Catalogue Editor

Role

Shapes the written and visual publication around an exhibition, festival, archive, or collection.

Description

A Catalogue Editor shapes the publication that accompanies an exhibition, festival, archive, or collection: commissioning essays, verifying credits, selecting documentation images, and editing the whole into a coherent object.

For immersive work the catalogue carries unusual weight, because it documents experiences most readers will never have. Installations close, hardware dies, licenses lapse — and the catalogue remains. For many immersive works the publication is the only form that survives, so its accuracy about credits, dates, and how the work actually behaved matters more than its prose.

Discipline-Specific Description

The catalogue is where exhibition-making meets publishing: a durable interpretive layer produced on print deadlines while the works themselves are still being installed.

Scope Note

May include commissioning and editing essays, credit and caption verification, documentation image selection, rights clearance for reproduced material, and production coordination with designers, translators, and printers.

Boundary Note

The Catalogue Editor makes the publication; the Interpretive Writer writes within it, the Marketing Lead speaks to audiences before they arrive, and the Archivist keeps the records the catalogue draws on. Editorial judgment over the whole object is what the role adds.

Collaboration Note

Collaborates with curators, interpretive writers, editorial leads, documentation photographers, graphic designers, and the archivists who hold the source material.

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