Browse > Creator > Walker, James
Number of items: 20.
Walker, James
(2017)
Lost in archives: disentangling invisible traces and constructed identities.
In: Illustration & Identity/ies international conference, 8 -10 November 2017, University of Lorraine, Nancy, France.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2017)
Transcriptor: Illustration, Documentary and the Material.
[Animation, Curation, Drawing, Exhibition/show, Illustration, Textiles]
Walker, James
(2017)
Great!!: fragmented animation archives and forgotten collections.
In: Society for Animation Studies 2017, 3-7 July 2017, University of Padova, Italy.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2016)
Mapping embattled environments and transgressive landscapes.
In: Shaping the view: understanding landscape through illustration, 7th Illustration Research Network conference, 10-11 November 2016, Edinburgh College of Art.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James and Taylor, Rebekah
(2016)
The materiality of animation archives.
In: Materiality and the Visual Arts Archive: Matter and Meaning Symposium, 23 September 206, University of Brighton, UK.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2015)
The forgetful act: erasure and forgetfulness in illustrative reportage.
In: Illustrator as Public Intellectual, 6th Annual International Illustration Research Symposium, 5-7 November 2015, Rhode Island School of Design, USA.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2014)
Consuming Japan in a post Akira world: phantasmagorical hybrids and illusions.
In: Canterbury Anifest, 27 October - 2 November 2014, Gulbenkian, University of Kent, Canterbury.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2014)
Joy Batchelor: a gifted illustrator.
In:
A moving image: Joy Batchelor 1914-1991: artist, writer and animator.
Southbank Publishing, London.
ISBN 9781904915416
Walker, James
(2014)
The vernacular line: adoption and transposition of the kitsch in illustration.
Journal of Illustration, 1 (1).
pp. 29-40.
ISSN 2052-0204
Walker, James
(2014)
Illustrative displacements: para-textual explorations of the optical imagination.
In: The Itinerant Illustrator: 5th International Illustration Research Symposium, 18-19 December 2014, Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore, India.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2014)
The para-textual experience: navigating the temporal distortions and spatial illusions in illustrative reportage and graphic journalism.
In: Hybridity and the news: hybrid forms of journalism in the 21st century, 4 - 5 November 2014, Vrije University, Brussels, Belgium.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James and Baldwin, Kevin and Challis, John and Bell, Steve
(2013)
6 Degrees of Bob Godfrey an imaginative life.
In: Bradford Animation Festival, 14 November 2013, National Media Museum, Bradford.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2012)
The Vernacular line: adoption and transposition of the kitsch in illustration.
In: The function of folk: illustration, narrative, society, 8-9 November 2012, The Ethnographic Museum, Krakow, Poland.
Walker, James
(2011)
Photographic memory and transcribing the traumatic space.
In: Comics and Conflict Conference, 19 August 2011, Imperial War Museum, London.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2011)
The autographic impulse: illustrative dislocations and dissolutions in contemporary illustration.
In: Illustration & Writing: Visual Language, 3-4 November 2011, Manchester Metropolitan University.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2008)
DIY cartoon kit and the art of persuasion: disembodied desires in postwar British animation.
In: Popular Culture Association National Conference, 19-22 March 2008, San Francisco Marriott, San Francisco, USA.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2007)
Animated desires: propaganda and ideology in post-war British television commercials.
In: Joint meeting of the Popular Culture Association and the American Culture Association Conference, 4-7 April 2007, Boston, USA.
(Unpublished)
Walker, James
(2006)
Animated commercials of Halas & Batchelor.
In:
Halas and Batchelor cartoons: an animated history.
Southbank Publishing, London.
ISBN 9781904915171
Walker, James
(2005)
A terror lexicon: shadows, places and ghosts.
In:
Art in the age of terrorism.
Paul Holberton, London, UK, pp. 144-155.
ISBN 9781903470411