Blogs Untitled (Blog)

Arts Institutions: Cathedrals, Town Squares—or Both?

Over the past few years there has been increasing discussion in the arts and cultural community about the shifting roles and expectations of audiences, and how they impact the creation of art as well as the relationship of cultural institutions with their audiences. Last year, for example, ARTnews published “Reshaping the Art Museum,” a story [...]

Over the past few years there has been increasing discussion in the arts and cultural community about the shifting roles and expectations of audiences, and how they impact the creation of art as well as the relationship of cultural institutions with their audiences. Last year, for example, ARTnews published “Reshaping the Art Museum,” a story that covered myriad strategies that arts institutions are experimenting with to attract and engage audiences. In that article I mentioned the Walker’s ongoing experiments with the presentation of its collections and the desire of our staff to advance more relational forms of engagement that invite increased viewer participation.

More recently, the Wall Street Journal’s story, “No More ‘Cathedrals of Culture’,” reported on changes that a new and younger generation of museum directors are making. (The writer, Judith Dobrzynski, also wrote a post on her blog at Arts Journal, “Why Must Our Cultural Cathedrals Be Replaced by Town Squares?”)

In the "cathedral": Guillermo Kuitca installing his survey at the Walker, June 2010

As director of the Walker, I was quoted briefly in both stories, but I thought I would take the opportunity here on our blogs to present my views on the subject in greater detail. On a fundamental level, it seems unnecessary to create such a strict dichotomy between the idea of arts institutions as “cathedrals” or “town squares.” This need not be an either/or proposition, in my view, particularly if you think back historically to the adjacency of the cathedral and the town square in the heart of any city center. Located facing the main public plaza and proximate to open air markets, cathedrals were often at the hub of community life. In addition to their public convening function, they were also centers for the recording of history, the preservation of culture and the commissioning of art, as well as scholastic centers for the dissemination and debate of knowledge.

Not to take the metaphor too far, but our dual mission at the Walker—to serve as “a catalyst for the creative expression of artists and the active engagement of audiences”—does reflect the importance of these kind of adjacencies in a community, and also the rather fluid boundaries that I believe should exist between them. Just as many contemporary artists are increasingly developing communal art-making practices and activating new kinds of relationships with audiences, the Walker too has been finding innovative ways to offer greater access to a broader range of visitors, to create increased points of entry, and to help them feel more engaged and invested in the Walker as an institution. These kinds of efforts have been most prominent in the current Open Field program taking place right outside our Vineland Place entry. In this summer-long experiment, we have not only invited the Twin Cities community at large to activate our “backyard” but have also partnered with a range of community groups and artist collectives from around the country to curate events and programs.

In the Walker galleries, we are also showcasing a significant number of the contemporary artists who have been directly or indirectly engaging with the public, and doing so for decades. Take two large-scale installations by Hélio Oiticica (from 1973) and Rirkrit Tiravanija (2006) currently on view in the Burnet Gallery, which both require audience participation; or The Talent Show, an exhibition that just closed, which examined complicated relationships that have emerged between artists, audiences, and participants over more than 40 years. One of its most popular works, by Peter Campus, was first installed at the Walker in 1971.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UqxBgbVgmVQ[/youtube]

As contemporary artists seek to activate new relationships with their audiences, museums and arts institutions help to foster these kinds of conversations. I’m proud to say that the Walker is uniquely positioned in this regard, not only as a platform and as a convener, but also as an instigator and catalytic voice. Indeed, we remain deeply committed to our mission and to developing our core, committed audiences while also seeking to broaden and diversify them.

