Artists Communities:
a directory of residencies in the United States that offer time and
space for creativity
Intro by Stanley Kunitz
Pub: Alliance of Artists Communities 1996 £13.50
Interesting short introductory pieces including what is an artists
community and accounts of residency experiences, then the main part
of the book is a well-laid out directory.
Art & Illusion:
A study in the psychology of pictorial representation
By E H Gombrich
Pub Phaidon 6th Edition 2002 ISBN 0714842087 £14.95 [£20.67
inc p&p]
A classic study of image-making. First published in the 1960s, the text
applies the findings of experimental science to the understanding of
art and in tackling complex ideas and theoretical issues, Gombrich is
rigorous; yet he always retains a sense of wonder at the inexhaustible
capacity of the human brain, and at the subtlety of the relationships
involved in seeing the world and in making and seeing art.
Art Worlds
By Howard S. Becker
Pub University of California Press 1982 ISBN 0520 05218-8 £12.95
[£15.05 inc p&p]
By art world, the author (a sociologist) means the network
of people whose cooperative activity, organised via their joint knowledge
of conventional means of doing things, produces the kind of arts works
that art world is noted for. From Titian to Comic-Strips, Hollywood
film scores and rock and roll tunes as well as Beethoven and Mozart
the scope of his analysis is wide. The focus on the networks
breaks from the traditional focus of sociology of art being the art
or artist. An important study well-worth reading.
Art: What Is
It Good For? Debating Matters
By David
Lee, Ricardo Floodsky, Andre McIlroy
Pub Hodder
& Stoughton with the Institute of Ideas 2002 ISBN 0340848375
out of print
A neat little
format ' six essays each taking an individual swipe at big issues '
arts for art's sake, or art as an accountable social activity, artists
as other or engaged with the real world, conceptual art v traditional
art. Interpretation v arts speaks for itself. All focus
on the visual arts and its relationship to the contemporary world '
a must read if you are engaged in the management of art now. Review
But
is it Art? An introduction to art theory
By Cynthia Freeland
Pub Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0192853678 £8.99 [£12
inc p&p]
A fascinating little book about what art is, what it means and why we
value it. The author covers a vast diversity of art, starting with present
day works, then backtracking to arts history and finally taking
in a global spread. She explains arts relationship with beauty,
culture, money, sex, and new technology. Review
Common Threads Uncommon People
By Jennifer Williams
Pub Centre for Creative Communities 2004 ISBN 095147636X £12 [£15.59 inc p&p]
The Creative
Age - Knowledge and Skills for the new economy
by Kimberley Seltzer and Tom Bentley
Pub Demos 1999 £9.95 ISBN 1 898309701
Creativity is what we need to thrive in the new knowledge economy. It
is not a matter of what we know, but can we apply our knowledge creatively,
and creatively can be learntt. This book calls for a major overhaul
of the National Curriculum as part of its radically different view of
education.
Drawing on the
Right Side of the Brain: How to Unlock Your Hidden Talent
By Betty Edwards
Pub Harper
Collins ISBN 0 00 638114 6 £14.99 [£20.19 inc p&p]
Drawing
on the Artist Within: How to Release Your Hidden Creativity
By Betty Edwards
Pub Harper
Collins 1986 ISBN 0 00 637264 3 £14.99 [£18.65 inc p&p]
The results of an art teacher becoming fascinated by the problem of
helping people to learn how to draw and finding out about new brain
research into the functioning of the right and left hemispheres of the
brain. This book is both an impressive system by which to teach yourself
to draw and provides evidence-based arguments on a new look at the art
of seeing. The author explores how looking at things in order to draw
them accesses a different way of seeing and thinking, and this can then
be applied more generally. A classic, very impressive, and beautifully
illustrated.
The Effective
Use of Role-Play: Practical Techniques for Improving Learning
By Morry van Ments
Pub Kogan Page 1999 second edition ISBN 074942799X £19.99 [£23.55
inc p&p]
Roleplay is a powerful and effective learning tool if used well.
This comprehensive study, now in its second edition, is based on a sound
theoretical understanding and provides valuable practical guidance on
the place of role-play in teaching and training, types of role-play
and their strengths and weaknesses, how to allocate roles and brief
participants, running role-play sessions and debriefing.
