia where one of the project’s workshops were conducted in 2016. Similar to the improvised processes used in going about everyday activities, the connective function of improvisation allows art makers to negotiate, take risks, unmake and remake artwork so that they are able to flow from one moment in a process to the next, thus negotiating the ways they work. The methodological approach of this paper will draw on art-based methods, ethnographic observations and visual documentation (photo and video). The value of this paper is that although the role of improvisation’s connective function in art making processes is highlighted, this connective role also enables Indigenous artists to connect with other Indigenous and cross-cultural groups as was demonstrated in the Margin to Margin project. Therefore, the paper present a practical framework for the enabling of flexible improvisatory methods that ensures connectivity in complex contexts during fieldwork.