temps and ros need to post that, we didn't actually see the exhibition, that was thursday... all i know is, it was a smackdown between them and really bad curation.
We asked if our book could be touched or if any "haptic interaction" was allowed between us, the work, or the viewer and we were quickly given a lecture about how we weren't the "stars of the show".
Consequently, nothing was touched and very little was learned. Just a lot of confused people trying to figure out how to turn book pages telepathically.
Oh, no... What harm would there have been in letting the work be touched? Isn't art about questioning rules and challenging norms? Or at the very least doing something interesting.
dude im sorry. i wish it turned out better for y'all. well, it will look good on the resume and you got a to have a fun weekend in new york with some friends.
5 comments:
temps and ros need to post that, we didn't actually see the exhibition, that was thursday... all i know is, it was a smackdown between them and really bad curation.
We asked if our book could be touched or if any "haptic interaction" was allowed between us, the work, or the viewer and we were quickly given a lecture about how we weren't the "stars of the show".
Consequently, nothing was touched and very little was learned. Just a lot of confused people trying to figure out how to turn book pages telepathically.
Oh, no... What harm would there have been in letting the work be touched? Isn't art about questioning rules and challenging norms? Or at the very least doing something interesting.
Let's be a living lecture back at them.
dude im sorry. i wish it turned out better for y'all. well, it will look good on the resume and you got a to have a fun weekend in new york with some friends.
forget challenging norms, it isn't exactly against the norm to turn the pages of a book. i think we have to start at common sense.
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