Collecting the new : museums and contemporary art

Bibliographic Information

Collecting the new : museums and contemporary art

edited by Bruce Altshuler

(Princeton paperbacks)

Princeton University Press, 2007, c2005

  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Originally published: 2005

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Collecting the New is the first book on the questions and challenges that museums face in acquiring and preserving contemporary art. Because such art has not yet withstood the test of time, it defies the traditional understanding of the art museum as an institution that collects and displays works of long-established aesthetic and historical value. By acquiring such art, museums gamble on the future. In addition, new technologies and alternative conceptions of the artwork have created special problems of conservation, while social, political, and aesthetic changes have generated new categories of works to be collected. Following Bruce Altshuler's introduction on the European and American history of museum collecting of art by living artists, the book comprises newly commissioned essays by twelve distinguished curators representing a wide range of museums. First considered are general issues including the acquisition process, and collecting by universal survey museums and museums that focus on modern and contemporary art. Following are groups of essays that address collecting in particular media, including prints and drawings, new (digital) media, and film and video; and national- and ethnic-specific collecting (contemporary art from Asia, Africa, and Latin America, and African-American art). The closing essay examines the conservation problems created by contemporary works--for example, what is to be done when deterioration is the artist's intent? The contributors are Christophe Cherix, Vishakha N. Desai, Steve Dietz, Howard N. Fox, Chrissie Iles and Henriette Huldisch, Pamela McClusky, Gabriel Perez-Barreiro, Lowery Stokes Sims, Robert Storr, Jeffrey Weiss, and Glenn Wharton.

Table of Contents

Collecting the New: A Historical Introduction by Bruce Altshuler 1 The Right to Be Wrong by Howard N. Fox 15 To Have and to Hold by Robert Storr 29 9Minutes 45 Seconds by Jeffrey Weiss 41 Breaking Down Categories: Print Rooms, Drawing Departments, and the Museum by Christophe Cherix 55 Keeping Time: On Collecting Film and Video Art in the Museum by Chrissie Iles and Henriette Huldisch 65 Collecting New-Media Art: Just Like Anything Else, Only Different by Steve Dietz 85 Beyond the "Authentic-Exotic": Collecting Contemporary Asian Art in the Twenty-first Century by Vishakha N. Desai 103 The Unconscious Museum: Collecting Contemporary African Art without Knowing It by Pamela McClusky 115 The Accidental Tourist: American Collections of Latin American Art by Gabriel Perez-Barreiro 131 Collecting the Art of African-Americans at the Studio Museum in Harlem: Positioning the "New" from the Perspective of the Past by Lowery Stokes Sims 147 The Challenges of Conserving Contemporary Art by Glenn Wharton 163 Acknowledgments 179 Index 181 Photography Credits 194

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