Call for Papers | Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art, Special Issue, Ko Te Moananui-a-Kiwa te wahi whakarahi, The Pacific Ocean joins us all: 23.2, 2023
Submissions Due: Friday March 31, 2023
Editors: Ngarino Ellis and Heather Igloliorte
The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art (ANZJA) is calling for submissions to be a part of Issue 2, 2023, entitled, Ko Te Moananui-a-Kiwa te wahi whakarahi. The Pacific Ocean joins us all.
This Special Issue is edited by Ngarino Ellis and Heather Igloliorte.
ANZJA welcomes Indigenous curators, artists and art historians to submit material for the first Indigenous-led issue of the ANZJA.
Te Moananui-a-Kiwa invites Indigenous thinkers to compress distance in order to come together to celebrate, interrogate, shout, contemplate and/or critically analyse our arty and dynamic worlds.
In line with the notion of wananga/kōrero/talanoa/workshop we invite submissions including research articles of 5,000 to 7,000 words (including endnotes), which will be peer-reviewed, and shorter texts (2000 to 3000 words long) of book, exhibition, and conference reviews; reflections, commentaries and opinion pieces; and interviews by or between artists. We are especially keen to provide a platform for emerging Indigenous scholars, curators and artists, with whom the editors will work with to offer support during the peer-review process. If you have any questions please contact us via the email below.
ANZJA is committed to expanding the vocabularies and epistemologies of art history and associated fields.
Journal Aims and Scope
See the ANZJA submission guidelines for further details on style guide, peer-review process and so on. Submissions not conforming to the guidelines will not be considered.
ANZJA is published by Taylor & Francis and the Art Association of Australia and New Zealand (AAANZ). The journal is housed by UNSW Art & Design under the editorship of Dr Verónica Tello with the support of Professor Edward Scheer (Head of School) and an editorial committee comprising Professor Jennifer Biddle, Dr Diana Baker Smith, Dr Bianca Hester, Dr Astrid Lorange and José Da Silva. AAANZ is Australia and New Zealand’s professional body for art and design historians, arts writers, artists, students of art history and theory, and museum professionals. ANZJA is Australasia and Pacifica’s principal refereed art-history journal. The Journal is dedicated to the study of art history, art practice, theory and exhibitions.
For all queries regarding the submission process please contact ANZJA’s Managing Editor, Anastasia Murney, a.murney@unsw.edu.au
Image: Linden-Museum Stuttgart, Photograph by Dominik Drasdow.
You must be logged in to post a comment.