Critic

Role

Publishes interpretive judgments about works, exhibitions, festivals, platforms, or practices.

Description

A Critic publishes interpretive judgment about works, exhibitions, festivals, platforms, and the field's directions: reviews, essays, and commentary written for a public rather than for a selection committee.

Immersive media is short on serious criticism, and it shows. Coverage skews between technology press impressed by novelty and arts press unsure what it watched, while makers mostly hear either marketing enthusiasm or silence. Criticism that knows the field's history, names what a work is doing, and says plainly whether it works gives the field a memory and a standard.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within research practice, criticism is public interpretation: it builds the vocabulary and comparisons through which the field understands its own output.

Scope Note

May include reviews and essays, festival and exhibition coverage, comparative and historical framing, interviews, and longer arguments about where the medium is going.

Boundary Note

The Critic judges in public on their own authority; the Reviewer judges inside a process, against criteria, for someone else's decision. Critics also differ from journalists covering the industry — criticism evaluates the work, not just the news around it.

Collaboration Note

Deals with editors and publications, festival press offices, curators, artists — at the professional distance the role requires — and researchers and historians who share the long view.

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