Paradigms and Pedagogy in Curatorial Studies

2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-169
Author(s):  
Jennifer Fisher ◽  
Jim Drobnick
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Maria Isabel D’Agostino Fleming

The Late African North African lamps of Terra Sigillata (African Red Slip Ware-ARS) are a category of objects which, alongside tableware, have acquired particular importance, not only for the volume of their production, but for their economic and commercial, iconographic and historical-religious implications. This article aims to present the development of fundamental research for the knowledge about the production and circulation of the ARS and in particular the lamps, taking as examples rich dialogues between the curatorial studies of museological collections and archaeological research that point the limits of the classical models of study of African ceramics and perform accurate reviews of dates, origins and contents of vessels, especially with archaeometric methods.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-138
Author(s):  
Camille-Mary Sharp

Review of: Winner of the 2020 Journal of Curatorial Studies Emerging Writer Award Tear Gas Epiphanies: Protest, Culture, Museums, Kirsty Robertson Toronto/Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press (2019), 432 pp., ISBN 978-0-77355-701-7, p/bk, CAD $39.95


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 122-128
Author(s):  
Erin A Peters

Erin A. Peters reflects on her objectives as a curator and educator, and the agency of museum visitors as co-creators.


1970 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 47-65
Author(s):  
Maciej Kaczor ◽  
Katarzyna Pyżewicz ◽  
Barbara Wielgus

This article presents selected aspects of potential intersections of archeology and art, the potential resulting from it, and also threats. We presented our interpretation of the perception of this issue, which is from the archaeologist’s perspective. We referred to specific examples that refer both to our experience resulting from more than a year of cooperation between the Faculty of Archeology of the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań and the Faculty of Art Education and Curatorial Studies of the University of Arts in Poznań, as well as the external sources. An attempt was made to answer the question – how archaeologists can use the knowledge and experience of artists. We focused on the example of museology and the popularization of archaeological knowledge, how to make it more attractive, and to facilitate public reception. At the same time, we presented our observations on the examples of the use of archeology by artists as inspiration.


POIÉSIS ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (26) ◽  
pp. 81
Author(s):  
Lisette Lagnado
Keyword(s):  

Este artigo procura rastrear a recepção crítica dos primeiros gestoscuratoriais no Brasil e propor a necessidade de pesquisas voltadas para a curadoria de arte contemporânea em âmbito acadêmico. Pretende mostrar a importância de um campo específico e complexo, que requer um domínio em várias disciplinas correlatas, abrangendo a história das exposições e das instituições. Num segundo momento, o artigo faz uma revisão da implantação dos programas de especialização inspirados nos curatorial studies, difundidos na Europa nos anos 1990, e conclui que o modelo deveria contemplar uma formação conjunta de artistas e curadores para permitir relações de troca sem reproduzir a separação ocidental entre consciência e sensibilidade, filosofia e poesia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-122
Author(s):  
Mankit Lai
Keyword(s):  

Review of: Winner Of The 2021 Journal Of Curatorial Studies Emerging Writer Award My Body Holds Its Shape Curated by Xue Tan, Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong, 25 May–27 September 2020


1970 ◽  
pp. 123
Author(s):  
Anne Folke Henningsen ◽  
Malene Vest Hansen

The Danish Research Council has provided funding for a new international network, Research network for curatorial studies, (ca. 1 million dkr.) for a two-year period. The network is based at University of Copenhagen with principal leaders Malene Vest Hansen, Ph.D. in Art History, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, and Anne Folke Henningsen, Ph.D. in History, the Saxo Institute. The following is a short introduction to the background for and the objectives of the network. 


Arts ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 78
Author(s):  
Marialaura Ghidini

By analysing a series of exhibition projects responding to central changes in web technology since its public unveiling (1991), this study identifies a historical trajectory for discussing the evolution of curating on the web. Such evolution highlights how curators have devised exhibition models that operate as platforms for not only displaying art specific to the web, but also for producing and disseminating it in a way that responds to the developments of web technology—and its socio-cultural and economic impact. With the massification of web tools, in fact, these platforms have generated distributed systems of artistic production free from the physical and conceptual limitations of the gallery and museum space. They have not only become spaces for displaying art, but also platforms that nurture its production, different modes of audience engagement and critique the canons of the institutionalised art world. Originating from the desire to reduce the historical fragmentation of this field of work and its partial mapping, this study follows a periodisation that starts from the early internet, with its BBS-enabled platforms such as ARTEX (1980), to introduce the 1990s experimentations with the web browser and the developments of projects like äda’web (1995). It then dives into the Web 2.0 when, with the platformisation of the technology, curators developed an array of approaches for adopting existing web services, as in the instances of CuratingYouTube (2007–present) and #exstrange (2017). Lastly, it outlines the trends of today’s web, which saw the birth of projects like the blockchain-enabled cointemporary (2014), to then draw conclusions about the relevance of this historical trajectory in the field of curatorial studies and the production of web-based and digital art.


Arts ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Gabriela Germana ◽  
Amy Bowman-McElhone

This essay examines three museums of contemporary art in Lima, Peru: MAC (Museum of Contemporary Art), MALI (Lima Art Museum), and MASM (San Marcos Art Museum). As framed through curatorial studies and cultural politics, we argue that the curatorial practices of these institutions are embedded with tensions linked to the negotiation of regional, national, and international identities, coloniality, and alternate modernities between Western paradigms of contemporary art and contemporary vernacular art in Peru. Peruvian national institutions have not engaged in the collection of contemporary art, leaving these practices to private entities such as the MAC, MALI, and MASM. However, these three institutions have not, until recently, actively collected contemporary vernacular Peruvian art and its by-products, thus inscribing this work as “non-Western” through curatorial practices and creating competing conceptions of the contemporary. The curatorial practices of the MAC, MALI, and MASM reflect the complex and contested musealities and conceptions of the contemporary that co-exist in Lima. This essay will address this environment and the emergence of alternative forms of museality, curatorial practices, and indigenous artist’s strategies that continually construct and disrupt different modernities and create spaces for questioning constructs of contemporary art and Peruvian cultural identities.


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