Lose Yourself – Editorial

M. Schavemaker, Dorine de Bruijne
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Abstract

A logical sequence of bright-lit, white-walled spaces has become the dominant architectural model of presenting modern and contemporary art and design around the globe. However, since its first appearance in the early decades of the twentieth century, the introduction of this “white cube” model has been paired with its disruption: artists and curators have created chaotic structures in which the art breaks out of its increasingly sanitized cage and visitors are asked to engage physically, getting lost in what can best be described as labyrinthine exhibitions that often meander, both inside and outside the vicinity of the museum territory. Multiple layers instead of optical clarity, immersion instead of spectatorship, proximity as opposed to distance, chance versus rationality; these are some of the dichotic terms that come to mind when considering the relationship between the labyrinthine exhibition and its white cube alter ego. The theme of this issue of Stedelijk Studies digs deeper into both the history and topicality of labyrinthine exhibitions as curatorial model. Renewed interest in this topic arose in conjunction with the large-scale retrospective of Jean Tinguely organized in 2015–2016 by the Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf and the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. In the Stedelijk’s version of the exhibition several rooms were dedicated to the exhibitions Tinguely had (co-)curated at the Stedelijk and the Moderna Museet, Stockholm, in close collaboration with museum directors Willem Sandberg (Dylaby) and Pontus Hultén (HON), as well as artists such as Martial Raysse, Robert Rauschenberg, Niki de Saint Phalle, Daniel Spoerri, and Per Olof Ultvedt. The first exhibition, Bewogen Beweging (Rorelse Konsten), the lively overview of kinetic art which traveled from the Stedelijk to Moderna Museet and the Louisiana Museum in Humlebaek in 1961/1962, was overwhelming, chaotic, and participatory. The two following exhibitions, Dylaby (1962) in the Stedelijk Museum and HON – en katedral (1966) in the Moderna Museet, have become truly remarkable exhibitions in the history of curating. Walking into a large vagina, shooting paint, gazing at the stars in a planetarium, dancing the twist, plowing a path through a room filled with balloons… the exhibitions might easily be considered more as theme park attractions than serious art shows, comprising theatrical props instead of works of art.
迷失自我-社论
明亮的灯光,白墙空间的逻辑序列已经成为全球展示现当代艺术和设计的主要建筑模式。然而,自从它在20世纪初首次出现以来,这种“白立方”模式的引入就伴随着它的破坏:艺术家和策展人创造了混乱的结构,在这种结构中,艺术突破了日益清洁的牢笼,参观者被要求亲自参与其中,迷失在迷宫般的展览中,这些展览往往在博物馆区域内外蜿蜒而行。多层次而不是光学清晰度,沉浸而不是旁观,接近而不是距离,偶然与理性;当考虑到迷宫般的展览和它的白色立方体的另一个自我之间的关系时,这些是一些浮现在脑海中的二元术语。这期《市立研究》的主题深入探讨了迷宫式展览作为策展模式的历史和时代性。2015-2016年,由杜塞尔多夫艺术宫和阿姆斯特丹市立博物馆联合举办的Jean Tinguely大型回顾展再次引起了人们对这个话题的兴趣。在市立博物馆版本的展览中,有几个房间专门用于Tinguely与博物馆馆长Willem Sandberg (Dylaby)和Pontus hult (HON)以及Martial Raysse、Robert Rauschenberg、Niki de Saint Phalle、Daniel Spoerri和Per Olof Ultvedt等艺术家密切合作,在斯德哥尔摩市立博物馆和现代博物馆(Moderna Museet)共同策划的展览。第一个展览,Bewogen Beweging (Rorelse Konsten),动态艺术的生动概述,从市立博物馆到现代博物馆和路易斯安那博物馆在1961/1962年在Humlebaek,是压倒性的,混乱的,和参与性的。随后的两个展览,在市立博物馆的Dylaby(1962)和现代博物馆的HON - en katedral(1966),已经成为策展史上真正非凡的展览。走进一个巨大的阴道,拍摄颜料,凝视天文馆里的星星,跳旋转舞,在一个充满气球的房间里穿行……这些展览可能更容易被认为是主题公园的景点,而不是真正的艺术展览,它们由戏剧道具而不是艺术品组成。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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