Description

Book Synopsis

Situated at the crossroads of performance practice, museology, and cultural studies, live arts curation has grown in recent years to become a vibrant interdisciplinary project and a genuine global phenomenon. Curating Live Arts brings together bold and innovative essays from an international group of theorist-practitioners to pose vital questions, propose future visions, and survey the landscape of this rapidly evolving discipline. Reflecting the field’s characteristic eclecticism, the writings assembled here offer practical and insightful investigations into the curation of theatre, dance, sound art, music, and other performance forms—not only in museums, but in community, site-specific, and time-based contexts, placing it at the forefront of contemporary dialogue and discourse.



Trade Review

“The volume appears as an assemblage that is not immediately easy to approach, but precisely because of that, it is an extremely interesting polyphony that can illuminate our understanding of what we are talking about when we talk about curation today.” • JRAI

“[This book] provides momentum for the evolution of research in the curation of performance, performing arts, theatre, music, and other media included in the live arts.” • ESSE (European Journal for the Study of English)

“Anyone interested in the significance, purpose, or agenda of curating and curators in performing arts should read this book. The curators promoted here are not rock stars, they don’t wear expensive designer clothing or hang out with celebrities, but they are deeply committed to their work, to the artists they work with, and to the communities they serve.” • thINKingDANCE

“The outstanding group of researchers in this innovative book engage in a lucid flow of passion and creative power. Its narratives are drawn from experimental approaches grounded in their authors’ rich lives. This anthology is comprised of unexpected revelations about curation that break the barriers of its canonic definitions, while remaining concerned with Beauty as a fundamental value and the live arts as a celebration of living.” • Alma Salem, independent curator, Syria Sixth Space

“This is a rich, global compilation of pieces that explore issues of power, community, inclusiveness, belonging, aesthetics, history, embodiment, epistemology, and pedagogy, all within the context of performance and the live arts.” • Nicole Stanton, Wesleyan University

“In seeking to reinvigorate one of the art world’s most ubiquitous terms, Curating Live Arts both interrogates and celebrates the historical in tandem with new possibilities for intervention into the complex space between artists, arts workers, art projects, participants and audiences. It asks critical questions about the values, the sensibilities, and the preoccupations of curating the live arts, and includes writing from artists, curators, and activists working in politically urgent contexts far removed from the centres of ‘high’ art. This wide-ranging anthology makes an invaluable contribution to the complex aspirations of this ever-expanding field.” • Sarah Miller, University of Wollongong



Table of Contents

List of illustrations

Prologue: Bethinking One’s Own Strengths: The Performative Potential of Curating
Florian Malzacher

Acknowledgments

A Collective Introduction
Dena Davida, Jane Gabriels, Véronique Hudon, and Marc Pronovost

A NOTE ON CURATORIAL STATEMENTS—A THIRD SPACE: CHASING THE INTANGIBLE
Michèle Steinwald and Michael Trent

PART I: HISTORICAL FRAMINGS

Chapter 1. From Context to Concept: The Emergence of the Performance Curator
Bertie Ferdman

CURIOSITY AND INTUITION
Marie Claire Forté

Chapter 2. Exhibiting Performances: Process and Valorisation in When Attitudes Become Forms—Bern 1969 / Venice 2013
Beatrice von Bismarck

Chapter 3. Can We Curate Dance without Making a Festival?: On Dance Curatorship and Its Shifting Borders
Elisa Ricci

Chapter 4. Curating Performance from Africa for International Stages: Thoughts on Artistic Categories and Critical Discourse
‘Funmi Adewole with Jareh Das

UNTITLED
Isabel Sachs

Chapter 5. The Curating Nation: Emergence of Performance Curation in Singapore and Its Impact on Cultural Politics
Ken Takiguchi

Chapter 6. The Curatorial Chronotope
Peter Dickinson

LAYERS
Harun Morrison

Chapter 7. More Weirdness, More Joy: Performance Curation and Pedagogy at Danspace Project and the Institute for Curatorial Practice in Performance
Judy Hussie-Taylor

