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The Edinburgh Companion to Curatorial Futures -

The Edinburgh Companion to Curatorial Futures

Buch | Hardcover
528 Seiten
2026
Edinburgh University Press (Verlag)
9781399508452 (ISBN)
CHF 279,30 inkl. MwSt
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The first curatorial studies volume to engage with the concept of ‘the future’.
In a so-called post-neoliberal world, it can seem like culture is stuck in a perpetual presentism where history and the future are but mere data points for speculative calculations of gains, and culture seems all but a string of endlessly repeating commodities. In such an environment, can we rescue the future for art, for curating and the curatorial, and for culture more generally? Do we need to? What function do concepts like the future and futurity play in the field of curating and the curatorial? What use is ‘the future’ to curators and others working within the field of the curatorial? The Edinburgh Companion to Curatorial Futures is the first curatorial studies volume to engage with the increasingly ubiquitous concept of ‘the future’ and its exponential growth in the fields of artistic research, curating, art and academia. What is it we need to know as we think towards the future?

Bridget Crone (1973–2023) was a writer and curator based in London, UK. She was a senior lecturer in Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths College, The University of London, where she co-convened the Ph.D. programme in Advanced Practices. Bridget died of cancer on 28th January, 2023, before the publication of this book, for which she is the founding editor. Crone had significant professional curatorial experience in the visual arts sector stretching across more than twenty years, working in the UK, Australia and internationally. She was the artistic director of Media Art Bath from 2006 to 2011 – a publicly funded research-based commissioning agency based in South West England – and, prior to that, she was curator at The Showroom Gallery, London. Crone also taught at universities and art schools in the UK and Australia, including Chelsea School of Art and Design, Monash University, and Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne, as well as giving guest lecturers and seminars at universities across the UK. She was a member of the European Forum for Advanced Practices, a Europe-wide network engaged in questions of artistic research and a COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) Action. Focusing on the body in material and speculative terms, Crone’s work explores questions of ‘liveness’ and the image in relation to contemporary performance art and moving image practices, and the changing relations of body, technology and ecology. Her edited book The Sensible Stage: Staging and the Moving Image, was published in a second revised and extended edition in 2017. In 2022, Fieldwork for Future Ecologies, was published; co-edited by Crone, Sam Nightingale and Polly Stanton, (2022). Recent essays include: ‘Future’, with Henriette Gunkel, in The Bloomsbury Handbook for 21st Century Feminist Theory (2019) and ‘Flicker-time and Fabulation: from flickering images to crazy wipes’ in Fictions and Futures, (2017). Recent curatorial projects include Propositions for a stage: 24 frames of a beautiful heaven (2017, Institute of Contemporary Art, Singapore), Spectral Ecologies (2017, Mildura Arts Centre) and the multiple site-based project The Cinemas Project: exploring the spectral spaces of cinema in Regional Victoria (2014, Latrobe Regional Gallery, Bendigo Art Gallery, Warrnambool Art Gallery, Mildura Arts Centre, Geelong Gallery). Bridget wrote regularly for artists and recently published an extended introduction, titled ‘Wounds of Unbecoming’ (addressing questions of gender and trans materiality), for Turner Prize winner Tai Shani’s collected writings, Our Fatal Magic (2019). Bassam El Baroni is a curator, writer, sporadic artist and Associate Professor in Curating and Mediating Art at the School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Aalto University, Finland. He has lectured at the Dutch Art Institute, ArtEZ University of the Arts, Arnhem (2013–2018) and served as the artistic director of the now folded non-profit art space ACAF - Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum, in Alexandria, Egypt (2005–2012). El Baroni’s work explores artistic and curatorial practices in relation to technology, the political economy, financialization, infrastructural futures and histories, and new forms of activism. Recent publications include: Between the Material and the Possible: Infrastructural Re-examination and Speculation in Art (2022) and Manual for a Future Desert (co-editor with Ida Soulard and Abinadi Meza, 2021). Curatorial projects include: Infrahauntologies, Edith-Russ-Haus for Media Art, Oldenburg, Germany; La Box ENSA, Bourges, France (2021-2022); Manifesta 8, Murcia, Spain, 2010 (co-curator); the Lofoten International Art Festival, Norway, 2013 (co-curator with Anne Szefer Karlsen and Eva González-Sancho); Agitationism, the 36th Eva International–Ireland’s Biennial, Limerick, 2014; and, What Hope Looks like after Hope (On Constructive Alienation) at HOME WORKS 7, Beirut, 2015. In 2021, El Baroni, in collaboration with Constantinos Miltiadis, Georgios Cherouvim and Gerriet K. Sharma, co-created Cybersyn 1973/2023, a video installation that reimagines the historic Project Cybersyn within the context of accelerated automation and advanced financialization. El Baroni holds a Ph.D. in Curatorial Knowledge from the Department of Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths, University of London. He lives and works in Helsinki, Finland. Matthew Poole is a Professor of Art History and Theory in the Department of Art & Design at California State University, San Bernardino. His practice involves producing exhibitions, publishing artists’ projects, writing on topics related to the relations of production and distribution of art, and teaching. He is currently the interim chair of the Department of Communication & Media at CSUSB, and from 2015-2021 he was chair of the Department of Art & Design. Prior to moving to California in 2012, Poole was a faculty member in the Department of Art History & Philosophy at The University of Essex, Colchester, UK, where he ran the post-graduate curatorial programs. Recent publications include: ‘Infrastructure, Ideology, Hegemony’, in Between the Material and the Possible: Infrastructural Re-examination and Speculation in Art, (2022); ‘Allography and the Baroque Agency of the Objectile’, in Construction Site for Possible Worlds, (2020); and ‘Marcel Duchamp’s Diagrammatics of Love, Sex, and Erotics’ in Glass Bead Journal Site 2: Dark Room – Somatic Reason and Synthetic Eros, published online April 2019.

