Preface
Christophe Cherix
(p. 5-9)
© JRP|Ringier, Les presses du réel, Christophe Cherix
When Hans Ulrich Obrist asked
the former director of the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Anne
d'Harnoncourt, what advice she
would give to a young curator
entering the world of today's more
popular but less experimental
museums, in her response she recalled
with admiration Gilbert &
George's famous ode to art: “I think
my advice would probably not
change very much; it is to look and
look and look, and then to look
again, because nothing replaces
looking … I am not being in
Duchamp's words ‘only retinal,'
I don't mean that. I mean to
be with
art—I always thought that was
a wonderful phrase of
Gilbert &
George's, ‘to be with art is all
we ask.'”
How can one
be fully with art?
In other words, can art be experienced
directly in a society that has
produced so much discourse and
built so many structures to guide the
spectator? Gilbert & George's answer is to consider art as a deity: “Oh
Art where did you come from, who mothered such a strange
being. For what kind of people are you: are you for the feebleof-
mind, are you for the poor-at-heart, art for those with no
soul. Are you a branch of nature's fantastic network or are
you an invention of some ambitious man? Do you come from
a long line of arts? For every artist is born in the usual way
and we have never seen a young artist. Is to become an artist
to be reborn, or is it a condition of life?”
(1) With a good dose
of humor, “the human sculptors” suggest that art needs no
mediation. Because artists refer to a higher authority, no curator
or museum is to stand in the way.
If the modern figure of the art critic has been well
recognized since Diderot and Baudelaire, the curator's true
raison d'être remains largely undefined. No real methodology
or clear legacy stands out in spite of today's proliferation of
courses in curatorial studies. The curator's role, as shown in
the following interviews, appears already built into preexisting
art professions, such as museum or art center director
(Johannes Cladders, Jean Leering, or Franz Meyer), dealer
(
Seth Siegelaub, for example), or art critic (Lucy Lippard).
“The boundaries are fluid,” Werner Hofmann observes, who
goes on to note that this is especially true in his birth place
of Vienna, where “you measure yourself against the curatorships
of [Julius von] Schlosser and [Aloïs] Riegl.”
The art of the late 19th and 20th centuries is deeply
intertwined with the history of its exhibitions. The predominant
accomplishments of the avant-gardes of the 1910s and
the 1920s can be seen—from today's point of view—as a series
of collective gatherings and exhibitions. These groups
followed the road traced by their predecessors, enabling
ever-increasing numbers of emerging artists to act as their
own mediators. “One forgets,” Ian Dunlop observed in 1972,
“how difficult it was a hundred years ago to show new work.
The official and semi-official exhibitions held annually in
most capital cities of the West came to be dominated by selfperpetuating
cliques of artists only too content to benefit
from the burst of collecting that followed the Industrial
Revolution. In almost every country these exhibitions failed
to meet the needs of a new generation of artists. Either the
annual shows created their own splinter groups, as was the
case in America, for example, or artists formed their own counter-exhibitions, as the Impressionists did in France,
the New English Art Club did in Britain, and Viennese artists
did in Austria.”
(2)
As we move through the 20th century, the history of
exhibitions appears inseparable from modernity's greatest
collections. Artists played a defining role in the creation of
these collections. Wladyslaw Strzeminski, Katarzyna Kobro,
and Henryk Stazewski started the Muzeum Sztuki in Lodz,
Poland, with the presentation to the public in 1931 of one of
the earliest collections of avant-garde art. And as Walter Hopps
recalls, “Katherine Dreier was crucial. She, with
Duchamp and Man Ray, had the first modern museum in America.”
However, a progressive professionalization of the curator's
position was already becoming evident. Many founding directors
of modern art museums, for instance, rank among the
curatorial pioneers—from Alfred Barr, first director in 1929
of The Museum of Modern Art of New York, to Hofmann
who created Vienna's Museum des 20. Jahrhunderts in 1962.
A few years later it came as no surprise that, with the advent
of curators such as Harald Szeemann at the Kunsthalle in
Bern and Kynaston McShine at the Jewish Museum and at
The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the majority of the
most influential shows were organized by art professionals
rather than artists.
During the course of the 20th century, “exhibitions
have become
the medium through which most art becomes
known. Not only have the number and range of exhibitions
increased dramatically in recent years, but museums and
art galleries such as Tate in London and the Whitney in New
York now display their permanent collections as a series of
temporary exhibitions. Exhibitions are the primary site of exchange
in the political economy of art, where signification
is constructed, maintained, and occasionally deconstructed.
Part spectacle, part socio-historical event, part structuring
device, exhibitions—especially exhibitions of contemporary
art—establish and administer the cultural meanings of art.”
(3)
While the history of exhibitions has started, in this last
decade, to be examined more in depth, what remains largely
unexplored are the ties that interconnected manifestations
have created among curators, institutions, and artists. For this
reason, Obrist's conversations go beyond stressing the
remarkable achievements of a few individuals—for instance Pontus Hultén's exhibition trilogy
Paris–New York, Paris–
Berlin, and
Paris–Moscow, Leering's
De straat: Vorm van
samenleven (
The Street: Ways of Living Together), and
Szeemann's
When Attitudes Become Form: Live in Your Head. Obrist's collected
volume pieces together “a patchwork of fragments,”
underlining a network of relationships within the art
community at the heart of emerging curatorial practices.
Shared influences among curators can be traced. The names
of Alexander Dorner, director of Hannover's Provinciaal
Museum; Arnold Rüdlinger, head of the Basel Kunstmuseum;
and Willem Sandberg, director of Amsterdam's Stedelijk
Museum, will become familiar to the reader of these interviews.
It is the mention of lesser-known curators—still
not present in the profession's collective consciousness—
that will most catch the historian's attention. Cladders and
Leering remember Paul Wember, director of the Museum
Haus Lange in Krefeld; Hopps points to Jermayne MacAgy,
a “pioneering curator of modern art” in San Francisco;
and d'Harnoncourt recalls a student of Mies van der Rohe
who became curator of 20th century art at the Art Institute
of Chicago, A. James Speyer.
Meyer observes that if history fails to remember
curators, it is “mainly because their achievements were
intended for their own time. While they were influential, they
have nonetheless been forgotten.” However, in the late
1960s, “the rise of the curator as creator,”
(4) as Bruce Altshuler
called it, not only changed our perception of exhibitions,
but also created the need to document them more fully. If
the context of an artwork's presentation has always mattered,
the second part of the 20th century has shown that artworks
are so systematically associated with their first exhibition
that a lack of documentation of the latter puts the artists'
original intentions at risk of being misunderstood. It is one
of the many reasons why the following 11 interviews represent
a key contribution to the broader approach necessary
for the study of the art of our time.
1.
Gilbert &
George,
To Be With Art is All We Ask, Art for All,
L ondon 1970, p. 3–4.
2. Ian Dunlop,
The Shock of the New: Seven Historic Exhibitions
of Modern Art, American Heritage Press, New York,
S t Louis, and San Francisco 1972, p. 8.
3. Reesa Greenberg, Bruce W. Ferguson, Sandy Nairne,
“Introduction,”
Thinking about Exhibitions, Routledge,
London and New York 1996, p. 2.
4. Bruce Altshuler,
The Avant-Garde in Exhibition: New Art in
the 20th Century, Harry N. Abrams, New York 1994, p. 236.