Teresa Veiga Furtado

Biography
Teresa Veiga Furtado is an artist and Associate Professor at the Department of Visual Arts and Design of the School of the Arts at the University of Évora. Her research is on interactive multimedia art and net art with socially vulnerable people and groups, and she conceptualizes and puts into practice co-creative projects in digital spaces. She integrates the GAGE (Game, art and gender equity) research project team, coordinated by Patrícia Gouveia. This project intends to portray the evolution of female participation in the Portuguese gaming industry, providing a comprehensive assessment of the gaps and challenges of gender equity in this professional field.
Publications
2018
Género na arte. Corpo, sexualidade, identidade, resistência Book
Lisboa: Museu Nacional de Arte Contemporânea–Museu do Chiado, 2018.
Cross Media Arts. Artes Sociais e Transdisciplinaridade-Social Arts and Transdisciplinarity Miscellaneous
2018.
Género na Arte. Corpo, sexualidade, identidade, resistência. Miscellaneous
2018.
Género na Arte. Corpo, sexualidade, identidade, resistência/Gender in Art. Body, sexuality, identity, resistance Journal Article
In: Aida Rechena e Teresa Veiga Furtado,“Género na arte. Corpo, sexualidade, identidade, resistência, pp. 27–46, 2018.
2017
Do Silenciamento à Reacção: Práticas Artísticas para a Eliminação da Violência Contra as Mulheres Miscellaneous
2017.
2016
SELF DETERMINATION, EMBODIED LANGUAGES AND LANDSCAPES IN WOMEN'S VIDEO ART Journal Article
In: International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences, vol. 2, no. 5, pp. 398–406, 2016.
The incorporation of violence by women video artists Journal Article
In: International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences, vol. 2, no. 5, pp. 388–397, 2016.
2015
Videoarte de mulheres: nossos corpos, nós mesmas. Corpo, identidade e autodeterminação nas obras de videoartistas influenciadas pelos feminismos Journal Article
In: 2015.
2013
INTRODUÇÃO. POLÍTICAS FEMINISTAS NAS ARTES VISUAIS E PERFORMATIVAS Journal Article
In: 2013.
2010
Female stereotypes-based «personae» in women's video art Journal Article
In: 2010.