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Beyond the white cube Make a critique of new curatorial practices.

An Introduction to the white cube In making a critique of curatorial practices that are defined by their point after the watershed of the white cube notion, it is important to understand that concept to see whether they have been successful in developing curatorial practice between now and then. We shall go on to look at how new curatorial practices, which claim to dispel the atmosphere of the white cube, are favoured by funding organisations, and what they see as desirable in new practice. This also raises the contention that practices may be implemented to secure funding opposed to more altruistic reasons. From here we shall look at two particular aspects of new curatorial practice: empowering the audience in an existing space, and altering the space to stimulate engagement in the audience. We will evaluate the practicalities and wider connotations of these aspects, seeing what can be achieved through innovative new practice. In conclusion I hope to demonstrate how new curatorial practices can help provide fresh context in which to rediscover art. New developments in curatorial practice may be accused of being gimmicks, or lip service to egalitarian notions of art, and on occasion (either knowingly or not) they may be used thus. But when used positively, it is new curatorial practice that is capable of driving art experience forward allowing us to engage in better relationships with art as a whole.

Inside the White Cube Beyond the White Cube was the title of Brian ODohertys retrospective exhibition of 2007, held at New York Universitys Grey gallery. The exhibition celebrated the work of ODoherty, an artist with particular interest in exhibition space and its impact upon forthcoming art. In 1976 ODoherty first published his essay Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Spacei in Artforum magazine. The essay was republished in book form and is still available, and pertinent, today. In his essay, ODoherty offers a scathing view of curatorial practices from forty years ago that is worryingly familiar today: A gallery is constructed along laws as rigorous as those for building a church. The outside world must not come in, so windows are usually sealed off. Walls are painted white. The ceiling becomes the source of light. The wooden floor is polished so that you click along clinically or carpeted so you pad soundlesslyThe discreet desk may be the only piece of furniture. In this context a standing ashtray becomes almost a sacred object. ODoherty describes an intense and rigorous space; isolated with the sanctity of the church, the formality of the courtroom, the mystique of the experimental laboratory. We can imagine the feel of the place it is not a location welcoming to the spectrum of human emotion, nor conducive to freethinking, or indeed permissive of anything unsanctioned by the institution. If not in a physical sense then certainly the essence of the criticism persists. Of course there are many galleries today that have been designed along breathtaking new contours. Does the Maxxi Gallery in Rome, designed by Zaha Hadid, collapse the essence of ODohertys criticism above or is it merely the equivalent of the Sagrada Familia, a breathtaking new exterior housing a traditional dogma. We can look at alternative location in more detail further on.

ODoherty elaborates the negative effect this space has upon the visitor, continuing from his discourse on how the white cube vacuums any time from the space: This eternity gives the gallery a limbolike status; one has to have died already to be there. Indeed the presence of that odd piece of furniture, your own body, seems superfluous, in intrusion. So ODoherty completes the concept of the white cube - an environment that doesnt want visitors, and if you must intrude you are pressured into subservience. The spaces that should disseminate art to a populace would in fact deter them from taking an interest, and engender a segregated, elitist art culture. No wonder that we sought to distance ourselves from this concept of an art space through new curatorial practices. But, the white-cube notion is persistent in the minds of visitorsii and art institutions. Evidence of on-going struggle against the notion can be clearly seen in the government funding body, Arts Council England (ACE). The ACEs criteria for funding are all combative of the white cube mentality in both institution and visitor, as we shall examine later. This position would seem to show the Governments commitment to positive engagement to art, although a more confrontational stance might view this as a debate along the lines of the Democracy of Spectacle as laid out in K. Schuberts The Curators Eggiii; creating footfall fuelled fun parks with an eye on eventual self sustainability. However, to the majority of institutions, securing funding will certainly impact curatorial practicalities. We shall look at the ACEs criteria for awarding funding to augment the critique of new curatorial practices. Whilst a detailed examination is beyond the remit of this paperiv, having seen the ACE criteria we may keep in mind the argument are institutions implementing practices claiming to go beyond the white cube to secure funding, with little practical evidence of their use in transgressing ODohertys concept.

