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How Do We Curate Multiple Types of Mediums?

How Do We Curate Multiple Types of Mediums?. CMDC student Michael Klase performing at “Loud & Clear,” North Bank Artists Gallery, April 2012; photo by Nicole Buckner. The Changing Scene.

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How Do We Curate Multiple Types of Mediums?

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  1. How Do We Curate Multiple Types of Mediums? CMDC student Michael Klase performing at “Loud & Clear,” North Bank Artists Gallery, April 2012; photo by Nicole Buckner

  2. The Changing Scene • Digital objects, particularly those that require audience intervention or participation, are changing museums & galleries exhibitions • Exhibition spaces now take many different forms • Possibilities for curating have expanded due to digital media “Circle” produced by Caitlin Fisher is a digital story created as an augmented reality environment; photo by Kerri Lingo

  3. Material Practice: Three types Daniel Howe’s work in the UWV downtown library at “Electrifying Literature,” in Morgantown, WV, June 2012; photo by Kerri Lingo John Barber’s Brautigan.net archive of the of American writer Richard Brautigan Second Life Art Nouveau Museum Virtual works in physical spaces Physical works in virtual spaces Virtual works in virtual spaces

  4. Curating in digital mediated situations adds new focus From “collection, education, connoisseurship” to “potentiality.” Curating is knowing how to tell the story of the works “well.” A computer station featuring electronic literature at the Pioneers of e-Lit exhibit, ELO 2008; photos by Dene Grigar From Vince Dziekan’s Virtuality & the Art of Exhibition, p. 53

  5. Curator’s aesthetic Space Material Object Audience’s aesthetic Curating involves Aesthetic, Material, & Spatial practices “[T]he new ecological condition of the contemporary museum is multi-platform and distributed along the lines of physical/virtual as well as onsite/online” (56).

  6. Curatorial Design Developing an exhibit that “present[s] perspectives, establish[es] contexts, and provide[s] platforms.” “artistic autonomy vs. curatorial co-creation” An interactive installation presented at the IDMAa Student Showcase; photo by Dene Grigar From Vince Dziekan’s Virtuality & the Art of Exhibition, pp. 56-7

  7. Aesthetic Experience • “Browsing” as a “form of engagement” • “Openness” to encourage “dialogue” “Placing,” created by Ethan Rose and produced with the help of CMDC students in fall 2010; photo by Liz Wade

  8. In-Class Activity Directions: Using the floor plan for Nouspace Gallery and drawing upon what you have learned about Stephanie Strickland’s work, sketch a plan for her retrospective that will provide an aesthetic experience.

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