The Walker’s efforts to encourage a “town square” atmosphere—in certain contexts and at appropriate times—does not signal an a priori abandonment of the institution’s commitment to quality, scholarship, stewardship, and presenting timely exhibitions of important artists and artistic movements (the traditional role of a “cathedral of culture.”) Currently on view is Guillermo Kuitca: Everything—Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008, a survey and catalogue that find new meanings in this artist’s singular painting practice. The Walker has also organized From Here to There: Alec Soth’s America, the first U.S. survey of work from this contemporary photographer, opening next month; and co-organized Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers, the first U.S. retrospective for this artist in nearly 30 years, opening in October. (The Walker has also published catalogues for both of those exhibitions.)

At the "town square": Kuitca and other participants at the Walker's Drawing Club

And yet, even as Kuitca was helping to install his exhibition inside the Walker, he enthusiastically participated in Drawing Club, a weekly “town square” event outdoors, which brings together artists and others to make collaborative art works. As an avid draftsman, he was happy and even eager to meet fellow artists and non-artists at this convivial gathering. Soth, who is always interested in engaging with his audiences, is creating an online photography project for the public in conjunction with his exhibition.

In short, arts institutions need not make either/or choices when it comes to the cathedral vs. town square metaphor. They can – indeed, I believe they must – take a both/and approach, and strive to have these roles converge in bold, imaginative ways that not only extend creative practice but also include the public in the creative economy. Embodying the notion of a town square does not have to involve pandering or diminishing the loftiest ideals about art, arts institutions, or the intimacy of the experience of art for the public; it’s simply making room for everyone, and making efforts to welcome them.

I hope that more voices will join in this ongoing conversation. Please share your thoughts and comments in the box below.

Dismantling My Career: A Conversation with Alec Soth

The exhibition From Here to There: Alec Soth’s America opens here on September 12th, 2010 and we are starting the install this week. I thought now would be a good time to post this conversation I had with Alec last winter. It also appears as one of several texts in the exhibition catalogue, which has been [...]


Alec Soth stills from the video slide show The Democratic Labradoodle 2009

The exhibition From Here to There: Alec Soth’s America opens here on September 12th, 2010 and we are starting the install this week. I thought now would be a good time to post this conversation I had with Alec last winter. It also appears as one of several texts in the exhibition catalogue, which has been printed and will be arriving in the next few days!  There are a lot of interviews with Alec out there and he is always very engaging. Siri Engberg, the exhibition’s curator, and I were wondering what we could do to make this contribution special, and we decided that it would be good to concentrate on Alec’s new body of work, Broken Manual and also on other pursuits that inform  his photography practice such as blogging and book publishing. One of the most interesting things about Alec is that he is a fine art photographer who is also a member of Magnum Photos, traditionally a photojournalist cooperative. I wanted to explore that a little, the feedback loop between working on commission, and producing self-authored bodies of work.

Broken Manual came out of a book project that Alec worked on with the writer and artist Lester B. Morrison who had written a manual on how to disappear. Lester is a regular contributor to Alec’s blog, and his work is featured in the current Soap Factory exhibition, A Theory of Values, a biannual survey of Minnesota-based artists curated by the Walker’s own Scott Stulen and Kris Douglas of Rochester Art Center. I was at the opening on Saturday and bumped into Morrison for the first time, here he is chatting with Alec.

There will be more Soth related posts over the coming weeks, so check back!

Bartholomew Ryan:
In 2007 you were invited by the High Museum of Art in Atlanta to make new work for its Picturing the South photography series, a commission that concluded with a recent exhibition there.<1> But this project expanded very soon into Broken Manual.

Alec Soth:
These last couple of years have been about taking apart everything I know—Broken Manual. The reason it’s broken has a lot to do with the fact that I can’t escape all these outside pressures. It did start as this commission, but then I started dismantling the project.

Just yesterday I was doing an online interview. One of the questions was: “What’s the project that has the most meaning for you?” And if I were just going to answer off the top of my head, it would be Sleeping by the Mississippi because there’s just nothing like that first time where you don’t know what you’re doing. You’re neck-deep into the work. What I’ve been trying to get back to—and in a funny way, what I am now at this moment getting back to—is that newness.

(more…)