User account

Liliana Gómez: Feralization of Curatorial Practices: The Encounter 				Between Community Activists and Curators of Memory Centers
Feralization of Curatorial Practices: The Encounter Between Community Activists and Curators of Memory Centers
(p. 23 – 52)

Liliana Gómez

Feralization of Curatorial Practices: The Encounter Between Community Activists and Curators of Memory Centers

PDF, 30 pages

  • global ecology
  • artistic practice
  • ecology

My language
English

Selected content
English

Liliana Gómez

Liliana Gómez

Liliana Gómez is professor of art and society at the University of Kassel/ Kunsthochschule Kassel and the documenta Institut. She directs the research project Contested Amnesia and Dissonant Narratives in the Global South: Post-Conflict in Literature, Art, and Emergent Archives for which she was awarded an excellence grant and SNSF-professorship by the Swiss National Science Foundation. She writes about cultural and media theories, the history of modernity, especially with regard to the arts, the urban and botany, aesthetics and decoloniality, art and human rights, visual cultures and the environmental humanities. Recently she edited Performing Human Rights: Contested Amnesia and Aesthetic Practices in the Global South (diaphanes, 2021) and co-edited Liquid Ecologies in Latin American and Caribbean Art (Routledge, 2020). She is the author of the book Archive Matter: A Camera in the Laboratory of the Modern (diaphanes, 2023) and editor-in-chief of the journal Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture.
Other texts by Liliana Gómez for DIAPHANES
Liliana Gómez (ed.), Fabienne Liptay (ed.): Eco-operations

Liliana Gómez (ed.), Fabienne Liptay (ed.)

Eco-operations

Softcover, 336 pages

PDF, 336 pages

The climate change crisis has become part of aesthetic discourse and critical research in culture and the arts. Future-oriented, ecologically conceived possibilities for action are being explored by artists, curators, and scholars alike. Eco-operations addresses these emerging aesthetic ecologies and new technologies of cooperation that both challenge and shape a sustainable future, foregrounding interruptions, ruptures, disconnections, dissonances, exclusions, and allochronism. Moving beyond the concepts of “flow” and “network” as a single, coherent (ecological or technological) system, Eco-operations instead emphasizes the frictions within asynchronously running systems. The infrastructures and formats of artistic production and exhibition play a central role here, as they themselves constitute ecosystems that invite and regulate processes of sharing and exchange. Artists and activists are embedded in these ecosystems, in which they simultaneously intervene when searching for alternative ways of creating collaborative practice. Bringing together scholars, artists, writers, and curators, and working across a range of disciplines, Eco-operations explores this field of tension between global and local ecologies, and aims to speculate on where dissonances imply both creative potential and political challenges.

 

With contributions by Dalida María Benfield, Ursula Biemann, Lisa Blackmore, T. J. Demos, Laura Flórez & Lorena García Cely, Sandra ­Frimmel, Alexandra Gelis, Liliana Gómez, ­Fabienne ­Liptay, Ana María Lozano, Uriel Orlow, Dorota Sajewska.

Content