|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Curatorial Challenges investigates the challenges faced by curators
in contemporary society and explores which practices, ways of
thinking, and types of knowledge production curating exhibitions
could challenge. Bringing together international curators and
researchers from the fields of art and cultural history, the book
provides new research and perspectives on the curatorial process
and aims to bridge the traditional gap between theoretical and
academic museum studies and museum practices. The book focuses on
exhibitions as a primary site of cultural exchange and argues that,
as highly visible showcases, producers of knowledge, and
historically embedded events, exhibitions establish and organize
meanings of art and cultural heritage. Temporary exhibitions
continue to increase in cultural significance and yet the
traditional role of the museum as a Bildung institution has
changed. As exhibitions gain in significance, so too do curatorial
strategies. Arguing that new research is needed to help understand
these changes, the book presents original research that explores
how curatorial strategies inform both art and cultural history
museums in contemporary society. The book also investigates what
sort of critical, transformative, and perhaps even conservative,
potential can be traced in exhibition cultures. Curatorial
Challenges fosters innovative interdisciplinary exchange and brings
new insights to the field of curatorial studies. As such, it should
be of great interest to academics, researchers, and postgraduate
students engaged in the study of curatorial practice, museum
studies, the making of exhibitions, museum communication, and art
history.
Curatorial Challenges investigates the challenges faced by curators
in contemporary society and explores which practices, ways of
thinking, and types of knowledge production curating exhibitions
could challenge. Bringing together international curators and
researchers from the fields of art and cultural history, the book
provides new research and perspectives on the curatorial process
and aims to bridge the traditional gap between theoretical and
academic museum studies and museum practices. The book focuses on
exhibitions as a primary site of cultural exchange and argues that,
as highly visible showcases, producers of knowledge, and
historically embedded events, exhibitions establish and organize
meanings of art and cultural heritage. Temporary exhibitions
continue to increase in cultural significance and yet the
traditional role of the museum as a Bildung institution has
changed. As exhibitions gain in significance, so too do curatorial
strategies. Arguing that new research is needed to help understand
these changes, the book presents original research that explores
how curatorial strategies inform both art and cultural history
museums in contemporary society. The book also investigates what
sort of critical, transformative, and perhaps even conservative,
potential can be traced in exhibition cultures. Curatorial
Challenges fosters innovative interdisciplinary exchange and brings
new insights to the field of curatorial studies. As such, it should
be of great interest to academics, researchers, and postgraduate
students engaged in the study of curatorial practice, museum
studies, the making of exhibitions, museum communication, and art
history.
An exceptional talent, master of Expressionist art, co-founder of
Die Brücke group. Where Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s work is
concerned, superlatives are basic. It is all the more surprising,
therefore, that there has been little critical appraisal of one of
the most important chapters in the painter’s life and oeuvre.
Besides his Expressionist acme, his imposing later-phase work
deserves special attention and recognition. In exile in Davos,
Kirchner again managed to produce an outstanding cycle of pictures,
before committing suicide at the age of fifty-eight. Though
continuing to use his inimitable style, he nevertheless invented
something entirely new. Nature appears as an intoxicating space in
intense colours, where the dignity of the human figure is
negotiated in a dynamic aesthetic. The scholarly publication gives
readers the complete picture in the context of another
Expressionist living in a self-imposed exile during those years:
Danish painter J. F. Willumsen (1863–1958). The juxtaposition of
Kirchner and Willumsen poses a visually persuasive and entirely new
perspective on an intense, colourful and vital vision of painting
from the 1910s–1930s.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|