Funding New Curatorial Practices I refer to the Arts Council England (ACE) document Achieving Great Art for Everyonev as a guide to criteria assessed by funding bodies. Whilst the ACE is by no means the only funding organisation available to galleries, it is one of the larger sources of revenue for a high number of art spacesvi. The document lists five distinct outcomes they would like to see from their investment. These are excellence, reach, engagement, diversity and innovation. By excellence they refer to an outstanding experience of outstanding art. Reach is the criteria by which they seek to bring more people to attend the art events. Engagement refers to the attempt to make these experiences meaningful to the participant. Diversity is the drive to broaden the art audience. Innovation the hope that the art spaces will challenge and develop the idea of art and art based events. The ACE would like to see more people from a wider demographic attend well-presented events of outstanding art, and feel involved and engaged by the experience. Its even better if the recipient of the funding can pursue and develop positive new practices, pioneering for others. This is the antithesis of the white cube. The visitor feels encouraged to visit the space and can engage with the work critically, the gallery looking to stimulate its audience and move forward in technique. In May of 2010, the Independent Curators International held a symposium titled Beyond the White Cube IIvii. The conference looked at collaboration in practice, with wider aims to examine the methods in which curators were rethinking their roles. The exorcism of the white cube is still in progress let us examine some of the new practices curators may utilise.

Empower Your Audience : Digital Augmentation Technological development from the point when ODoherty first outlined the white cube has been massive. The advances in communication, for social uses as well as exchange of ideas and information, has impacted upon nearly all spheres of life, including contemporary curatorial practices. With so many people creating and sharing so much online, the approach to how we discover and engage with culture alters. Gallery visitors have access to, and may engage with art through, computers - we can use Google Art Project to view seventeen institutions and see work in previously unseen detail or conditionsviii. However works of art have always been available outside the gallery; this is not so much a new curatorial practiceix as a much quicker and cheaper alternative to art books. Technology has also moved information into the gallery as well as taken the art out of it. Aside from the odd, dejected looking P.C in the corner of the gallery, visitors have access to computing power in their pockets in the form of mobile phones. An audience with the Internet in their pocket is not ignored. Increasingly, institutions offer downloadable applications with guides to the collection or information about upcoming events, such as at the Museum of Modern Art. There may be interaction with the collection in the form of a game or challenge, as in the Tates flagship application, which turns the collection into a giant game of Top Trumps, rating the art in terms of exhilaration, menace and absurdityx. Electronic guides to a gallery space are not new. Audio guides have been a part of the museum culture for a long time. The advantage of this new technology as guide resides in its flexibility and interactivity: a visitor can make their own path through the gallery space, finding information on the pieces they want to, or ignoring rooms altogether. It seeks to enfranchise the visitor turning them from passive observer to active navigator by allowing them their own guide to the space and encouraging them to create a unique

narrative through their visit. Whilst they may not yet be able to physically collect the works they want to see together, they become something of their own curator. This is one of the bigger battlegrounds of curatorial practice post-white cube -engagement with the viewer. The hope that the audience might take an interest in the work critically, and has a more beneficial experience as a result. How well does an electronic guide, or game, of the collection really empower the audience? Certainly it can provide an information anchor from which to enjoy the collection. Anecdotes from the life of the artist and the piece of work can make us feel more attached to both, emphasising their humanity as opposed to the suspended time and space of the white cube. One can take as little or as much from the exhibition as one wishes visitors with only a couple of hours to spend might engage with the work on a more superficial level as opposed to delving into the history of a piece. An electronic tablet could provide an encyclopaedic guide or simple What do you like to see? or What are your hobbies? level of involvement with a collection. This simply isnt feasible for everyone, both visitors and institutions. Visitors might not have the necessary platform, or be technologically minded. They may want to engage with the work on a personal level without constant reference. It would be impractical for a dynamic space, set up cheaply and quickly to engage their audience in such a way. For these reasons, digital information as part of the gallery can be a useful addition in stimulating an audience, and hopefully creating a more welcome space. It is suited to a large, established, institution; somewhere that can continually provide stimulation, afford the outlay and has an extensive collection. However, as a development it can go so far in taking you past the velvet rope. It is a practice that places the onus of engagement on the audience. There is another level of digital augmentation of a gallery space, the application of which rests with the curator. This is the inclusion of a versatile digital space, an area capable of

showing work through projection or similar means of display. Whilst statically displaying a framed Pre-Raphaelite piece would be nothing beyond the white cube, it would be the innovative use of such a space that could affect visitors, and could connected them with the institution or art in general. For example - the Open Eye gallery Liverpool will be holding an exhibition, Rich and Famous, early next year. Alongside the formal exhibition, they will invite the public to submit photographs of themselves with celebrities encouraging visitors to participate with art and feel more invested in the gallery; its a practice from beyond the white cube. A versatile display area would be ideal for this type of visitor interaction, or indeed any type of visual engagement; deconstructing a piece, showing x-rays, allowing interaction with the artworks even. It all allows a greater versatility and involvement from the visitor. Weve looked at two new practices that seek to enhance the connection between audience and art. These practices are aimed at making the white cube less foreboding, but they can feel contrived, or secondary, against the relationship between the individual and art. The connection by an informed audience is positive, but stimulated audience members will seek to inform themselves. We have seen the impact of technology in negating the constraining atmosphere of white cube curatorial practice. An alternative is to remove the connotations of the velvet rope entirely, allowing an unmediated reaction between art and audience.

