试行创造性参与战略,与父亲探讨为人父母的主题

Iryna Culpin, Catherine Lamont-Robinson, Mark Billington, Matthew James, James Prewett, Gareth Ward, Mireia Bes Garcia, Giovanni Biglino
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引用次数: 0

摘要

艺术在健康领域的作用日益得到认可,以艺术为基础的参与式方法促进了公众的参与。然而,人们对男性参与基于艺术的参与式研究知之甚少。我们的目标是调查身为父亲的男性如何以创造性的方式参与其中,以探索为人父和为人母的体验。父亲们与一位艺术家合作,通过电话和电子邮件分享个人对父亲身份的看法,最终以创造性的方式表现父亲的身份。最初的对话是由 2020 年题为 "男性"(Masculinities)的展览目录(巴比肯中心,伦敦)中的图片引发的,邀请参与者对图片策划做出回应。这本画册既是衡量参与者创作倾向的艺术参考,也是促进关于父亲身份的个人意义的自发对话的基础。父亲们对当代艺术的体验千差万别;然而,所有父亲都自信地分享了他们的反应,包括摄影师对男性和父爱的表现,以及对这一非常特殊的策展中被排除或优先考虑的内容的看法。这些讨论进一步引出了关于父爱的表述的对话,并强调了父亲参与研究和公众参与的特定兴趣领域。艺术家通过电子邮件向每位参与者提供了反思,并在初步对话的基础上提供了艺术资源链接。最后的作品包括:围绕分享初为人父的脆弱而创作的音乐作品、代表为人父母的性别语言的文字云、代表父亲与孩子之间纽带的动画图形图像、突出父亲身份假设的诗歌短句组合、父亲和儿子早年经历的摄影记录,以及围绕为人父母的情商而创作的漫画。以艺术为基础的参与性活动捕捉到了现代社会中作为父亲的深层次体验,揭示了共同的文化和代际观点,同时也挖掘了独特的个人经历。这些独特反应的丰富性和多样性表明,以艺术为基础的方法可以促进公众与男性的接触,并引导人们对父亲和为人父母等复杂的社会建构现象进行深入思考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Piloting creative engagement strategies to explore themes of parenthood with fathers
The role of the arts in health is increasingly recognised, with participatory arts-based approaches facilitating public engagement. However, little is known about men's involvement in art-based participatory research. We aimed to investigate how men who are fathers may be engaged creatively to explore experiential aspects of fathering and parenthood.Fathers collaborated with an artist, sharing individual perspectives around fatherhood by telephone and email, leading up to creative representations of fatherhood. Initial conversations were prompted by images from a 2020 exhibition catalogue entitled “Masculinities” (Barbican Centre, London) inviting participants' responses to the photographic curation. The catalogue served as an artistic reference to gauge a sense of participants' creative predispositions, as well as a foundation to facilitate spontaneous dialogue about personal meanings of fatherhood. Fathers' experiences of contemporary arts varied greatly; yet all fathers confidently shared responses ranging from photographers' representation of masculinity and fatherhood and perceptions of what was excluded or privileged within this very specific curation. These discussions further led to conversations around representations of fatherhood and highlighted particular areas of interest in terms of fathers' involvement in research and public engagement. The artist provided reflections to each participant by email with links to arts resources building on the initial conversations. Two further shorter sessions followed as fathers' key messages emerged, and the final forms of their own creative expressions crystallised.The final pieces included a musical composition around sharing vulnerability as a new father, a word cloud to represent gendered language of parenthood, an animated graphic image representing the bond between father and child, a combination of short poetic stanzas highlighting assumptions around fatherhood, an experiential photographic record of a father and a son in the early years, and a cartoon strip around emotional intelligence in parenting.Arts-based participatory engagement enabled to capture deep-rooted experiences of being a father in modern society, illuminating common cultural and intergenerational perspectives, while also tapping into unique individual experiences. The richness and diversity of these unique responses suggest that arts-based methodology can facilitate public engagement with men and lead to deep reflections on complex and socially constructed phenomena such as fathering and parenthood.
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