Difference between revisions of "LGBTQ Curators at Museums and Art Galleries"

From QueerBio.com
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 22: Line 22:
 
* [[J. B. Harter]], United States, Historic New Orleans Collections
 
* [[J. B. Harter]], United States, Historic New Orleans Collections
 
* [[Charles C. Hill]], Canada, National Gallery of Canada
 
* [[Charles C. Hill]], Canada, National Gallery of Canada
 +
* [[SD Holman]], Canada, Sum Gallery
 
* [[Frank Howarth]], Australia, Australia Museum
 
* [[Frank Howarth]], Australia, Australia Museum
 
* [[Stephan Jost]], Canada, Art Gallery of Ontario
 
* [[Stephan Jost]], Canada, Art Gallery of Ontario
Line 50: Line 51:
 
* [[LGBTQ Librarians and Archivists]]
 
* [[LGBTQ Librarians and Archivists]]
 
* [[Queer Theorists]]
 
* [[Queer Theorists]]
 +
 +
<html><br />
 +
<a href="#"
 +
  onclick="
 +
    window.open(
 +
      'https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u='+encodeURIComponent(location.href),
 +
      'facebook-share-dialog',
 +
      'width=626,height=436');
 +
    return false;">
 +
  Share on Facebook
 +
</a></html>

Revision as of 21:09, 30 July 2018

LGBTQ Curators

There are several successful LGBTQ art and museum curators at prominent cultural institutions and art galleries around the world.

In essence, a curator is a keeper or guardian of important cultural heritage pieces, including collectibles, historic objects, art pieces, or scientific pieces. Curators thus represent important links between the past and today’s contemporary world. In this respect, they work very closely with archivists and librarians with a specializing similar to their field of study or expertise.

It is a curator’s responsibility to carefully assess the importance and relevance of pieces to the historic narrative of the subject matter. If relevant, they acquire the piece to add to a collection of similar pieces which collectively convey a specific story. Curators often are required to interpret the meaning of a specific piece in the context of a period of time, then catalogue it and prepare it for presentation to the public. To accomplish this requires a specialization in their field of study.

Given the historic context in which a curator works, you can see the relevance of having LGBTQ representation in this professional field. It is important that curators maintain a position of academic standing that puts them above bias and censorship in their work of revealing the true historical narrative to the public.

Curators have long played an important role within the LGBTQ community itself. Many exhibitions have been staged which relay the historical narrative of the emergence of the LGBTQ community within a specific community, region, or country. They have relied on material within LGBTQ archives to both uncover the story and convey it to their audience.

We have identified several LGBTQ individuals who are, or have been, prominent curators around the world. They hail from Germany, New Zealand, Great Britain, France, Canada, the United States, Spain, Poland, Singapore, and Australia.

See Also


Share on Facebook