What is contemporary curatorial thought? Current discourse on the topic
is heating up with a new cocktail of bold ideas and ethical imperatives.
These include: cooperative curating, especially with artists; the
reimagination of museums; curating as knowledge production; the
historicization of exhibition-making; and commitment to extra-artworld
participatory activism. Less obvious, but increasingly of concern, are
issues such as rethinking spectatorship, engaging viewers as co-curators
and the challenge of curating contemporaneity itself. In these five
essays, art historian and theorist Terry Smith surveys the international
landscape of current thinking by curators; explores a number of
exhibitions that show contemporaneity in recent, present and past art;
describes the enormous growth world wide of exhibition infrastructure
and the instability that haunts it; re-examines the contribution of
artist-curators and questions the rise of curators utilizing artistic
strategies; and, finally, assesses a number of key tendencies in
curating as responses to contemporary conditions. Thinking Contemporary
Curating is the first book to comprehensively chart the variety of
practices of curating undertaken today, and to think through,
systematically, what is distinctive about contemporary curatorial
thought.