Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
About this portal
The portal of the Norwegian Artistic Research Programme is used to disseminate research which is done directly affiliated with the research fellowship programme or the project programme. Although there is no other reviewing connected to the publishing, the aim is to give access to research done in or connected to Norwegian artistic research environments.
contact person(s):
Ingrid Milde ,
Geir Strøm ,
Linda H. Lien ,
Jonas Howden Sjøvaag url:
https://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/2428875/2428876
Recent Issues
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2023. 2023
Contains research published in 2023
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2019. 2019
Expositions 2019
Recent Activities
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Free Improvisation - Method an Genre
(2015)
author(s): Michael Duch
connected to: Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
published in: Research Catalogue
“Free Improvisation – Method and Genre” was a research-fellow project from November 2007 until November 2010 at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) on Free Improvisation and the use of Improvisation in Experimental Music.
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Bulletin No. 1 - NARP
(2015)
author(s): Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
published in: Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
The bulletins of the Norwegian Artistic Research Programme aim primarily to disseminate artistic research funded and supported by the programme and secondly to point at research with connection, affiliation or other reference to Norwegian researchers, environments, institutions or organisations.
The bulletin is not a reviewed portal and will not contain other than short descriptions of and links to research work, chiefly on the Research Catalogue but not exclusively.
Bulletin No. 1 guides the reader to seven expositions in progress by former research fellows who in 2014 received grants to present their reflection material, and three expositions related to funding from the project programme.
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Transcribing Johann Sebastian Bach's Lute Music for Guitar Bouzouki
(2015)
author(s): Andreas Aase
connected to: Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
published in: Journal for Artistic Research
Johann Sebastian Bach's lute suites were probably written on the harpsichord, and are commonly performed on the guitar. This project examines the possibilities and limitations in transcribing one suite for a four-course, fifth-tuned instrument in the cittern/octave mandolin family, while preserving supposed interpretation practices from Bach's era and/or from Scandinavian traditional music. The final artistic result may or may not express these traits. The audiovisual examples aim to express problems of interpretation, and suggestions for their solutions in the cases where they are specific to my instrument. I will attempt to contextualise the process through introducing various strands of research and the observations of others.
The discussion commences at a point where I have produced a suggestion for a transcription, as I embark from the premises laid out in the previous paragraph and ask, Is it possible to create an edition of Johann Sebastian Bach's Lute Suite BWV 997 for my instrument? Deriving from this question, I simultaneously ask, Which methods and contexts can I employ to make the artistic outcome convincing for myself, as well as for an audience familiar with this music?
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Artistic research fellows
(last edited: 2024)
author(s): Linda H. Lien, Geir Strøm, Ingrid Milde
connected to: Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
This exposition is in progress and its share status is: visible to all.
Bibliographies and project abstracts for artistic research fellows active in the Norwegian Artistic Research School.
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Artistic Research Fellows Graduated
(last edited: 2024)
author(s): Linda H. Lien, Ingrid Milde, Geir Strøm
connected to: Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
This exposition is in progress and its share status is: visible to all.
Bibliographies and project abstracts for artistic research fellows active in the Norwegian Artistic Research School.
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Research projects NARP
(last edited: 2024)
author(s): Geir Strøm, Ingrid Milde, Linda H. Lien
connected to: Norwegian Artistic Research Programme
This exposition is in progress and its share status is: visible to all.
Research projects supported by NARP grants in the years 2011-2026