Deriving from the Latin curare, meaning to care, according to Merriam Webster (2016), a curator is the person who is in charge of the things in a museum. While the job of curator is indeed one that requires formal training and preparation, the word has been liberated from its contextual home within the museum and has become mainstreamed and democratized, now referring to the control and care that we have over our arts, media, and culture in the 21st century. This is largely due to technological evolution along with the proliferation of media choices and new media creation opportunities
The concept of care has recently gained significant attention in cultural institutions and among art...
Originally I looked to curatorial practices to investigate the theme of \u27word and image\u27 due t...
This introduction explores themes discussed in the special issue of the Museum History Journal which...
Deriving from the Latin curare, meaning to care, according to Merriam Webster (2016), a curator is...
It seems nowadays that any aspect of collecting and displaying tangible or intangible material cultu...
The proliferation of the world wide web and, with it, ways to communicate and share experiences virt...
Although aware of a growing bibliography grounded in feminist theory on the necessity of an ethics o...
Objects, though the material stuff of curating, occupy a peripheral role in curatorial theory and pr...
Increasingly, the curatorial role is focused on audience engagement and collaboration, rather than s...
As curator Steve Dietz has observed, new media art is like contemporary art—but different. New media...
The curator has traditionally been defined as a custodian, a person having control and taking care o...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction -- The art formerly known as "new media" ...
Objects, though the material stuff of curating, occupy a peripheral role in curatorial theory and pr...
The process of curating objects to construct cultural narratives and to tell stories has traditional...
Google the word ‘curator’, and you’ll likely find that it refers to someone who works in a museum an...
The concept of care has recently gained significant attention in cultural institutions and among art...
Originally I looked to curatorial practices to investigate the theme of \u27word and image\u27 due t...
This introduction explores themes discussed in the special issue of the Museum History Journal which...
Deriving from the Latin curare, meaning to care, according to Merriam Webster (2016), a curator is...
It seems nowadays that any aspect of collecting and displaying tangible or intangible material cultu...
The proliferation of the world wide web and, with it, ways to communicate and share experiences virt...
Although aware of a growing bibliography grounded in feminist theory on the necessity of an ethics o...
Objects, though the material stuff of curating, occupy a peripheral role in curatorial theory and pr...
Increasingly, the curatorial role is focused on audience engagement and collaboration, rather than s...
As curator Steve Dietz has observed, new media art is like contemporary art—but different. New media...
The curator has traditionally been defined as a custodian, a person having control and taking care o...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction -- The art formerly known as "new media" ...
Objects, though the material stuff of curating, occupy a peripheral role in curatorial theory and pr...
The process of curating objects to construct cultural narratives and to tell stories has traditional...
Google the word ‘curator’, and you’ll likely find that it refers to someone who works in a museum an...
The concept of care has recently gained significant attention in cultural institutions and among art...
Originally I looked to curatorial practices to investigate the theme of \u27word and image\u27 due t...
This introduction explores themes discussed in the special issue of the Museum History Journal which...