Engineers of the Imagination: The Welfare State Handbook
Ed by Tony Coult & Baz Kershaw
Pub Methuen Revised & Updated Edition 1990 ISBN 0413528006 £12.99 [£17.02 inc p&p]
A wonderful book that is both inspirational and very practical. The book records the work of the enduringly successful company Welfare State International and is fascinating as a historical account of street and participatory arts. It is also crammed full of practical information. In the core techniques section, it covers lanterns, puppets, bonfires, big towers, scaffolding, flags, puppets on cars, costumes and ceremonial food.
Handbook
of Creativity
Ed Robert
J Sternberg
Pub Cambridge
University Press 1999 ISBN 0 521 57604 0 £22.95 [£27.86 inc p&p]
This book aims to provide the most comprehensive, definitive and authoritative
single volume review available in the field of creativity. 22 chapters,
written by a wide range of leading behavioural scientists, are accessible
to all those interested in creative thinking in both the arts and sciences.
The first part sets out the major themes and reviews the history of
thinking about creativity. Subsequent parts deal with methods, origins,
self and environment, special topics and conclusions.
Hare Brain Tortoise
Mind: why intelligence increases when you think less
By G Claxton
Pub Fourth Estate 1997 ISBN 1857027094 £7.99
The human brain will do a number of unusual, interesting and important
things - if given time. As described in this book, there is evidence
from cognitive science and elsewhere that it will learn patterns of
a degree of subtlety which normal, purposeful, busy consciousness cannot
even see, let alone master; it will make sense out of hazy, ill-defined
situations which leave everyday rationality flummoxed; and it will sometimes
come up with solutions to complicated predicaments that are wise rather
than merely clever. The book explores these slower ways of knowing and
explains how we could, or should, use them more often and more effectively.
House of Games:
Making theatre from everyday life
By Chris Johnston
Pub: Nick Hern Books 1998 ISBN 1854593099 £9.99 [£13.36
inc p&p]
A valuable source book for drama leaders, facilitators and theatre directors.
The techniques which are discussed draw widely from the very best contemporary
theatre practice. The book follows on from Keith Johnstone s Impro
and Augusto Boals Games for Actors and Non Actors. It includes
contributions from several leading facilitators. The three sections
cover Foundations the essential understandings which underpin
drama work. Facilitation the responsibilities and challenges
of facilitating a group. Animations games and exercises for impro,
narrative, imagework, movement and devising performance.
On Creativity:
Interviews Exploring the Process
By John Tusa
Pub Methuen 2004 2nd edition ISBN 0413773485 £8.99
What do we mean by creativity? Can we define it, or at least say what
its distinguishing features are? Whey does it matter? What separates
the genuinely creative artist from the rest of us? These questions are
explored in interviews with some of the greatest creative minds of our
time: Howard Hodgkin, Anthony Caro, Elliott Carter, Eve Arnold, David
Sylvester, Nicholas Grimshaw, Milos Forman, Paula Rego, Harrison Birtwistle,
Frank Auerbach, Tony Harrison, Muriel Spark. There is also an interesting
piece by John Tusa himself on Creativity. To be reviewed.
Ultimate Book
of Business Creativity: 50 Great Thinking Tools for Transforming
Your Business
By Ros Jay
Pub Capstone
ISBN 18411 20669 £12.99 [£16.29 inc p&p]
After a short and interesting introduction to creativity, the rest of
the book is a toolkit of 50 neat ideas to develop creative thinking.
Each idea is clearly explained in practical terms ready for use. There
is a huge range, from the well-known to unknown, from the esoteric and
to the wacky.
Six Thinking
Hats
By Edward de Bono
Pub Penguin 1985/revised 1999£7.99 ISBN 0140296662
A powerful little book that is a best-seller and a classic worldwide.
Six different coloured hats are used to symbolise six different modes
of thinking. A simple and practical method of using these modes introduces
parallel thinking instead of argument and allows groups
to develop better ideas and reach better decision in a fraction of the
usual time. Based on an understanding of how the brain works, the six
hats method allows the fullest use to be made of everyones intelligence,
experience and information. Well worth reading and implementing.
