How did you become a curator and what was the starting point?JK: I suppose the starting point was at university in Cambridge, England, when I was seriously thinking about changing to the study of architecture (A/N: from art history). I did a thesis on an architect-furniture-designer and began to realize that I really enjoyed the intellectual debates and people involved in design history rather than architectural history. I was doing a lot of research in the Victoria and Albert Museum in the department of furniture and wood works. So I was becoming very aware of the kind of people coming in and out of the museum and these different approaches and very object-based kind of studies. It was also the time of the development of design history as a freestanding discipline, intellectually it was quite exciting. I just felt it was a really lively area to be involved in. I always loved the "stuff" and even when I moved from working in museums and I moved into teaching, first at Glasgow University in the art history department, and then at the Glasgow School of Art, I always kept curating small exhibitions and teaching very much from spaces and objects. L: What does curating mean to you? Is it related to "the stuff" you love, is it about exhibitions, what does the activity of curating mean to you?JK: Well, in the sense of "curare" or "care for" or a kind of duty or responsibility I think that´s even if you are not responsible for a collection, you are responsible to a heritage or a culture and how you present it. The activity of curating is trying to communicate the kind of excitement, connections and stories that I understand to a wider public and to be doing that largely non-verbally, in the way you are making objects and parameters images talk to each other, creating narratives that are always leading the viewer or opening up questions. For me its like creating view points and arguments in a spatial and material form, of course part of that is having a deeper knowledge to be able to bring those connections or insights to the full. 17_2 revista de pesquisa em arquitetura e urbanismo iau-usp
The Museum of Modern Art. A Fellow of the American Academy in Rome and the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, he has degrees in architectural design and architectural history from Cornell University, an M.Arch from Princeton University and a Ph.D in art history from the University of California, Los Angeles. He has practiced as an architect and taught in Afghanistan,
During Fall 2016 we had the unique opportunity to participate in the regular internship program of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and assist with ongoing exhibition projects in the Architecture and Design Department (A&D). This Department was established in 1932 as the first curatorial department dedicated to architecture and design and built on an ambitious collection covering major figures and movement of architectural culture from mid-19th century to the present. With looking back on a rich history of influential exhibitions such as Modern Architecture: International Exhibition (1932), Architecture Without Architects (1964/65) or Deconstructivist Architecture (1988) it has been one of the key institutions to push the format of the architecture exhibition and which it keeps doing up to today. Having this in mind we both came to New York with great respect and honored to gain insights in this institution for a period of three months. The department currently employs around 15 people which made it a really pleasant, intimate place to work with highly passionate and professional individuals full of remarkable expertise and respect for each other. This said and with the department going through some recent (at that moment) personnel changes, most notably the new directorship of Martino Stierli since 2015, as well MoMA reconfiguring and adding gallery spaces set to be open in 2019, we felt it was a very interesting moment for us to talk to our curator colleagues about their personal history and professional ambitions as curators at MoMA as well specific challenges of exhibiting architecture and design. Being both educated in architecture in different countries (Brazil and Germany) we could gain not only a lot of professional insights but also talk about personal aspects of the curators´ – not always linear – careers. In total we conducted six interviews with all (senior) curators and one curatorial assistant of the Architecture and Design Department, all of whom we asked the same, around ten questions in order to produce a complete “panorama” of the departments staff at that very moment. In the following we would like to share with you the second half with Juliet Kinchin, Martino Stierli and Sean Anderson. The first three interviews with Paola Antonelli, Barry Bergdoll and Michelle Millar Fisher, were published on RISCO v.16 n.1 2018. From the interviews, Juliet Kinchin had an approach since a student into intellectual debates and design history rather than architectural history, while Martino as a professor, was also engaged doing exhibitions. Sean Anderson struggled being a professor and practicing architect, and curation for him “means also being able to condense ideas and questions”. Since they had different backgrounds before arrive at MoMA, the teaching position and a special love for research is a shared common background for them. Juliet Kinchin argues that the curator’s activity apart from the responsabilities also means communicate and creating view points and arguments in a spatial and material form, while Martino talk about the work of curating a show as very much about a teamwork. For Sean Anderson also the very strong critical sensibility, is a must have skill for a curator. Sean Anderson’s advice to young curators is to ask questions and to have as many experiences in the world as possible. Juliet Kinchin talks about integrity, that makes the difference in your work, Martino in the same way, reinforce the ideia to love what you do and so you will be successful. Luis Michal, Amanda Saba Ruggiero
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