This article examines the affective turn in museums: what does it mean for museum theory and practice? How can we theorize its effects? In order to address these questions, the article develops the concept of ‘affective curatorship’, denoting curatorial approaches specifically aimed to affect visitors emotionally. Drawing on recent museological literature and exhibition projects in Europe and North America, the article exemplifies the qualities of affective curatorship and examines how emotions can be leveraged in curatorial practice in connection with the exhibition theme, activities, design, and the senses. The main finding is that affective curatorship is subtly transforming curatorial practice and, through that, the way we think and fee...
The co-editors introduce the second special issue of the Journal of Curatorial Studies which explore...
This article describes a series of experimental trials regarding the role of feelings in a museum co...
While the existence of uncritical exhibition practices that support nostalgic narratives about the p...
This is the first of two issues addressing affect theory as a mode of analysis for curatorial and ex...
Helena Reckitt moderated this discussion on the affective turn in curating and society more broadly,...
As museums have found themselves needing to express concepts and events for which we seem not to hav...
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
The emotional part of a museum experience is being debated and there is research pointing towards th...
The emotional part of a museum experience is being debated and there is research pointing towards th...
All museums engender emotions: what is represented in an exhibition may influence what visitors will...
Affective metadata for object experiences in the art museum explores the notion of affect as related...
Affective metadata for object experiences in the art museum explores the notion of affect as related...
The co-editors introduce the second special issue of the Journal of Curatorial Studies which explore...
This article describes a series of experimental trials regarding the role of feelings in a museum co...
While the existence of uncritical exhibition practices that support nostalgic narratives about the p...
This is the first of two issues addressing affect theory as a mode of analysis for curatorial and ex...
Helena Reckitt moderated this discussion on the affective turn in curating and society more broadly,...
As museums have found themselves needing to express concepts and events for which we seem not to hav...
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors....
The emotional part of a museum experience is being debated and there is research pointing towards th...
The emotional part of a museum experience is being debated and there is research pointing towards th...
All museums engender emotions: what is represented in an exhibition may influence what visitors will...
Affective metadata for object experiences in the art museum explores the notion of affect as related...
Affective metadata for object experiences in the art museum explores the notion of affect as related...
The co-editors introduce the second special issue of the Journal of Curatorial Studies which explore...
This article describes a series of experimental trials regarding the role of feelings in a museum co...
While the existence of uncritical exhibition practices that support nostalgic narratives about the p...