PART II: ETHICAL PROPOSALS

Chapter 8. Dancing the Museum
Thomas F. DeFrantz

Chapter 9. Curatorial Discourse and Equity: Tensions in Contemporary Dance Presenting in the United States
Naomi Jackson

HOLY MOTOR—A MECHANICAL METAPHOR SURROUNDING THE LIVE ARTS CURATOR
Cécile Tonizzo

Chapter 10. Noticing the Feedback: A Proposal to the Contemporary Dance Field, and/ or This Revolution Will Be Crowdsourced
Michèle Steinwald

Chapter 11. Email to a Curator: An Introduction to The Curator’s Piece
Tea Tupajić & Petra Zanki

CURATING LIVENESS
Victoria Mohr-Blakeney

Chapter 12. Curation as a Form of Artistic Practice: Context as a New Work through UK-based Forest Fringe
Deborah Pearson

PART III: THE ARTIST-CURATORS

Chapter 13. The Artist-Curator, or the Philosophy of ‘Do-It-Yourself’
Julie Bawin

"SOFT CURATION," POLLINATION, AND RHIZOMES
Yves Sheriff

Chapter 14. Being in Vanguard of Sensibility: Artists as Curators in Performing Arts—A Study of Collective Affect
Kasia Tórz

Chapter 15. Familias: Artist-Activist Curation in the South Bronx, New York
Jane Gabriels

Chapter 16. What We Talk About When We Talk About Curating the ‘Unexpected’
Syreeta McFadden

GREATER THAN
Shoshona Currier

Chapter 17. Because I love Art, I Want Art to be Different. The Project Perverse Curating and a Few Things I’ve Learned From It
Jacob Wren

Chapter 18. Making Stage: Contemporary Dance and Performance Curation in the Caribbean
Makeda Thomas

AS WE
Nadège Grebmeier Forget

Chapter 19. The Work of the Musician-Curator and the Notion of the "Concert Scenario"
Marie-Hélène Breault

Chapter 20. Pseudo-, Anti-, and Total Dance: A Self-Interview on Curation
SALTA

Chapter 21. Collective Creation and Improvised Curation: A Discussion with Body Slam
Body Slam Dance Improv Collective: Gregory Selinger, Helen Simard, Roger White, Xavier Laporte, Victoria Mackenzie, and Claudia Chan Tak

PART IV: EXHIBITIONS AS EVENTS

Chapter 22. A New Kind of Critical Elsewhere
Travis Chamberlain

Chapter 23. Re-enact History? Performing the Archive!
Julia Kurz

Chapter 24. Choreographing Archives, Curating Choreographers: Yvonne Rainer, Xavier Le Roy, and the Dance Retrospective
Fabien Maltais-Bayda and Joseph Henry

THE TITLE AS THE CURATOR'S ART PIECE
Steve Giasson

Chapter 25. Exhibiting Dance, Performing Objects: Cultural Mediation in the Museum
Erin Joelle McCurdy

Chapter 26. The Curator’s Work: Stories and Experiences of Tino Sehgal’s Events
Véronique Hudon

PART V: ARTIVISM

Chapter 27. Framing a Network, Charting Dis/Courses: Performance Curation, Community Work, and the Logic/Anxieties of an Emerging Field
Roselle Pineda

CURATE
Natalie Doonan

Chapter 28. Food=Need: Constraints, Reflexivity, and Community Performance
Pam Patterson

Chapter 29. ARC.HIVE of Contemporary Arab Performing Arts: Memory, Catastrophe, Resistance and Oblivion
Adham Hafez

Chapter 30. Collective Walks / Spaces of Contestation: Site-Specificity, Community Involvement, and Mobility Employed as Curatorial Strategies in the Creation of Participatory Performances
Mariane Bourcheix-Laporte

