Curator, writer and historian, working across the fields of design, craft and contemporary art.

Work

Dorothy Grebenak

In the annals of overlooked artists, Grebenak is an extreme case. Working in an era when art world acceptance was hard to come by for women even in the best of circumstances, she doubled her marginality by choosing a medium that was relegated firmly to the “minor” arts. In the end, her work would be almost entirely erased from art history

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WritingBrilliant Move
Objects of Dispute

There is an astonishing scene in the new documentary Do Not Resist, in which an enormous military vehicle drives slowly down a side street in a Wisconsin suburb. It is thickly armored, the color of desert sand, and the size of a tank—or for that matter, nearly the size of the houses it rolls past

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WritingBrilliant Move
Fredrikson Stallard

London designers Patrik Fredrikson and Ian Stallard are deeply invested in material experimentation as a way of generating form. My monographic book on their work, surveying their career from the couple’s first meeting at Central St. Martin’s through to the their most recent work, is published in 2017 by Skira.  Following is an excerpt to the volume’s introduction.

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WritingBrilliant Move
Art in the Making

Art in the Making: Artists and Materials from the Studio to Crowdsourcing is a collaborative book project, written together with Julia-Bryan Wilson. Coming at the topic of art-making from two different directions – myself from craft studies, and Julia from postwar art history – we argue for the interpretive relevance of production. Moving from seemingly obvious topics like painting and woodworking to distributed authorship methods, like the hiring of fabricators and online outsourcing, we consider various ways of making art and the impact that productive decisions have on aesthetics and meaning.

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WritingBrilliant Move
Jane Dillon: Ahead of the Curve

This is one entry of a blog called “From Sketch to Product” which I wrote while at the V&A, from 2009 to 2011. The nominal topic was design drawings, and the way that they affected the finished design. Along the way the blog wandered a bit, including a series of posts that covered the behind-the-scenes design process of the Postmodernism exhibition I was co-curating at the time. This particular post discusses the work of the industrial designer Jane Dillon, who like many women of her generation did great work and got too little credit for it.

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Brilliant Move
Absent Minded

In 1919, Marcel Duchamp presented his patron Walter Arensberg with a small quantity of air. It was contained inside a blown glass ampule, which he had purchased from a pharmacist, and was labeled: 50cc of Paris Air.  

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WritingBrilliant Move
Voulkos: The Breakthrough Years

This exhibition, co-curated with Andrew Perchuk of the Getty Research Institute and Assistant Curator Barbara Paris Gifford, was the first exhibition to focus on the early career of Peter Voulkos, whose radical methods and ideas during this period opened up the possibilities for clay in ways that are still being felt today. The exhibition opened at the Museum of Arts and Design and subsequently traveled to the Renwick Gallery.

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Static

This exhibition was curated for Friedman Benda Gallery in New York City, in January 2017. A selective core sample of radical design works from the 1960s through the late 1980s, the show was sheathed in a projection of ‘white noise’ and a low-volume hiss of feedback.

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Postmodernism

Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970 to 1990, co-curated with Jane Pavitt with the assistance of Oliver Winchester, opened at the V&A in 2011 and subsequently toured to MART in Rovereto and the Swiss National Museum, Zurich. The exhibition traced the intellectual and stylistic progression of postmodern art and design, from its initial radicalism to its eventual commodification. The show was accompanied by a major catalogue with 40 commissioned essays, and a synthetic curatorial overview.  The exhibition design, by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life, drew on period motifs while presenting a contemporary setting within the V&A’s Victorian architecture. 

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Industrial Strength Design

A monographic study of a Milwaukee-based designer, Industrial Strength Design: How Brooks Stevens Shaped Your World was on view at the Milwaukee Art Museum in 2003. Staged in the museum’s newly opened wing, designed by architect Santiago Calatrava, the show included several vehicles, among them the Skytop Lounge observation train car from the streamlined 1947 Hiawatha, and a period Oscar Mayer Wienermobile.

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fix fix fix

The perfect repair would be an invisible one. The hope is to completely restore a broken object to its original function and appearance. But no repair is perfect. It’s not possible to turn back the clock, and no matter how skilled the restoration, it will be detectable - at least to expert eyes. This means that, aesthetically speaking, fixing works against itself. It involves a process of self-erasure; the more skilled the repair, the less visible it will be.

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