Curating under pressure : international perspectives on negotiating conflict and upholding integrity / edited by Janet Marstine and Svetlana Mintcheva.
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Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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National Museum of the Philippines On Display | Non-fiction | N 72 C87 2021 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NMLIB-01980 |
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No cover image available | No cover image available | ||
K 3791 U54 2001 c.2 The UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Heritage. | LB 1028.75 K34 2016 Connected gaming : what making video games can teach us about learning and literacy / | ML 3752.6 E53 2018 Encyclopedia of nongak : community band music, dance and rituals in Korea. | N 72 C87 2021 Curating under pressure : international perspectives on negotiating conflict and upholding integrity / | N 408 C87 2022 Curating art / | N 410 B39 1967 The museum age / | N 497 N53 2004 Ben Nicholson. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
List of figures
List of plates
List of contributors
Introduction
Acknowledgments
Part 1 Understanding self-censorship
1 Rethinking the curator's remit
2 Much ado about nothing: policing of controversial art in the UK
3 Curating contemporary global art in Doha, Qatar: anticipated "conversations," undesirable controversies and state self-censorship
4 No names, no titles, no further explanations
5 Lady disrupted: self-censorship and the processes of feminist curating in South Africa 6 Bishan project: efforts to build a utopian community under authoritarian rule
Part 2 Negotiating self-censorship
7 Navigating censorship: a case from Palestine
8 Truth or dare? Curatorial practice and artistic freedom of expression in Turkey
9 The complexity of taking curatorial risks: case studies from East Asia
10 Negotiating self-censorship in the representation of Colombian armed conflict
11 Experimental curatorship in Russia: beyond contemporary art institutions
12 From Carbon Sink to WASTE LAND: a case study in navigating controversy 13 The bigger picture: rethinking curatorial approaches to photographs of childhood
14 Smart tactics: toward an adaptive curatorial practice
Index
"Curating Under Pressure breaks the silence surrounding curatorial self-censorship and shows that it is both endemic to the practice and ubiquitous. Contributors map the diverse forms such self-censorship takes and offer creative strategies for negotiating curatorial integrity. This is the first book to look at pressures to self-censor and the curatorial responses to these pressures from a wide range of international perspectives. The book offers examples of the many creative strategies that curators deploy to negotiate pressures to self-censor and gives evidence of curators' political acumen, ethical sagacity and resilience over the long term. It also challenges the assumption that self-censorship is something to be avoided at all costs and suggests that a decision to self-censor may sometimes be politically and ethically imperative. Curating Under Pressure serves as a corrective to the assumption that censorship pressures render practitioners impotent. It demonstrates that curatorial practice under pressure offers inspiring models of agency, ingenuity and empowerment. Curating under Pressure is a highly original and intellectually ambitious volume and, as such, will be of great interest to students and academics in the areas of museum studies, curatorial and gallery studies, art history, studio art, and arts administration. The book will also be an essential tool for museum practitioners"-- Provided by publisher.
in English.
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