2007
DOI: 10.1386/jvap.6.3.175_1
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Collecting the traces: an archivist's perspective

Abstract: The phenomenon of artists drawing on their own and other archives is not a new one, but over the past few years there has undoubtedly been a significant increase in attention, among both artist and art historians, given to the archive as part of the creative process, as well as to archive practice. Archives have also become contested territory, caught up in discourses about the nature of museums and individual anxieties about the significance and preservation of documentation. From an archivist's point of view… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The art archivists Breakell and Worsley write that the archive has commonly been perceived 'as a space where things are hidden'; a space covered in dust, 'a dustiness implying a place of no movement, tranquility and silence; 'of objects that have been left to rest'. 14 However, in contrast, as Breakell and Worsley continue, the archive can be highly vivid. The archives are ways through which they move through the past and forward in their practice.…”
Section: Archivingmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The art archivists Breakell and Worsley write that the archive has commonly been perceived 'as a space where things are hidden'; a space covered in dust, 'a dustiness implying a place of no movement, tranquility and silence; 'of objects that have been left to rest'. 14 However, in contrast, as Breakell and Worsley continue, the archive can be highly vivid. The archives are ways through which they move through the past and forward in their practice.…”
Section: Archivingmentioning
confidence: 98%