Re-discovery : Changing Spaces

The practice of altering the gallery space in some way, or using a non-gallery space, has drastically challenged the white cube. But making an art space circular (for example) no more deconstructs the concept than painting the walls grey. It is not a matter of geometry as much as of the careful consideration of space and placing this consideration having perhaps one of the most dramatic alterations upon a viewers reception of a piece. When Mark Rothko left his precise instructions on the display of his work he recognised this effect on the impact of artxi. Displaying artwork outside a traditional gallery space is not radically new. In 1988, Damien Hirst partially orchestrated the Freeze exhibition in a docklands building, and today you can visit any number of graduate shows held in alternative spaces. Seeing work outside a traditional gallery can be liberating. The air of hush that pervades the white cube becomes less inhibiting and the participant may feel more comfortable with their thoughts on the work around them. To use ODohertys example, an ashtray would no longer appear a holy relic, and the art must stand on its own merits unsanctioned by its surroundings. However, using alternative space suffers if the ethos remains that of the white cube. The works may be hung and treated as though they were in a gallery, and the best features of alternative space can fall away. The power of the white cube to bless its relics is mirrored by a scruffy warehouse demeaning its detritus, or simply creating an uncertain space. This is the downfall of a number of graduate shows organisers see the power an alternate space can have but may be unaware of how to harness it. Because the real power of an alternate space, the strange charm to be worked on the participant, is in destabilising you and forcing you to discover art completely anew. Imagine the chills of being told that somewhere in a deserted warehouse, Van Goghs Wheat Field With Crows waited for you, that as you walked through a space not loaded with preconceptions at some point that tear of yellow would hit you, it would be you that startles those crows into a flight of raucous calls. That you might develop a relationship

of just the two of you, unmediated by a white gloved chaperone. This new practice of alternative exhibition spaces allows a genuine engagement with the viewer, one that is precipitated by allowing the relationship to occur naturally. Through this practice art moves beyond the white cube and under your skin. As part of the 2010 Liverpool Biennial, the groups NoLongerEmpty and The Art Organisation collaborated in creating an exhibitionxii. Both groups are interested in utilising derelict spaces, and exhibited in a building that would have been a nightclub (had the financial crisis not halted its development). From the basement to the strange mezzanine levels, new work was given room to reveal itself to each visitor. It remains one of my most enjoyable art experiences; reminding me of the pleasure of discovery and the exploratory, human nature of art. It is, however, counterproductive for an established gallery to hold its exhibitions outside a space custom built for purpose. Similarly, they cant remodel the gallery to create a space devoid of the gallery connotations each exhibition considerations, not least financial would mitigate against such activity. This acknowledged, Tate Liverpool has attempted to alter white cube exhibition space to provide new context. Proclaiming to counteract a conception that art galleries are formal spacesxiii, as part of the This is Sculpture exhibition, one of the rooms was equipped with a colourful dance floor and headphones with a funk soundtrack. The room displayed sculpture of the human body, from Ron Muecks Ghost to Degas Little Dancer, the connection pointing us at the versatile nature of the human body. However, this awkwardly forced connection, or in some cases disconnection, meant that it seemed the work shrunk back against the walls, refusing to reveal anything except the incongruity of their display. Muecks painfully gawky Ghost seemed uncomfortable as an unhappy teenager, the Little Dancer turned her nose up at me, and Reg Butlers Girl on a Round Base made a terrifying contorted shape screaming at her lack of connection

with the oblivious 70s party goers. It appeared to me simultaneously a loud indication of the established galleries yearn to distance itself from formal space, and how not to do it. I believe that the exhibition space has the largest effect on our reaction to art. As ODoherty argued, an antiseptic controlled environment can only elicit so much of a response. I would suggest that an environment in which both the audience and the art are unencumbered allows for a much deeper reaction. The Tates dance floor was not just a spatial experiment. It was the result of curatorial collaboration with fashion designer, Wayne Hemingway. Collaboration and experimentation of this nature are indicative of the ethos of new curatorial practices, which seek to reinvigorate the art spaces; embracing digital technologies seeking to empower an audience or creating space in which art can be made new. There may be problems along the way, but problems hopefully point to solutions.