Strange
and Charmed: Science and the Contemporary Visual Arts
Ed Sian Ede
Pub Gulbenkian
ISBN 0 903319 87 X 2000 £10.99 [£14.99 inc p&p] Review
Art Not Chance:
Nine Artists' Diaries
Ed Paul Allen
Pub: Gulbenkian Foundation 2001 0903319942 £8.50
This book has grown out of the Gulbenkian Foundations grants programme
Time to Experiment to encourage professional artists (from
all art forms) to set aside time simply to test new concepts. Nine artists
were asked to keep a regular record of how they make their work and
here are the results in diary form. They make fascinating reading, provide
insights into artists processes, and much food for thought. Review
The Tastemakers
UK Art Now
By Rosie Millard
Pub: Scriber UK 2001 ISBN 0743231635 £9.99
A funny and irreverent survey of the current British art scene by the
BBC Arts Correspondent Rosie Millard. Mostly visual art, with some coverage
of theatre, design and architecture.
Eyes
on Stalks
By John Fox
Pub Methuen 2002 ISBN 0413761908 £14.99 [£19.82 inc p&p]
This delightful book tells the stories of two families – the author’s family and the Welfare State International family. (See also Engineers of the Imagination). John Fox provides a vivid account of the company’s working practices over the last thirty years. There’s humour, there’s politics and local planning issues, there’s funding challenges, fire structures, the building of their Lantern-house home and on a more serious note, naming ceremonies and funerals. Illustrated with photos and the author’s own drawings.
Passage
By Andy Goldsworthy
Pub Thames & Hudson 2004 ISBN 0500511918 £35 [£43.03 inc p&p]
Silent Spaces
By Chris Drury
Pub Thames & Hudson 2004 ISBN 0500284830 £24.95 [£31.36 inc p&p]
Crash Course
in Creativity
By Brian Clegg & Paul Birch
Pub Kogan Page 2002 ISBN 0749438339 £14.99 [£18.55 inc p&p]
The Art of Looking
Sideways
By Alan Fletcher
Pub Phaidon 2001 ISBN 071483449 £24.95 [£29.95 inc p&p]
Visualizations:
The Nature Book of Art and Science
By Martin Kemp
Pub Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 9780198564768 £20 [£25.10]
Private
Views: Artists Working Today
Ed by Judith Palmer
Pub Serpent's Tail 2004 ISBN 185242821X
Interviews with and essays by, a wide range of contemporary artists - across all art forms. "And they said you’d never make it… celebrating Britain’s top artists". There are moving personal stories and humorous observations that confound many of the received myths about the life of the artist, and show shared patterns of experience and outlook across disciplines and generations. To be reviewed.
Managing The Mavericks: Nurturing creative talents
By Kaye Thorne
Pub Spiro Press 2003 ISBN 1904298486 £14.99 [£18.49 inc p&p]
It is likely that many of those who browse SAM’s Books website will recognize something of themselves in this intriguing book. Whether you are either managing mavericks or are one yourself – or both - this will offer ideas for unleashing the creative potential for all those who are able to think ‘outside the box’. It comes with case studies and ideas to enable the fostering of entrepreneurial talent which can be used for both personal growth and to enhance and develop your organisation through innovative people.
Inspirational Leadership: Timeless insights from Shakespeare’s greatest leader
By Richard Olivier
Pub Spiro Press 2004 ISBN 1904298214 £10.99 [£14.49 inc p&p]
Henry V is Shakespeare’s greatest leader – inspired and inspiring, visionary yet pragmatic, powerful yet responsible. The book draws on Richard Olivier’s intimate knowledge of the play and its absorbing central character, to unmask the secrets of inspirational leadership and reveal the timeless lessons it holds for managers and leaders today.
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Arts Council
England has produced a free downloadable publication
| Artists
in figures |
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This
report provides information on the size of the artistic
labour force, artists employment status, employment
tenure, unemployment, their working hours, pay and multiple
job-holding. It also describes the characteristics of artists;
their gender, age, educational qualifications and where
they live.
Published: 2003
http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/information/publications_recent.php
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