19th and 20th September 2019
Department of Architecture and Newnham College, University of Cambridge
Convenors:
François Penz (Cambridge)
Janina Schupp (Cambridge)
Suzanne MacLeod (Leicester)
Maureen Thomas (Lillehammer/Oslo)
Andong Lu (Nanjing)
£110 (delegate)/ £55 (student)
Visual Culture, especially cinema, has produced an unprecedented archive
of audio-visual records of everyday domestic practices in diverse cultures,
constituting a highly valuable resource for the study of lived spaces. This
conference will explore how the comparative analysis of visual culture
artefacts, from paintings to fiction films, can contribute to our understanding
of everyday life practices in homes around the globe.
The foundation for this proposed event is our 30-month AHRC research
project entitled ‘CineMuseSpace: A Cinematic Musée Imaginaire of Spatial
Cultural Differences’ for which this international conference will be the final
act (more information about the project can be found at
https://www.cinemusespace.arct.cam.ac.uk).
The aim of the ‘Slices of Everyday Lives’ conference is to investigate
and generate novel understandings of spatial cultural differences and new
awareness of everyday life across cultures. The conference will also provide an
opportunity to debate issues around the analysis of the everyday in visual
culture more broadly.
In addition, the event aims to explore the creation of innovative
technological methods for comparative approaches to the study of the everyday,
such as film databases and image-recognition technologies as well as the
preservation and dissemination of the everyday in museums and galleries.
By bringing together various disciplines engaged in the comparative
study of the everyday, the conference hopes to stimulate an exchange of
methodologies and help foster interdisciplinary collaboration.
The conference will take place over two days and will explore 4 themes:
Theme 1: The minor magic of everyday life – and its many facets
This theme investigates everyday practices through a number of
sub-themes including:
- Architecture and the everyday
- Everyday urbanism
- Spatial ethnography of everyday life
- Painterly practices and drawn representations of the ordinary
Theme 2: Cinematic representation of the practices of everyday life
This theme focuses on the everyday embedded in moving images, especially
cinema and includes sub-themes such as:
- Studies of everyday life across different cultures in fiction films
- Rhythmanalysis of everyday activities in films
- Emotions and atmospheres of the everyday in sound and image
- Cinematic studies of behaviour patterns and energy use
- Urban cinematics and the everyday
Theme 3: The future of the everyday imagination – new technologies of
representation
This theme explores the development of new technologies to study
existing visual culture material on the everyday. Sub-themes will focus in
particular on:
- Database cinema
- Cinemetrics – measuring the filmic parameters of the everyday
- AI approaches, such as language, sound, pattern and image recognition technologies used to examine everyday life practices
Theme 4: Musées imaginaires of everyday life – celebrating the ordinary
This theme looks into the role of museums, galleries and artists in
capturing and representing everyday objects and activities. Sub-themes include:
- Representation of the everyday in museums
- Theatrical performances of mundane activities
- Remediating and showcasing the everyday
We welcome abstracts of 300 words maximum in one of the four main
conference themes, with a perspective relating to one of the sub-themes.
Submissions should include the title of the paper and the name, affiliation,
short biography (100 words), e-mail address and full postal contact information
of the author. The final conference presentations should be of 20 minutes
length.
The abstracts should be sent as a Word doc or pdf file via e-mail to
cinemusespace@aha.cam.ac.uk, with the subject: ‘Slices of Everyday Lives Paper
Submission’. Please also indicate which of the listed sub-themes you would like
to contribute to. The deadline for abstract submissions is 19th June 2019 and
all applicants will be notified of the outcome by 2nd July 2019.
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