The Politics of Museum Collection Re-Hangs
Ann Temkin, chief curator of painting and sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, recently framed the curator’s central dilemma in terms of the problem of storage: at any given moment, only a tiny fraction of a museum’s collection can be displayed, leaving the vast majority of its holdings to languish unseen in warehouses and vaults. At the same time, even as the storage rooms threaten to overflow, the imperative to collect persists; we no longer conceive of the museum as a repository of unquestioned masterpieces but as a living organism, open to debate and contestation, preserving the past and interpreting it according to the priorities of the present. A great many works find a more or less permanent home in the bowels of storage for good reason: ultimately, some stuff just doesn’t age well. But shifts in taste and priorities go both ways, as artists whom one generation thought weird, provincial, or minor can be revelatory for another. As Temkin writes in a 2010 Artforum essay, “We cannot afford to allow the displays in the so-called permanent collection galleries of painting and sculpture to be static, precisely because of what awaits us in storage.”
Esta historia es de la edición Fall 2016 de ARTnews.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición Fall 2016 de ARTnews.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
A Portrait of the Artist as a Collector
How much can artworks tell us about the person who acquired them?
You've Gotta See This!
Artists are luring their peers and predecessors out of obscurity and back into the spotlight–discovering, rediscovering, and even mentoring them.
Concrete History
Chicana Muralist Judith F. Baca goes from the great wall to the museum wall.
Clean, Well-Lighted Places
On our nostalgia for the golden age of art dealing
Q & A Douglas Crimp
Q & A Douglas Crimp.
Mom & Popped
In a market contraction, the middle class gallery is getting squeezed.
Mary Heilmann’s Idiosyncratic, Rhymthic Abstractions Find Their Place In the Sun
Mary Heilmann’s idiosyncratic, rhymthic abstractions—and chairs—find their place in the sun.
To All Tomorrow's Parties
Break out the bubbly—Florine Stettheimer’s back.
From Palace To Tank
“Karaoke King” and art collector Qiao Zhibing is parlaying his popular Shanghai karaoke-club cum-exhibition-space into a museum-cum-recreation-space.
Autocorrect
The Politics of Museum Collection Re-Hangs