Friday, December 22, 2023

Christov-Bakargiev to Retire

 


The Kicker
A CHANGE OF PACE. The inimitable Documenta 13 chief Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, who is retiring as director of the Castello di Rivoli in Turin, Italy, shared her typically wide-ranging thoughts with Artnet News. “One of the things that the museum should offer in the 21st century is slow culture,” she said. “That means you want 60,000 people a year to come in and spend the entire day, and come out changed, rather than 6 million who walk through while looking at their phones.” [Artnet News]

Have a great weekend.


Game-Changing Curator and Museum Director Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev to Retire

Alex Greenberger

Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, one of the world’s most influential curators and museum directors whose quirky exhibitions are much-loved by many, will retire at the end of this year.

Her retirement was announced by the Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art, the Turin institution where Christov-Bakargiev has worked for over two decades and which she has led since 2016. The museum promised a search for a new director that would begin on January 1, 2024.

Christov-Bakargiev is a giant of the international art scene, having organized an array of celebrated biennials. Her venturesome, offbeat sensibility has made her an influence for a number of curators working today.

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As she once put it in a New York Times profile, “I am that person in the art world who says, ‘The field of art doesn’t exist anymore,’ in the way someone might have said, ‘The Roman Empire doesn’t exist anymore, Mr. Charlemagne.’”

Her biggest curatorial endeavor was Documenta 13, the 2012 edition of the famed exhibition that takes place once every five years in Kassel, Germany. Her edition, the second-ever Documenta curated by a woman, also set parts of the show in far-flung locales like Alexandria and Banff—a mode that was later repeated in Documenta 14, which was partially staged in Athens—and also involved a parallel exhibition in Kabul.

The show, according to Documenta, “caused confusion in the press prior to the exhibition with her ‘non-concept,’ eco-feminism, dog calendars, an absurd title that no one could remember (The dance was frenetic, animated, clattering, twisted, and lasted a long time).”

Her 2015 edition of the Istanbul Biennial, titled “SALTWATER: A Theory of Thought Forms,” likewise spun what could have been just another big international show in ever stranger directions. She sprinkled the show across nearby islands and addressed the Armenian genocide and salt.

“There are not so many works that are about salt, because the artists don’t have to do things about salt,” she told ARTnews at the time. “For me salt is one of the codes. It’s about what’s under the surface of things. Salt—you think of it as something you can’t eat too much of, or you can’t drink salt water because you would die.”

In her capacity as director and curator at various institutions, including the Villa Medici in Rome and MoMA PS1, Christov-Bakargiev undertook the typical activities expected of one in her job. She curated acclaimed shows and gained the support of many artists. But she also demonstrated that a museum director need not be boring in order to thrive.

Her long history with the Castello di Rivoli dates back to 2002, when she was hired as chief curator, and has since then, with a few gaps when she was not at the museum, continued an array of off-kilter exhibitions.

In 2017, she organized a 400-work show about colors and emotions that was so vast, it also appeared at the Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea in Turin, where she was also director from 2016 to 2018. It featured pieces ranging from ancient Tantra drawings to videos by Hito Steyerl. A show in 2019 purported to feature a work that may have been the actual Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci, and more recent years have brought a sustained series of conversation with Beeple, with whom she forged ties long before any other art institution did. Under her leadership, the Castello di Rivoli helped a refugee escape Afghanistan and was turned into a Covid vaccination site.

Her activities at the Castello di Rivoli could occasionally take on a more traditional feel, as they did when, in 2017, she facilitated the museum’s acquisition of the $570 million Cerruti collection, which includes several important works by Giorgio de Chirico. A grouping of exhibitions at the Castello di Rivoli have since showcased gems from the collection.

Other shows by Christov-Bakargiev included the 2008 Biennale of Sydney and the 2000 edition of Greater New York, the recurring show she founded at MoMA PS1 that spotlights artists active in the city.

