Fantasy in Public
Author(s)
Primary Supervisor
Burton, Laini
Younger, Jay
Year published
2018
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This thesis consists of artworks and an exegesis in response to the question: How can the appeal of advertising narratives aimed at contemporary Australian youth culture be scrutinised through restaging narrative content? The exegesis will be structured around a chronological reflection on studio outcomes, interspersing evaluation of exhibited works with relevant theoretical frameworks and significant practices within this field of research. In response to the dense implicit ideological content of narrative in advertising and the historical field of cultural texts responding to consumer capitalism, the central argument of ...
View more >This thesis consists of artworks and an exegesis in response to the question: How can the appeal of advertising narratives aimed at contemporary Australian youth culture be scrutinised through restaging narrative content? The exegesis will be structured around a chronological reflection on studio outcomes, interspersing evaluation of exhibited works with relevant theoretical frameworks and significant practices within this field of research. In response to the dense implicit ideological content of narrative in advertising and the historical field of cultural texts responding to consumer capitalism, the central argument of this exegesis will formulate a practical research methodology that enacts sustained scrutiny of an advertisement’s narrative appeal. In working towards a research methodology, this exegesis will assess the potential of appropriative art production to critically respond to contemporary youth-oriented advertising. Taking into account the pervasiveness of oppositional and ironically complicit narratives within contemporary advertising culture, this research will use a method of appropriation as over-identification to restage advertising narratives that relate to my personal experience, my identity and the values of my community.
View less >
View more >This thesis consists of artworks and an exegesis in response to the question: How can the appeal of advertising narratives aimed at contemporary Australian youth culture be scrutinised through restaging narrative content? The exegesis will be structured around a chronological reflection on studio outcomes, interspersing evaluation of exhibited works with relevant theoretical frameworks and significant practices within this field of research. In response to the dense implicit ideological content of narrative in advertising and the historical field of cultural texts responding to consumer capitalism, the central argument of this exegesis will formulate a practical research methodology that enacts sustained scrutiny of an advertisement’s narrative appeal. In working towards a research methodology, this exegesis will assess the potential of appropriative art production to critically respond to contemporary youth-oriented advertising. Taking into account the pervasiveness of oppositional and ironically complicit narratives within contemporary advertising culture, this research will use a method of appropriation as over-identification to restage advertising narratives that relate to my personal experience, my identity and the values of my community.
View less >
Thesis Type
Thesis (PhD Doctorate)
Degree Program
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
School
Queensland College of Art
Copyright Statement
The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
Subject
Advertising narratives
Contemporary Australian
Youth culture
Art production
Exhibited works
Theoretical frameworks
Significant practices