51

Skip to main content

Share this page

Social media

Latest news

13
March
2025
|
15:33
Europe/London

A reflection on the ‘Exploring Arts-Based Participatory Research Methods’ project

Dr Henry McPherson reflects on his recent project ‘Exploring Arts-Based Participatory Research Methods’.

Written by Research Associate, Creative 51 

Speaking to professionals who make powerful arts-based participatory research happen, we get a sense of the importance of creative practices in sustaining relationships and connecting people together. The work taking place with partners like , or , embedded in the diverse communities of the region, reveals that artistic approaches provide both wide ranging possibilities for research collaboration and nourishing experiences for public participants, arts professionals, and academics. 

The unique expertise of skilled arts practitioners can enable research teams to address big questions holistically, maintaining academic rigor, while ensuring a duty of care and responsibility to those whose lives and experiences are being rendered in the research space. Arts-based participatory research collaborations can generate compelling, effective, impactful outputs, while championing responsible human-to-human connection.

Arts-based practices aren’t just a ‘nice thing to do’ or a way of adding ornament to more ‘serious’ research methods; they’re a vital force for expression, connection, and creative thinking which bridge academic, public, and professional experience. They often lead to surprising insights, and can help make complex, often sensitive topics, more concrete and accessible to a wide range of people.

Genuinely collaborative partnerships can foster meaningful participation and promote more equitable research practices. Where arts-based methods are encouraged and supported, especially through sustained long-term collaboration with arts-sector specialists, public participants can have a clearer creative agency within research projects.

But we are aware, as we have discovered in our project, how this work can be under supported, how inflexible structures can challenge, even impede, the development of mutually beneficial research relationships. Even in our own approach to conducting this research, we experienced barriers to efficiency and creative modes of engagement.

To cultivate trusting, meaningful relationships with non-academic partners, ore work is required to ensure that institutional structures support arts-based participatory research methods, by which collaborative partnerships can develop fruitfully and responsibly. We hope in our Findings Report(s) that by outlining both the affordances, and challenges, in developing arts-based participatory research, we might better understand the steps needed to enact a more reciprocal, creative, and welcoming research culture.

.