Page 80 - Constructing Craft
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apart  from  being  élitist,  to  argue  that  the  useless  things  be
                        called  art,  and  the  useful,  craft.  These  distinctions  are
                        reflections  in  the  art  world  of  older,  more  hieratic,  class
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                        societies, and have no place in a modern democratic society.

               Smith then linked the abandonment of the distinction with changes to arts and crafts

               education and suggested that students should be required to study both art and,

               ideally, two crafts so they could become flexible. Smith’s call for a more conciliatory
               approach to the division in some ways reflected the movement of the debate over

               the previous thirty to forty years. The earlier discussion had taken place almost

               exclusively on the pre-Second World War, Northern Hemisphere stage where art
               was compared to traditional craft. When Smith presented his ideas it was in the

               Southern Hemisphere in a less class-conscious society and craft was no longer
               bound by traditional restraints. In addition, in Australia craft education was

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               becoming more common and establishing a more formal academic structure  – a
               trend that New Zealand followed in the 1980s.



               Pierre Bourdieu

               Discussion on the art/craft debate in New Zealand before the 1990s did not call on
               the ideas of the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu to any great extent. This was

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               largely because his work had not been widely translated into English,  his writing –
               even in translation – was particularly dense and his research into French cultural

               taste and the relationship between cultural preference and class seemed too

               obscure and remote for any meaningful analysis of art and craft in New Zealand.
               However, his writings offer a theory of human interaction that help explain why

               craftspeople in New Zealand found it so difficult to be accepted into the world of fine

               art.


               Bourdieu’s work emphasised social and cultural factors in maintaining established
               patterns of social stratification and power. He explained society as a social space

               where people exist in relation to one another primarily based on economic capital
               (money and property); cultural capital (cultural goods and services, and  educational

               credentials); social capital (networks and acquaintances) and symbolic capital which

               is identified with the components of legitimacy such as honour, prestige and
               recognition.  Symbolic capital could also be linked to other elements that are

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