The world's most influential contemporary-art curator explores the
history and practice of his craft
Hans Ulrich Obrist curated his first exhibit in his kitchen when he was
twenty-three years old. Since then he has staged more than 250 shows
internationally, many of them among the most influential exhibits of our
age.
Ways of Curating is a compendium of the insights Obrist has gained
from his years of extraordinary work in the art world. It skips between
centuries and continents, flitting from meetings with the artists who
have inspired him (including Gerhard Richter, Louise Bourgeois, and
Gilbert and George) to biographies of influential figures such as
Diaghilev and Walter Hopps. It describes some of the greatest
exhibitions in history, as well as some of the greatest exhibitions
never realized. It traces the evolution of collections from Athanasius
Kircher's seventeenth-century Wunderkammer to modern museums, and
points the way for projects yet to come.
Obrist has rescued the word curate from wine stores and playlists to
remind us of the power inherent in looking at art--and at the world--in
a new way.