Image for Curating After the Global

Curating After the Global : Roadmaps for the Present

Part of the The MIT Press series
See all formats and editions

What it means to be global-or to be local-in the context of artistic, curatorial, and theoretical knowledge and practice. In this volume, an international, interdisciplinary group of writers discuss what it means to be global-or to be local-in the context of artistic, curatorial and theoretical knowledge and practice.

Continuing the discussion begun in The Curatorial Conundrum (2016) and How Institutions Think (2017), Curating After the Global considers curating and questions of locality, geopolitical change, the reassertion of nation-states, and the violent diminishing of citizen and denizen rights across the globe. It has become commonplace to talk of a globalized art world and even to speak of contemporary art as a driver of globalization.

This universalization of what art is or can be is often presumed to be at the cost of local traditions and any sense of locality and embeddedness.

But need this be the case? The contributors to Curating After the Global explore, among other things, specific curatorial projects that may offer roadmaps for the globalized present; new institutional approaches; and ways of thinking, vocabularies, and strategies for moving forward. Contributors include Lotte Arndt, Marwa Arsanios, Athena Athanasiou and Simon Sheikh, Maria Berrios and Jakob Jakobsen, Qalandar Bux Memon, Ntone Edjabe and David Morris, Liam Gillick, Alison Greene, Yaiza Maria Hernandez Velazquez, Prem Krishnamurthy and Emily Smith, Nkule Mabaso, Morad Montazami, Paul-Emmanuel Odin, Vijay Prashad, Kristin Ross, Grace Samboh, Sumesh Sharma, Joshua Simon, Hajnalka Somogyi, Lucy Steeds, Francoise VergesCopublished with the Center for Curatorial Studies Bard College/Luma Foundation

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£28.80 Save 20.00%
RRP £36.00
Product Details
MIT Press
0262537907 / 9780262537902
Paperback / softback
069.53
22/10/2019
United States
English
541 pages : illustrations (black and white)
24 cm
Published in association with Luma Foundation and The Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College.