Feminist Thought and Curating: On Method
Curating Degree Zero Archive: Curatorial Research
Feminist Thought
and Curating: On Method
by Elke Krasny
What if there is a feminist turn in curating?1 And if so, what is it and what
does it do? Does it turn practices of curating and scholarship on the histories of
curating into a feminist enterprise? Or, does it turn feminism into the subject of
curatorial knowledge production? Or, does it turn to feminism in order to understand from a feminist standpoint what curating is and what it is that curating does?
These questions raised here are central to my study of The International Dinner Party
in Feminist Curatorial Thought.
On Feminist Thought
My thesis examines The International Dinner Party within feminist curatorial
thought. I turn to feminist thought in order to analyse, historicise, theorise, and
practise curating. The conceptual framework, which I will lay out in this chapter,
draws on feminist thought as a form of practice. Thought as practice is always
situated in the concrete conditions specific to particular times and geographies.
What is of interest to me throughout this thesis are the politics of feminist thought
with regard to historiography, epistemology, and chronopolitics, and how the lessons gained from a critical understanding of these politics can be used to situate
curating historically and theoretically.
What follows is first a conceptual framework of feminist thought. I will
raise some key points here: feminist thought makes a claim to the non-monolithic;
feminist thought is marked by paradox and contradiction to which it responds on a
number of different theoretical, methodological, and practical levels; feminist
thought expresses a pronounced resistance to be tied down by definition; feminist
thought is in need of definition; feminist thought is in need of ongoing re/definition with regard to definition; feminist thought actively expresses resistance to
categorization; feminist thought is characterised by the quest for transformation
and the ongoing process of further differentiation from within; feminist thought
engages in a historiographical project of writing, re-writing, reflecting, and questioning the processes of knowledge-making and the resulting knowledge production.
Secondly, I will proceed with mapping of some of feminist thought’s paradigmatic historiographies. I seek to draw out how the key points raised above—
ranging from the non-monolithic to ongoing processes of differentiation—are ‘at
work’ in the already canonical or in the still emerging, yet already established histories and chronological narratives of feminist thought. What interests me are ways
of relating critical insights gained from an understanding of feminist thought’s
historiographies to the writing of curatorial historiography. What is at stake here
are the politics and power relations governing historiographic operations, and by
extension the epistemological implications. I refer to Susan Archer Mann to stress
the importance of such a historiographic approach. “The advantages of an historical approach are that readers can see how theories are constructed over time and
how they often develop in response to concrete historical conditions as well as to
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other perspectives
t
and debates they engender.”2 With reference to the work of
Marsha Meskimmon, such an historical approach needs to be troubled with regard
to any underlying assumptions of a “progressive chronology.”3 In order to specifically locate feminist thought as responses to concrete historical conditions, it is
necessary to continue working “against the grain of linear narratives of progress.”4
Meskimmon uses the work of Marxist feminist geographer Doreen Massey to
reveal how “spatial differences are reconvened as temporal sequence.”5 In order to
avoid the pitfalls of ‘uncritical chronology,’ one has to turn to “critical cartography.”6 My mapping of feminist thought’s historiographies uses such a critical cartography as its method. There are important lessons to be gained from this with
respect to curatorial historiography. In doing so, special attention will be paid to the
chronopolitics at work within the concepts and operations used to construct such
historiographies.
The Opening Question/Opening the Question (Again)
I have opened this chapter with a question. The question was: What if there
is a feminist turn in curating? By starting this chapter with a question, I am actually
already deeply indebted to feminist thought’s methods. I make myself part of feminist thought’s legacy by activating the question as method. What is feminism? This
question or questions similar to this have been raised and are still being raised over
and over again. I would even go so far as to say that feminism is the question.7
Posing the question of what feminism is, as I seek to demonstrate, leads to a strategic resistance to any merely descriptive or simply reductive definition. A feminist
method, as one might argue, is the resistance to definition, the refusal to be tied
down by any one monolithic and definitive definition. On the other hand, the question of what feminism is also pushes the need for ongoing processes of negotiating
re-definitions and the quest for changing definitions. The question of what feminism is leads to establishing contours in order to avoid that feminism is too easily
understood as some kind of indiscriminate form of attack, as a ‘pick-as-you go’
theory or a “particularly empty terminology, a critical stance without critique.”8
This is one of the constitutive paradoxes, or contradictions, actively challenging
feminist thought. This also offered in the past, and continues to do so, a fertile
ground for a large number of different strands of feminist thought, such as liberal,
Marxist, socialist, or anarchist feminism,9 or Christian, Islamic, Judaic, Hindu, or
Buddhist feminism. Other strands of feminist thought include “psychoanalytic,
care-focused, existentialist, postmodern, women of color, global, ecofeminist,”10
poststructural, deconstructivist, intersectional, Black, Mestiza, postcolonial, decolonial, cross border, transnational, indigenous, urban immigrant feminism, queer, or
transgender feminism. Considerable disputes, debates, conflicts, shared interests,
and alliances within different strands of feminist thought point to another constitutive paradox. Schools, canons, labels, or strands of feminist thought cannot be
neatly separated or definitively categorized. “To be sure this list of labels is incomplete and highly contestable.”11 Feminist thought therefore is also marked by a
resistance to a labelling categorization and not only by a resistance to definition,
which I pointed out earlier. Even though highly contestable, such categories are
nonetheless useful tools in understanding the multiplicity politics and orientations
at work within feminist thought. They also allow for an understanding of how these
different strands of thought not only create productive debates and conflicts
within feminism, but also sharing, crossings, and all kinds of intellectual exchange
and movements that can actually lead to new associations and transgressions.
