Crafting relations: Aspects of materiality and interactivity in exhibition environments
By Sandra Karina Lösch
1968 Reconstruction of the Abstract Cabinet at the Sprengel Museum Hannover/Germany, 2009. |
Abstract:
The past decades have seen the early avant-garde’s laboratory paradigm
and associated exhibition practices re-appropriated by relational art.
Both art movements re-evaluate our relationship to the world and to one
another and exhibition environments play an important role in the
crafting of these relations.
Against this background, the paper
investigates two aspects of avant-garde practice that touch upon
relational aspects in exhibitions: first, the Constructivists’ radical
re-evaluation of materiality as relations of energies between the
physical world and human beings that has been summarised under the
heading of faktura; and, secondly, the practical and directed
application of faktura in the design of exhibition environments with the
objective of producing new relations between audience, art institution
and the world.
Using Lissitzky’s Hannover and Dresden
demonstration rooms as case studies, the paper identifies an inventory
of techniques and materials deployed for the construction of what has
been considered the first relational environment. It intends to
establish a platform for the discussion of trans-historical
correspondences that can be detected in contemporary approaches to
interactivity and materiality — particularly in art practices associated
with relational aesthetics and postproduction art. Does Lissitzky’s
precedent anticipate, challenge, or offer expansions on current
thinking? Read full Paper
Abstract from: Crafting relations: Aspects of materiality and interactivity in exhibition environments
Full paper published in craft+design enquiry: issue 4 Relational Craft and Design
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