List of Figures

1. Introduction: Emergent Directions in Curatorial Thinking and Practice
Bridget Crone, Bassam El Baroni and Matthew Poole

Part I. Curatorial Complexities
2. Unravelling: After Practice-Based Curating
Lucy Cotter
3. Conspiratorial Realities: Toward a Media History of Art
Mahan Moalemi
4. Liquid Bodies Liquid Worlds: Notes
Bridget Crone, with an introduction by Lucy A. Sames
5. Curatorial Constellations, Parataxis, Neoliberalism
Matthew Poole
6. Curating-at-Large: Notes Towards a Sufficiently General Category
Suhail Malik

Part II. Re-Centring The Curatorial
7. Stolen Moments: Namibian Music History Untold
Aino Moongo and Renzo Baas
8. Curating Incommensurable Nuclear Futures
Ele Carpenter with Lise Autogena, Gabriella Hirst, Warren Harper, Alex Ressel, Kerri Meehan and Jeremiah Garlngarr
9. Listening to Offshore Detention: The Politics of Curation in how are you today by the Manus Recording Project Collective
James E. K. Parker and Joel Stern
10. Curative Curation: Black Women Curators as Restorative Agents
Portia Malatjie
11. Johanna Unzueta’s Tools for Life: Engaging a Politics of Labour Within the Art Institution
Danielle Child
12. GABAN (strange): Holding Space for murum-gidyal (Healing) in Museums and Galleries
Brook Garru Andrew
13. After-Events: Biennials Beyond the Exhibition
Anthony Gardner
14. Working Together(ness): The Curatorial as a ‘Function’
Dimitra Gkitsa with Grace Samboh

Part III. Datafication
15. Desperately Seeking Audience: Analytics in the Twenty-First-Century Museum
Katrina Sluis
16. Curating on the Web as a Way to Create Interferences in Today’s Network
Marialaura Ghidini
17. Curating/Fermenting Data: Speculative Practices for Curatorial Futures
Magdalena Tyżlik-Carver
18. Sleep Series: ‘art by sleepers, for sleepers and art as sleep’
Shu Lea Cheang and Matthew Fuller
19. The Labour of Symbiosis
Caroline A. Jones
20. Curating Tech Platforms
Mi You
21. Useful Curating in the Postdigital Era
Stéphanie Bertrand

Part IV. Radical Infrastructures
22. Acoustic Sympathies: Temporal, Vibrational and Improvisational Worlds
Brandon LaBelle
23. Companion to an Eviscerated City: A Tragireality in Two Voices and Four Acts
Lara Baladi and Beth Stryker
24. Preserving Citizenry: Derry Film and Video Workshop and the Quest(ion) for Institutions
Isobel Harbison
25. Something Smiles Through All The Drowsiness of the World: A Field Report
Maha Maamoun for Kayfa ta
26. From the ‘Lure for Feeling’ to Grassroots Planning: Grammars of Intention and Conjuncture in the Future Possible
Janna Graham
27. Object Flow: From Storage to Commons
Marina Valle Noronha
28. Where is the Body of the Curator?
Lisa Rosendahl

Part V. Fictioning The Curatorial
29. Curatorial Practice as Disaster Fiction
Jacob Lillemose
30. World Building: Feminist Futures on Mothership Earth
Eva Díaz
31. Prototyping Value
Lukáš Likavčan
32. Parables of Curatorial Futures
Tara McDowell

Notes on Contributors
Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 31.1.2026
Reihe/Serie Edinburgh Companions to Literature and the Humanities
Zusatzinfo 57 black & white illustrations, 22 colour illustrations
Verlagsort Edinburgh
Sprache englisch
Maße 170 x 244 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Kunstgeschichte / Kunststile
Schulbuch / Wörterbuch Lexikon / Chroniken
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Hilfswissenschaften
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
ISBN-13 9781399508452 / 9781399508452
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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