This article explores curatorial practice that has technology-reliant works at its epicentre, arguing that for an efficient methodology to historicize the latter there needs to be a reconfiguration of the curatorial scope and a holistic approach to viewing and documenting exhibitions. Based on theoretical research and install decisions of recent years, the ways in which curatorial practice can be reconfigured within the art canon to inform art history, as well as to accommodate developments in exhibition practices are examined
Although museum automation emerged in the mid-1960s, American and British art museums continue to ha...
The paper addresses the changes that occur in curatorial practice as a result of the rapid evolution...
This article addresses the current digital status in the fields of Museology and History of Art, bot...
Following the International Conference on Art, Museums and Digital Cultures (April 2021), this e-boo...
The author examines the emerging impact of the works of the “New Aesthetic,” along with other works ...
This article focuses on the overproduction of aestheticised digital content, a testament to social, ...
This article reflects on a curatorial and pedagogical research project to reactivate ARTIUM’s contem...
Histories of the digital arts have their own distinctive concerns. These interests also deserve to b...
This article, as well as the book, investigates the ways in which new digital media may enhance the ...
This article is an overview of preliminary research undertaken for the creation of a framework for c...
The phenomenon of using digital materials provokes a democratization of access to primary sources, t...
The Museum is part of a ubiquitous framing of cultural production and a common, urban (political) sp...
Wiley Blackwell Companions to Art History are reference volumes that chart the influence of key idea...
This article explores the impact of the digitization of traditional works of art on the aesthetic ex...
Digital technology is not just the means by which museums today communicate with their audiences, ma...
Although museum automation emerged in the mid-1960s, American and British art museums continue to ha...
The paper addresses the changes that occur in curatorial practice as a result of the rapid evolution...
This article addresses the current digital status in the fields of Museology and History of Art, bot...
Following the International Conference on Art, Museums and Digital Cultures (April 2021), this e-boo...
The author examines the emerging impact of the works of the “New Aesthetic,” along with other works ...
This article focuses on the overproduction of aestheticised digital content, a testament to social, ...
This article reflects on a curatorial and pedagogical research project to reactivate ARTIUM’s contem...
Histories of the digital arts have their own distinctive concerns. These interests also deserve to b...
This article, as well as the book, investigates the ways in which new digital media may enhance the ...
This article is an overview of preliminary research undertaken for the creation of a framework for c...
The phenomenon of using digital materials provokes a democratization of access to primary sources, t...
The Museum is part of a ubiquitous framing of cultural production and a common, urban (political) sp...
Wiley Blackwell Companions to Art History are reference volumes that chart the influence of key idea...
This article explores the impact of the digitization of traditional works of art on the aesthetic ex...
Digital technology is not just the means by which museums today communicate with their audiences, ma...
Although museum automation emerged in the mid-1960s, American and British art museums continue to ha...
The paper addresses the changes that occur in curatorial practice as a result of the rapid evolution...
This article addresses the current digital status in the fields of Museology and History of Art, bot...