This book analyzes practices of collecting in European art museums from 1989 to the present, arguing that museums actualize absence both consciously and unconsciously, while misrepresentation is an outcome of the absent perspectives and voices of minority community members which are rarely considered in relation to contemporary art.
This book analyzes practices of collecting in European art museums from 1989 to the present, arguing that museums actualize absence both consciously and unconsciously, while misrepresentation is an outcome of the absent perspectives and voices of minority community members which are rarely considered in relation to contemporary art.
Margaret Tali is Lecturer in Visual Art and Culture at Maastricht University.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter 1: The Presence of Joseph Beuys and the Struggle Over his Legacy in Berlin Chapter 2: Absencing and Presencing in Exhibition Narratives Chapter 3: Collectors' Space and the Agents of Narration Chapter 4: The Ludwig Collection in Budapest and the Absent Eastern Europe Chapter 5: Interrogating the Archival Logic Chapter 6: Archival Absence Afterword: Turning Absence into Difficult Knowledge
Introduction Chapter 1: The Presence of Joseph Beuys and the Struggle Over his Legacy in Berlin Chapter 2: Absencing and Presencing in Exhibition Narratives Chapter 3: Collectors' Space and the Agents of Narration Chapter 4: The Ludwig Collection in Budapest and the Absent Eastern Europe Chapter 5: Interrogating the Archival Logic Chapter 6: Archival Absence Afterword: Turning Absence into Difficult Knowledge
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