Chapter 31. Sound Citizen: Curating Sound Art in the Distributed Public Sphere
Morten Søndergaard

CURATION AS A PRACTICE OF RADICAL CARE: A DEFINITION
Nicole L. Martin

PART VI: INSTITUTIONAL REINVENTIONS

Chapter 32. Rethinking the Role of Institutions and Curators in a New Interdisciplinary Age
Philip Bither

Chapter 33. The Curator as a Culture Producer
Marta Keil

DEFINITION OF CURATION
SALTA

Chapter 34. How to Build a Manifesto for the Future of a Festival
“Festivals as Thinking Entities,” a Conversation with Judith Blackenberg, Daniel Blanga-Gubbay, Silvia Bottiroli, Livia Andrea Piazza, initiated by Silvia Bottiroli and Berno Odo Polzer
Silvia Bottiroli

Chapter 35. The Curatorial Gesture as a Decolonial Gesture
Arnaldo Rodriguez Bagué

PROPOSING INTERVALSCURATING AS CHOREOGRAPHY
Gabriele Brandstetter

Chapter 36. Are You Not Entertained?: Curating Performance within the Institution
Rie Hovmann Rasmussen

Chapter 37. Bodies in Museums: Institutional Practices and Politics
Véronique Hudon with Boris Charmatz

CURATING HISTORY, CURATING RESISTANCE
Jaamil Kosoko

Chapter 38. What Can Contemporary Art Perform? And Then Transgress?
Emelie Chhangur

Epilogue: Situation Critical: What Comes Next for the Field of Performance Curation?
Tom Sellar

THE PARABLE OF THE CURATOR
Michel Herreria (drawing) and Jean-Paul Rathier (text)

Index

Curating Live Arts: Critical Perspectives,

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    A Paperback / softback by Dena Davida, Marc Pronovost, Véronique Hudon

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 29/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9781789201345, 978-1789201345
      ISBN10: 1789201349

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Situated at the crossroads of performance practice, museology, and cultural studies, live arts curation has grown in recent years to become a vibrant interdisciplinary project and a genuine global phenomenon. Curating Live Arts brings together bold and innovative essays from an international group of theorist-practitioners to pose vital questions, propose future visions, and survey the landscape of this rapidly evolving discipline. Reflecting the field’s characteristic eclecticism, the writings assembled here offer practical and insightful investigations into the curation of theatre, dance, sound art, music, and other performance forms—not only in museums, but in community, site-specific, and time-based contexts, placing it at the forefront of contemporary dialogue and discourse.



      Trade Review

      “The volume appears as an assemblage that is not immediately easy to approach, but precisely because of that, it is an extremely interesting polyphony that can illuminate our understanding of what we are talking about when we talk about curation today.” • JRAI

      “[This book] provides momentum for the evolution of research in the curation of performance, performing arts, theatre, music, and other media included in the live arts.” • ESSE (European Journal for the Study of English)

      “Anyone interested in the significance, purpose, or agenda of curating and curators in performing arts should read this book. The curators promoted here are not rock stars, they don’t wear expensive designer clothing or hang out with celebrities, but they are deeply committed to their work, to the artists they work with, and to the communities they serve.” • thINKingDANCE

      “The outstanding group of researchers in this innovative book engage in a lucid flow of passion and creative power. Its narratives are drawn from experimental approaches grounded in their authors’ rich lives. This anthology is comprised of unexpected revelations about curation that break the barriers of its canonic definitions, while remaining concerned with Beauty as a fundamental value and the live arts as a celebration of living.” • Alma Salem, independent curator, Syria Sixth Space

      “This is a rich, global compilation of pieces that explore issues of power, community, inclusiveness, belonging, aesthetics, history, embodiment, epistemology, and pedagogy, all within the context of performance and the live arts.” • Nicole Stanton, Wesleyan University

