Curatorial Design
Curatorial Design
The future of architecture lies in the curatorial approach. This is the thesis
put forward by architect Wilfried Kuehn and theorist Dubravka Sekulić in their
book Curatorial Design: A Place Between, which brings together contributions
from more than 30 authors working in the fields of architecture, art, and
curatorial knowledge and practice.
Architectural design and the curatorial share a non-disciplinary background, and
aim to assemble diverse forms of knowledge rather than specializing. Inherently
transdisciplinary, then, they are at odds with the increasing division of labor
in all fields of knowledge and practice. In the face of professionalization,
which limits our capacity to intervene comprehensively, design and the
curatorial challenge specialization and produce relational knowledge. They
intend to create an in-between place, as together they form a novel practice
that—in combining heterogenous forms of knowledge—takes center stage rather than
serving as a moderator or mediator of sorts. What unites them is the assertion
of a relational form, the autonomy of which consists precisely in teasing out
relations between different elements. What happens to architectural design when
it consciously enters a relationship with the curatorial?
The book is aimed at practitioners and educators in the field of architecture
and design, as well as curators and exhibition makers. It contains three photo
series by Armin Linke that accompany the three sections of the book: "Public
School for Architecture", "Total Reconstruction," and "Designing for
Co-Habitation."
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