Abstracts
Abstract
Increasingly, contemporary artists are receiving invitations from museums; and not simply to present works produced elsewhere, but to carry out projects on site designed specifically for the museum. In addition to commissions for conventional in situ installation projects, of the type Daniel Buren has conducted for nearly fifty years, numerous invitations call on artists to introduce a fresh perspective on collections, through presentations that diverge distinctly from typical museum practices. Different approaches can be observed—often revealing a very critical perspective on the museum institution—their common feature being that they are presented as an alternative to the practices of museum professionals, while resulting from a negotiation with them. The carte blanche thus represents a new form of conjoint practice— a duel expressivity—directly linking contemporary creation to its institutionalization, where the relationship between the parties concerned is neither completely visible nor completely equitable.
Download the article in PDF to read it.
Download
Appendices
Note biographique
Après des études d’art et un doctorat en esthétique, l’auteur est devenu professeur au département des Arts plastiques de l’Université Paris 8 où il est actuellement responsable des masters et administre une galerie universitaire. Ses recherches portent sur les théories et pratiques de l’art contemporain ainsi que sur la question de l’exposition. Il dirige la revue Marges depuis sa fondation en 2002. Ses principales publications : L’Art : une histoire d’expositions (PUF, 2009), L’Art contemporain entre les lignes (PUF, 2013), L’Invention du curateur (PUF, 2015). Il a récemment codirigé avec Bernadette Dufrêne l’ouvrage collectif Histoire(s) d’exposition(s) / Exhibitions’ Stories (Hermann, 2016).