Conclusion : Innovation ODoherty in the 1970s and the ACE today share a goal in imagining a new approach to the exhibition of art. Central to this perceived need is the audiences resentment at sensing that they require permission to engage with the art, along with a fatigue of repetitive art experiences dulling them to the possibility of feeling. At the core of the solution to these issues is innovative curatorial practice. To say for certain what factors will allow any particular individual to best engage with art is impossible, being essentially subjective. Helping an audience re-discover, or find for the first time, the visceral response to a piece of art, remains a positive aim. We can stand in an art gallery, with white walls and blocked windows the sense of limbo pervading - and be captivated by art. This is a fortunate thing; some of the larger institutions have phenomenal collections and change will undoubtedly be difficult. An

electronic guide, with details as personal as possible about the work, wont remove the feeling of being chaperoned. Physical changes inside the white cube are in their infancy, as witnessed by the Hemingway work, and can feel equivocal to David Cameron claiming to enjoy hip hop. In the Beyond the White Cube discussions of 2010, Abigail Satinsky co director of InCUBATE announced that they had decided against maintaining a fixed exhibition location. The pros and cons tumble in quickly, but InCUBATE have made themselves a more dynamic force. They have few of the constraints a larger, stationary institution have; how art can affect the audience is their prime concern not a problem of how to make an audience comfortable in their institutionxiv. In my examples I have emphasised the power of curators re-imagining the space in which we engage with art. I would not wish to claim this was the ultimate progression in new curatorial practice only show the impact achievable through it, and demonstrate how positively different our relationship with art can be through innovative thinking and practice. New curatorial practice, innovation and experimentation in connecting the art with an audience, can offer the audience a pantheon of benefits - from greater insight into the humanity of artists to breathtaking new experience. It isnt always perfect it can be lip service to egalitarianism or novel for the sake of it but, as shown, it can help us find new and very exciting context in which to remould our relationships with art.

B.ODoherty, Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space, The Lapis Press, 1988 It was strange that in the online magazine Motilo, one of the largest Damien Hirst collectors claimed, galleries can be intimidating. Is she honestly intimidated by galleries or is she speaking for her public? The interview with Anna Machkevitch can be found at http://magazine.motilo.com/obsession-damian-hirst/ iii K. Schubert, The Curators Egg Ridinghouse, 2009 Edition. The revised edition contains an introduction titled Democracy of Spectacle: The museum revisited. iv We would need to analyse the new curatorial practices use in securing funding by sifting through a large number of application forms citing said practice as evidence, and then compare this against an incredibly difficult scale to measure to what extent did the visitors feel this practice helped absolve them of white cube mentality. v ISBN: 9780728714939 November 2010 - available for free online (http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/publication_archive/strategic-framework-arts/) or in printed format upon request. vi Page 15 of the document describes their investment in regularly funded institutions as 344 million in 2009/10 vii http://www.curatorsintl.org/index.php/site/events/beyond_the_white_cube_ii_international_network s/ viii Access to seventeen galleries, including the MoMA in New York, Tate London and the State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg can be found on www.googleartproject.com. Here you can see Chris Ofilis No Woman, No Cry in the dark revealing the phosphorescent paint on the canvas normally obscured by lighting. ix Really this notion will persist only so long as the audience attaches at least some importance to an original or designated original work. Once this decomposing connection is lost, curatorial practice will change radically again the object being only a token. The notion is given better exploration in Andre Malrauxs Musee Imaginaire. x It recently won a competition awarded by the American Association of Museums, a gold in the games / augmented reality category. The judges praised the app for, creating interesting conversations between participants, and making the experience accessible for audiences of all ages providing a justification of expense and providing a catchy sound bite for the Tates argument against themselves as a white cube institution. xi The claustrophobic, surrounded presence of the Seagram murals Tate London room works much better for me than the disrupted, unconnected space of their hanging in Tate Liverpool of the 2010 exhibition. It also more closely mirrors the wishes of Rothko. xii http://www.biennial.com/content/LiverpoolBiennial2008/LiverpoolBiennial2010/SQUAT/Overview. aspx xiii http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/CollectionDisplays?venueid=4&roomid=5623 xiv That the Tate seeks to dispel a notion of being a formal space suggests their belief that formal spaces are inhibitive to audience engagement.
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