Taking Up Space: Museum Exploration in the
Twenty-First Century
by Tiffany Sutton
Museums have become a crucible for questions of the role that traditional
art and art history should play in contemporary art. Friedrich Nietzsche
argued in the nineteenth century that museums can be no more than mausoleums
for effete (fine) art. Over the course of the twentieth century, however,
curators dispelled such blanket pessimism by showing that what keeps historical
art museums, both comprehensive and modern, "alive" and relevant in the
modern art world are the things that curators do with the artworks in
their collections. In certain cases, I will argue in this article, the
focus on artworks and the relationship between them can be rewardingly
shifted onto the spatial aspect of the museum. I will try to show what
such a shift of focus entails, show that it involves a gestalt
shift (in Wittgenstein's terms, the "dawning of an aspect"), and illustrate
the limits within which this can arise. The foremost of these limiting
factors is museum architecture, and I will discuss this to the extent
that it determines the limits of what curators can do. How architects
do things with museums, however, lies outside the scope of this article.
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