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Tradition Innovations in Arts, Design, and Media Higher Education Releases Second Part of Special Issue on AI

a2ru News, Cross-disciplinary, Interdisciplinary

Aug 12, 2024

Tradition Innovations in Arts, Design, and Media Higher Education, a new open access, peer-reviewed online journal created collaboratively by a2ru and a2ru partner institution University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV), has the second installment in its three-part inaugural special edition on “Artificial Intelligence and Possible Futures for the Arts.”

The issue asks: How are recent innovations in Artificial Intelligence (AI)—ones that change art processes and appear to produce creative works—transforming the creation of art and knowledge? The pace of these innovations and the discussions surrounding them challenge traditions in the arts, design, and media fields and encourage (if not force) us to consider the possible futures of the arts. The first part of the issue, released in October 2023, has garnered over 2000 downloads from 69 countries since its debut.

The newly-released articles include:

  • “Teaching Creatives to be A.I. Provocateurs: Establishing a Digital Humanist Approach for Generative A.I. in the Classroom” by Joshua A. Fisher (Ball State University”
  • “The Voice Actor and Their Double: Working as a voice actor and teaching voice acting in the age of AI voice cloning” by Adam Paul (University of Nevada Las Vegas)
  • “Generative Algorithms for Art and Architecture: A Collaborative Teaching Approach” by Sam Keene and Benjamin Aranda (The Cooper Union)
  • “Generative AI and the Role of Educators in the Creative Arts” by Leah Howd (Willem de Kooning Academie)

The issue’s cover image, seen above, was created by UNLV’s Josh Vermillion using a workflow described in his article in this special issue.

The journal is freely available to download from UNLV’s Digital Scholarship platform.

Read and Download the Issue

About Tradition Innovations in Arts, Design, and Media Higher Education

How can we build a future for teaching/mentoring creative work and research that honors core disciplinary traditions, supports interdisciplinary collaborations, and enhances transdisciplinary work? How can evolving digital technologies foster innovation in the interwoven work of teaching-researching-creating, while supporting the best of traditional practices in arts, design, and media disciplines?

Tradition Innovations in Arts, Design and Media Higher Education provides a multimedia forum to address this and connected questions by exploring how creative work, teaching/mentoring, and knowledge creation/research are linked and in conversation with one another.

In a rapidly changing world – socially, ecologically, technologically – educators are constantly forging new techniques and innovative practices. We saw this in the crucible of the pandemic, as educators in arts, design, and media disciplines rapidly explored and developed creative solutions as they shifted from in-person to remote teaching, researching, and creating.

Art, design, and media faculty adapted centuries-old teaching traditions to new technologies and in new contexts that were themselves changing rapidly. These “tradition-innovations” continue to transform higher education in response to evolving challenges.

The journal’s founding editor is Yvonne Houy, Learning Technologist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The Editorial Board is an international, interdisciplinary cohort of scholars and practitioners in the arts, design, humanities, and information sciences.

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