Interpretive Writer

Role

Creates text that helps audiences understand a work, exhibition, collection, or program.

Description

An Interpretive Writer creates text that helps audiences understand the context, meaning, background, or significance of a work. This may include exhibition text, wall labels, catalogue entries, educational material, facilitator scripts, public guides, or project essays.

In immersive media, interpretive writing can help a work endure beyond the moment of experience. Because immersive projects are often hard to document or explain, good interpretation helps audiences, curators, researchers, and future viewers understand what the work is doing.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within writing, narrative, and dramaturgy, the Interpretive Writer connects the work to public understanding. They help explain context and significance without overdetermining the audience’s response.

Scope Note

May include exhibition labels, catalogues, public guides, education text, facilitator scripts, artist statements, project essays, contextual descriptions, accessibility explanations, and archive-facing summaries.

Boundary Note

Interpretive writing is different from marketing copy. It focuses on understanding, context, and meaning rather than persuasion or promotion.

Collaboration Note

Commonly works with curators, artists, producers, researchers, archivists, publicists, educators, documentation leads, and accessibility advisors.

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