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Performing With the Database: Art Geography Approaches to Research on the Data, Trade, Place, Values Nexus, 2015-2017
Creator
Crutchlow, P, University of Exeter
Study number / PID
855850 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-855850 (DOI)
Data access
Restricted
Series
Not available
Abstract
This qualitative data collection comprises eight interviews and two group conversations collected as part of the doctoral study: Museum of Contemporary Commodities (MoCC): a research performance. The project worked with partners in London and Exeter between 2015-17 to co-produce a series of site responsive, digitally interactive and relational encounters that were devised and staged between commodities, 'consumers' and everyday retail spaces. These resulting qualitative data examine how these events and encounters were realised and to what effects ie. how the people participating perceived both the event and contemporary commodity cultures and their consequences through the lens of their encounter with the project.
Accompanying documentation for this data set includes a ‘MoCC zine’ that documents the journey of the project and the process and methods involved in its co-production.The social and environmental consequences of what has been termed the 'prolific present' are increasingly well documented. Overflowing and abundant, material and intangible commodities are arriving from factories, onto container ships, into warehouses, onto screens, into shops and through homes, into charity shops, recycling yards and waste dumps. An important part of managing and growing this flow of 'stuff' is the capturing, measuring and computational valuing of our consumption practices. How these data processes are constructed, with whose values and to whose profit, and with what impact and to whose detriment, is often obsfuscated or hidden from public scrutiny. If these processes are unknown to us, how can we make informed decisions on how we participate in them? Understanding and challenging the deeply connected and largely invisible relationships between data, trade, places and values has thus become an urgent matter of concern.
My practice-led PhD 'Museum of Contemporary Commodities (MoCC): a research performance', combined social art practice with geographic methods to...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
26/03/2015 - 03/10/2017
Country
United Kingdom
Time dimension
Not available
Analysis unit
Event/process
Universe
Not available
Sampling procedure
Not available
Kind of data
Text
Data collection mode
Data were gathered through mixed methods including participant observation, interviews, anonymous ‘feedback’ forms distributed at events. Visitors were invited to discuss their experience of the artwork and the thoughts it provoked with the researcher and project collaborators during their MoCC visit. Experiences and observations of the artwork and visitor encounters with it were then reflected on by project collaborators with the researcher through interviews and group conversations.
Funding information
Grant number
ES/V012185/1
Access
Publisher
UK Data Service
Publication year
2022
Terms of data access
The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.