True to form, Christov-Bakargiev will remain active, even during her retirement. She will lead what a release called “a major multi-year research and publication project on her archive and almost forty-year practice,” as well as an exhibition about the Arte Povera movement that will open in Paris next year and the catalogues raisonnĂ©s of Fabio Mauri and Michelangelo Pistoletto.

“I would especially like to extend my heartfelt thanks to all the artists I have had the privilege to work with for their unwavering dedication and generosity during my tenure,” she said in a statement. “Finally, I look forward to returning to this magical and unique place as a member of the audience.”

Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev on June 21, 2010, in Kassel, central Germany. (UWE ZUCCHI/DPA/AFP via Getty Images)



‘Pressures on Directors are Enormous’: Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev on the Future of Museums

An in-depth interview with the star curator as she heads out after more than two decades at the Castello di Rivoli in Turin.




After leading the Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev’s time at the institution is coming to an end this month.

With Francesco Manacorda succeeding her in the prestigious post as she heads into retirement, Christov-Bakargiev leaves behind a major legacy at the Italian museum where she worked for more than two decades, leading it since 2016. As one of the major powerhouse curators of the European institutional scene, she also curated the trailblazing 2012 edition of Documenta 13, where she broke with tradition and experimented outside conventional art hubs, holding events in Kabul, Alexandria-Cairo, and Banff.

And while Christov-Bakargiev feels that Documenta was “the most significant thing” she did in her life, the list of achievements goes on: running the 2015 Istanbul Biennial, and working as a curator and chief curator at the Villa Medici in Rome, MoMA P.S. 1 in New York, and the 2008 Biennale of Sydney.

All that time, she never stopped maintaining a broad view about what museums can and should be. In 2022, the institution was one of the first to exhibit the work of the NFT breakout art star Beeple; earlier this year, the museum collected a major NFT work by the artist.

“Nobody knows what art is, and neither do I. Art changes its definition constantly,” said the curator. “My way of looking and seeing what artists are relevant is generally: I look at society and situations, in terms of economy, technology, societal questions, and then I look at everything that’s happening in human culture, philosophy, art. film, and literature, and especially in science. I’ll see what is most connected in art to all that, and how. That helps me to identify the artists that are more relevant.”

Unsurprisingly, the 66-year-old may officially be retiring, but she has ambitious plans for the future, including a major exhibition on Arte Povera at Bourse de Commerce in Paris next fall. She shared a trove of personal insights in a staccato stream of consciousness at the elegant Hotel Victoria in Turin in November.

Beeple, Human One installed at Castello di Rivoli. (Photo by Roberto Serra - Iguana Press/Getty Images)

Beeple, Human One installed at Castello di Rivoli. (Photo by Roberto Serra – Iguana Press/Getty Images)

What is next for you?

I didn’t learn that much in university. I mainly learned from the Arte Povera artists. They taught me something which is very much in Mediterranean culture, ever since the pre-Socratic Greeks, which is that nothing is static, everything changes, and is in metamorphosis. There isn’t an artwork that is just there, not even a painting or a sculpture. Everything changes constantly, because of temperature, humidity, light. The artwork exists in a habitat. In the mid-1960s they were among the first artists to make installation art. It’s a form of artwork that says the artwork is not in its materiality, but in its constant vital transformation of energy and traversed by the public. That marked my life.

And the first thing I’m going to do as a young independent curator [laughs], is a big homage to Arte Povera at the Bourse de Commerce Collection Pinault in Paris, with an exhibition opening next fall.

It’s become a trend to highlight overlooked artists, and women who were part of historical movements, but this show doesn’t seem to include many women.

You’re asking me a really hard question, because, yes, there has been a tendency to establish the careers of overlooked women recently, and rightly so, and this exhibition is not part of that. I myself did that, bringing Etel Adnan and Anna Boghiguian into the Documenta 13, or hosting Carol Rama at the GAM in 2016, and many others. Right now I’m doing a lot of work with Bracha Ettinger. She’s a wonderful artist and intellectual. But most of the best women artists from the 1960s from Italy were not Arte Povera. If you don’t make installations, it’s not Arte Povera. The only woman who was active in the Arte Povera group at the time was Marisa Merz. She was a very important artist in my view.

