Still Life: Ecologies of the Modern Imagination at the Art Museum

Still Life: Ecologies of the Modern Imagination at the Art Museum

By Fernando Domínguez Rubio

How do you keep the cracks in Starry Night from spreading. How do you prevent artworks made of hugs or candies from disappearing. How do you render a fading photograph eternal--or should you attempt it at all. These are some of the questions that conservators, curators, registrars, and exhibition designers dealing with contemporary art face on a daily basis.

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Book Information

Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publish Date: 08/19/2020
Pages: 424
ISBN-13: 9780226713922
ISBN-10: 022671392X
Language: English

Full Description

How do you keep the cracks in Starry Night from spreading? How do you prevent artworks made of hugs or candies from disappearing? How do you render a fading photograph eternal--or should you attempt it at all? These are some of the questions that conservators, curators, registrars, and exhibition designers dealing with contemporary art face on a daily basis. In Still Life, Fernando Domínguez Rubio delves into one of the most important museums of the world, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, to explore the day-to-day dilemmas that museum workers face when the immortal artworks that we see in the exhibition room reveal themselves to be slowly unfolding disasters. Still Life offers a fascinating and detailed ethnographic account of what it takes to prevent these disasters from happening. Going behind the scenes at MoMA, Domínguez Rubio provides a rare view of the vast technological apparatus--from climatic infrastructures and storage facilities, to conservation labs and machine rooms--and teams of workers--from conservators and engineers to guards and couriers--who fight to hold artworks still. As MoMA reopens after a massive expansion and rearranging of its space and collections, Still Life not only offers a much-needed account of the spaces, actors, and forms of labor traditionally left out of the main narratives of art, but it also offers a timely meditation on how far we, as a society, are willing to go to keep the things we value from disappearing into oblivion.

About the Author

Fernando Domínguez Rubio is assistant professor of communication at the University of California, San Diego. He is coeditor of The Politics of Knowledge.

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