Edited by Christiane Paul – New Media in the White Cube and Beyond, Curatorial Models for Digital Art

Edited by Christiane Paul

University of California Press, ISBN 9780520255975, USA, 2008, English
This is an anthology of eight essays plus four case studies on the curatorial practices in digital art. The carefully selected essays by Charlie Gere, Sarah Cook, Steve Dietz, Joasia Krysa, Jon Ippolito, Sara Diamond and Patrick Lichty represent a good compendium of the inherent discourse. This is especially supported by practical issues addressed in the case studies section where curators Beryl Graham, Patrick Lichty again, Caitlin Jones, Carol Stringari, Tilman Baumgartel, Hans D. Christ, and Iris Dressler extensively discuss landmark exhibitions. The premise is that the protocols that museums use to deal with digital artists and their work are still the same of the ones used with artists dealing with physical artifacts, with all the consequent inconsistencies. Artworks so dependent on fragile technologies are questioning all of the previously acquired certainties, requiring to radically rethink what we mean by “exhibiting” (for a public) and preserving (for the future). So exhibiting these type of (ephemeral in their own nature) works is still an uncharted territory and preserving them is one of the most challenging task that an institution can embrace. On the other side the core of new media art is undoubtedly the “process”, and consequently the collaborative aspect (among artist and with the public) is essential to its understanding. Definitively pushing a different trajectory of what Christiane Paul defines as the “art world food chain” is what is here explored, and the troubled relationship between contemporary and new media art is then settled.