Why were so few women making this art?

I do not know. You can’t invent something that was not there. At the time, the great women artists were either doing something else—like Carol Rama. Or there were many other women before Arte Povera, in the painting school, great artists like Giosetta Fioroni. Or in other fields—a very important artist in body art, was Gina Pane.

Courtesy Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli-Turin.

Courtesy Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli-Turin.

Was there an invisible wall preventing women from engaging with this movement?

There surely was an invisible wall in the 1960s up to the ’80s. But it’s not true that all the women were not creating art. Why were more women painters than installation artists? Does that mean that making installation art is a more male thing? I don’t think so, there are great women installation artists now. But at that time evidently, that is how things were.

Will you continue working in Italy?

I’ll be between a country house south of Rome and Turin, as well as London and Brussels where my daughters are, and New York.

What I’m most interested in now, is learning more about the digital art world. After the crash of all the NFTs, I’m even more interested in that universe than before. I found out there are a ton of artists working in this field who identify as artists, and that the art world generally rejects. We often cut out of the whole damn thing of human culture, all these people who spend their time in the digital realm, and that is profoundly wrong, a form of retro-thinking.

How do you view the pressures museum directors face today?

The negative pressures on museum directors are enormous. The main one is funding. Private funding is going more into private museums, and that is problematic. It has to do with narcissism. Wanting to be someone. The selfie. So there’s less of a sense of collective good. The business of footfall is also caused by the digital age, because the numbers are not the same as before, and need to be ever higher. [Now] there’s this nutty idea that the museum has to serve masses of people.

One of the things that the museum should offer in the 21st century is slow culture. That means you want 60,000 people a year to come in and spend the entire day, and come out changed, rather than 6 million who walk through while looking at their phones. People who deeply experience museums become less binary—less “I like/I don’t like”, less emoji-style.

If there were qualitative measurements, for example, rather than quantitative ones, that would already make a big difference.

Exterior of the Museum of Contemporary Art “Castello di Rivoli” near Turin. Photo by Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images.

You said you wanted to try saving museums because they are endangered. Can you explain?

They are in a hard position right now, because the public museum, at least in Europe, is funded publicly. Meanwhile, the new wealth in the world, characterized by private museums opening, doesn’t do the scholarly work that the public museums did and they don’t reflect an entire community with all its differences. It’s as if the public museum was getting fragmented, splitting into lots of little pieces because it needs to fundraise so much.

When I saw that the national museum in Rio de Janeiro burned [in 2018] because the director didn’t have the money to change the electrical wiring in the building, I felt it was a catastrophe that really was emblematic of our oligarchic times.

While the public museum is suffering pressures, a private museum such as the Bourse de Commerce Collection Pinault can and does support the making of an Arte Povera show and its legacy today. I am honored and happy to organize this exhibition, after my retirement from the public museum.

Director of the Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev. Photo by Filippo Alfero/Getty Images for Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea.

How would you like to save public museums?

I would like to use some of the new digital wealth of the new technology society. The new wealthy from the digital world are actually more caring of our physical world and cultural heritage than people imagine. I would like to make a foundation that supports physical restoration and repairs of museums and artifacts. I would love to be involved in a project like that, which could give grants every year to museums around the world.

What advice do you have for a new museum director or curator?

The most important thing is that we serve the artists. Their words, their ideas, and their visions are much more important than that of patrons; and more important than the market, galleries, and art historians. Listen to them.

By artists I mean not just the visual artists but also the writers, the scientists—everybody making culture. It’s a question of trust, and being open and vulnerable to that relationship. If that grows, everything else will be more or less okay.

 

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