Curator

Role

Selects, frames, and presents works within exhibitions, festivals, collections, institutions, archives, or public programs.

Description

A Curator selects works and builds the frame through which audiences meet them: what is shown, in what company, in what order, with what words on the wall, and with what claim about why it matters.

Immersive work hands curators problems the gallery tradition never solved. What does an institution actually acquire when it acquires a VR piece — the build, the hardware, the right to re-stage it? How does a timed, solo, headset-bound experience sit inside a space designed for wandering crowds? These questions have no settled answers yet, and every exhibition ends up answering them one way or another.

Discipline-Specific Description

Curatorial practice here spans galleries, museums, festivals, collections, and public programs, and its center holds across all of them: selection with an argument attached.

Scope Note

Usually covers research and selection, exhibition concepts and framing, interpretive direction, artist relationships, acquisition and commissioning advice, and installation decisions made together with exhibition designers.

Boundary Note

The Curator frames and argues; the Festival Programmer selects into a time-bound program of slots and premieres; the Exhibition Designer gives the frame physical form; the Media Conservator keeps the selected works alive. The territories overlap most at festivals, where a program can amount to an argument.

Collaboration Note

Works with exhibition designers, festival programmers, media conservators, collection managers, interpretive writers, educators, and the artists whose work carries the argument.

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