A brief history of curating [ Texto impreso] / Hans Ulrich Obrist.
Material type: TextSeries: Documents ; 3Publication details: Zurich : JRP/Ringier ; Dijon : Presses du réel, cop. 2008.Description: 243 p ; 21 cmISBN:- 9783905829556 (JRP/Ringier)
- 9782840662877 (Les Presses du réel)
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monografía prestable | Biblioteca FJM Sala general | Estudios Curatoriales | N 408 .O27 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2c,c1Ing | Available | 1200771 |
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N 408 .L56 2010 Selected Maria Lind writing / | N 408 .M66 2020 Especies de comisarios, especies de críticas / | N 408 .N48 2016 The New curator [ : researcher, commissioner, keeper, interpreter, producer, collaborator / | N 408 .O27 2008 A brief history of curating [ | N 408 .O27 2015 Ways of curating [ | N 408 .O2718 2010 Breve historia del comisariado [ | N 408 .P54 2013 Pigeons on the grass alas [ : contemporary curators talk about the field / |
Interviews by Hans Ulrich Obrist with: Walter Hopps (p. 10) ; Pontus Hultén (p. 32) ; Johannes Cladders (p. 52) ; Jean Leering (p. 66) ; Harald Szeemann (p. 80) ; Franz Meyer (p. 102) ; Seth Siegelaub (p. 116) ; Werner Hofmann (p. 132) ; Walter Zanini (p. 148) ; Anne d'Harnoncourt (p. 168) ; Lucy Lippard (p. 196) -- Postface: the archaeology of things to come / Daniel Birnbaum (p. 234)
"Part of JRP|Ringer's innovative Documentsseries, published with Les Presses du Reel and dedicated to critical writings, this publication comprises a unique collection of interviews by Hans Ulrich Obrist mapping the development of the curatorial field--from early independent curators in the 1960s and 70s and the experimental institutional programs developed in Europe and the U.S. through the inception of Documenta and the various biennales and fairs--with pioneering curators Anne D'Harnoncourt, Werner Hoffman, Jean Leering, Franz Meyer, Seth Siegelaub, Walter Zanini, Johannes Cladders, Lucy Lippard, Walter Hopps, Pontus Hulten and Harald Szeemann. Speaking of Szeemann on the occasion of this legendary curator's death in 2005, critic Aaron Schuster summed up, "the image we have of the curator today: the curator-as-artist, a roaming, freelance designer of exhibitions, or in his own witty formulation, a 'spiritual guest worker'... If artists since Marcel Duchamp have affirmed selection and arrangement as legitimate artistic strategies, was it not simply a matter of time before curatorial practice--itself defined by selection and arrangement--would come to be seen as an art that operates on the field of art itself?" (información del editor)