      “In seeking to reinvigorate one of the art world’s most ubiquitous terms, Curating Live Arts both interrogates and celebrates the historical in tandem with new possibilities for intervention into the complex space between artists, arts workers, art projects, participants and audiences. It asks critical questions about the values, the sensibilities, and the preoccupations of curating the live arts, and includes writing from artists, curators, and activists working in politically urgent contexts far removed from the centres of ‘high’ art. This wide-ranging anthology makes an invaluable contribution to the complex aspirations of this ever-expanding field.” • Sarah Miller, University of Wollongong



      Table of Contents

      List of illustrations

      Prologue: Bethinking One’s Own Strengths: The Performative Potential of Curating
      Florian Malzacher

      Acknowledgments

      A Collective Introduction
      Dena Davida, Jane Gabriels, Véronique Hudon, and Marc Pronovost

      A NOTE ON CURATORIAL STATEMENTS—A THIRD SPACE: CHASING THE INTANGIBLE
      Michèle Steinwald and Michael Trent

      PART I: HISTORICAL FRAMINGS

      Chapter 1. From Context to Concept: The Emergence of the Performance Curator
      Bertie Ferdman

      CURIOSITY AND INTUITION
      Marie Claire Forté

      Chapter 2. Exhibiting Performances: Process and Valorisation in When Attitudes Become Forms—Bern 1969 / Venice 2013
      Beatrice von Bismarck

      Chapter 3. Can We Curate Dance without Making a Festival?: On Dance Curatorship and Its Shifting Borders
      Elisa Ricci

      Chapter 4. Curating Performance from Africa for International Stages: Thoughts on Artistic Categories and Critical Discourse
      ‘Funmi Adewole with Jareh Das

      UNTITLED
      Isabel Sachs

      Chapter 5. The Curating Nation: Emergence of Performance Curation in Singapore and Its Impact on Cultural Politics
      Ken Takiguchi

      Chapter 6. The Curatorial Chronotope
      Peter Dickinson

      LAYERS
      Harun Morrison

      Chapter 7. More Weirdness, More Joy: Performance Curation and Pedagogy at Danspace Project and the Institute for Curatorial Practice in Performance
      Judy Hussie-Taylor

      PART II: ETHICAL PROPOSALS

      Chapter 8. Dancing the Museum
      Thomas F. DeFrantz

      Chapter 9. Curatorial Discourse and Equity: Tensions in Contemporary Dance Presenting in the United States
      Naomi Jackson

      HOLY MOTOR—A MECHANICAL METAPHOR SURROUNDING THE LIVE ARTS CURATOR
      Cécile Tonizzo

      Chapter 10. Noticing the Feedback: A Proposal to the Contemporary Dance Field, and/ or This Revolution Will Be Crowdsourced
      Michèle Steinwald

      Chapter 11. Email to a Curator: An Introduction to The Curator’s Piece
      Tea Tupajić & Petra Zanki

      CURATING LIVENESS
      Victoria Mohr-Blakeney

      Chapter 12. Curation as a Form of Artistic Practice: Context as a New Work through UK-based Forest Fringe
      Deborah Pearson

      PART III: THE ARTIST-CURATORS

      Chapter 13. The Artist-Curator, or the Philosophy of ‘Do-It-Yourself’
      Julie Bawin

      "SOFT CURATION," POLLINATION, AND RHIZOMES
      Yves Sheriff

      Chapter 14. Being in Vanguard of Sensibility: Artists as Curators in Performing Arts—A Study of Collective Affect
      Kasia Tórz

      Chapter 15. Familias: Artist-Activist Curation in the South Bronx, New York
      Jane Gabriels

      Chapter 16. What We Talk About When We Talk About Curating the ‘Unexpected’
      Syreeta McFadden

      GREATER THAN
      Shoshona Currier

      Chapter 17. Because I love Art, I Want Art to be Different. The Project Perverse Curating and a Few Things I’ve Learned From It
      Jacob Wren

      Chapter 18. Making Stage: Contemporary Dance and Performance Curation in the Caribbean
      Makeda Thomas

      AS WE
      Nadège Grebmeier Forget

      Chapter 19. The Work of the Musician-Curator and the Notion of the "Concert Scenario"
      Marie-Hélène Breault

      Chapter 20. Pseudo-, Anti-, and Total Dance: A Self-Interview on Curation
      SALTA

      Chapter 21. Collective Creation and Improvised Curation: A Discussion with Body Slam
      Body Slam Dance Improv Collective: Gregory Selinger, Helen Simard, Roger White, Xavier Laporte, Victoria Mackenzie, and Claudia Chan Tak

      PART IV: EXHIBITIONS AS EVENTS

      Chapter 22. A New Kind of Critical Elsewhere
      Travis Chamberlain

      Chapter 23. Re-enact History? Performing the Archive!
      Julia Kurz

      Chapter 24. Choreographing Archives, Curating Choreographers: Yvonne Rainer, Xavier Le Roy, and the Dance Retrospective
      Fabien Maltais-Bayda and Joseph Henry

      THE TITLE AS THE CURATOR'S ART PIECE
      Steve Giasson

      Chapter 25. Exhibiting Dance, Performing Objects: Cultural Mediation in the Museum
      Erin Joelle McCurdy

      Chapter 26. The Curator’s Work: Stories and Experiences of Tino Sehgal’s Events
      Véronique Hudon

      PART V: ARTIVISM

      Chapter 27. Framing a Network, Charting Dis/Courses: Performance Curation, Community Work, and the Logic/Anxieties of an Emerging Field
      Roselle Pineda

      CURATE
      Natalie Doonan

      Chapter 28. Food=Need: Constraints, Reflexivity, and Community Performance
      Pam Patterson

      Chapter 29. ARC.HIVE of Contemporary Arab Performing Arts: Memory, Catastrophe, Resistance and Oblivion
      Adham Hafez

      Chapter 30. Collective Walks / Spaces of Contestation: Site-Specificity, Community Involvement, and Mobility Employed as Curatorial Strategies in the Creation of Participatory Performances
      Mariane Bourcheix-Laporte

      Chapter 31. Sound Citizen: Curating Sound Art in the Distributed Public Sphere
      Morten Søndergaard

      CURATION AS A PRACTICE OF RADICAL CARE: A DEFINITION
      Nicole L. Martin

      PART VI: INSTITUTIONAL REINVENTIONS

      Chapter 32. Rethinking the Role of Institutions and Curators in a New Interdisciplinary Age
      Philip Bither

      Chapter 33. The Curator as a Culture Producer
      Marta Keil

      DEFINITION OF CURATION
      SALTA

      Chapter 34. How to Build a Manifesto for the Future of a Festival
      “Festivals as Thinking Entities,” a Conversation with Judith Blackenberg, Daniel Blanga-Gubbay, Silvia Bottiroli, Livia Andrea Piazza, initiated by Silvia Bottiroli and Berno Odo Polzer
      Silvia Bottiroli

      Chapter 35. The Curatorial Gesture as a Decolonial Gesture
      Arnaldo Rodriguez Bagué

      PROPOSING INTERVALSCURATING AS CHOREOGRAPHY
      Gabriele Brandstetter

      Chapter 36. Are You Not Entertained?: Curating Performance within the Institution
      Rie Hovmann Rasmussen

      Chapter 37. Bodies in Museums: Institutional Practices and Politics
      Véronique Hudon with Boris Charmatz

      CURATING HISTORY, CURATING RESISTANCE
      Jaamil Kosoko

      Chapter 38. What Can Contemporary Art Perform? And Then Transgress?
      Emelie Chhangur

      Epilogue: Situation Critical: What Comes Next for the Field of Performance Curation?
      Tom Sellar

      THE PARABLE OF THE CURATOR
      Michel Herreria (drawing) and Jean-Paul Rathier (text)

      Index

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