Taken together, these activities nourish the ongoing transformation of feminist
thought itself. And, as Rosemarie Tong states: “They signal to the public that feminism is not a monolithic ideology and that all feminists do not think alike.”12
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Turning now to curating, I will follow feminist thought’s method and raise
the following question: What is curating? Recent proliferation of theoretical discourse on and historiographic narration of curating clearly shows that this question
has been raised in a number of publications.13 And, having studied feminist thought,
we come to see a paradox or contradiction at work. Curating chooses to resist
definition. Curating seeks to change and expand how its past definitions are understood, what its current definitions are and what its future definitions might
become. Yet, in order to be seen as a specific “area of knowledge,”14 curating and
curatorial thought are in need of some definition. And, I would like to add, such
definitions are in fact helpful in order to make the (ongoing) transformations–
which in fact often actively contest and transgress earlier models or definitions of
what curating is–better understood.,Therefore, the question also drives the need
for specificity and for contours, as I pointed out earlier with regard to feminist
thought. Again, it is a paradox that lies at the heart of curatorial thought. This
paradox unfolds as follows: the desire to be understood as a specific area of knowledge and the desire to not to be tied down by restraining and narrowing definitions. This also offers fertile ground for a wide range of different approaches manifest in curating. These have not solidified into long-standing categories such as the
ones I named with regard to feminist thought. Nonetheless, I will attempt to sketch
out different strands that are to be discerned within contemporary curating. I will
do so firstly according to perspectives taken up by curators, secondly according to
historic periodisation and fields of artistic production, and thirdly according to sites
where curators work. With regard to the perspectives employed, these strands are
activist, critical, conceptual, discursive, educational, feminist, global, involved, postcolonial, Black America, Chicana, global, or transnational curating/curatorial
thought. With regard to historic periodisation and fields of artistic productions,
these strands can be named as follows: modern art, contemporary art, video art,
installation art, performance art, conceptual art, postconceptual art, or digital and
new media art curator. With regard to sites of work, these strands can be named as
follows: museum, biennale, festival, gallery, education, public space, communitybased, urban, village, or theory curator. Admittedly, such a list is unfinished and
risks the danger of oversimplification. On one hand, curating/curatorial thought is
prone to introducing such self-labelling in order to work out specificities, differences, and positions. On the other hand, curating/curatorial thought is very likely
to resist such labelling as restrictive and reductive. Such (albeit tentative and preliminary) labelling categorizations are seen as helpful tools to understand the different politics and orientations at work within the emerging differences of curating.
They also allow opposing and conflicting perspectives to be traced, as well as the
emergence of productive dialogues and intellectual transgressions. This process of
differentiation into a wide number of specific strands within curating points to the
emergence of a new area of knowledge pointed out earlier. This area of knowledge
is marked by the differences within. I want to return now to what Rosemarie Tong
stated about feminist thought and use it this recitation and change to describe
curating. “They signal to the public that ‘curating/curatorial thought’ (my change) is
not a monolithic ideology and that all ‘curators’ (my change) do not think alike.”15
Even though definitions run the risk of reductionism and oversimplification,
they are, to a certain degree, necessary to arrive at differentiation and to achieve
nuanced intellectual specificity. Even though feminist thought and curating tend to
resist definitions, it is of importance to not end up with, as already stated before, a
“critical stance without critique.”16 Even though it can be understood via feminist
thought that curating also cannot be described by narrowly defined schools, naming different strands points to the complex historic and still ongoing processes of
differentiation and self-transformation. In addition, such a practice of naming can
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also be understood as self-chosen, self-identifying, self-labelling, self-positioning, or
self-organising. With regard to the methods used in this study, attention is paid to
the anti-monolithic or non-monolithic. This places the focus on working out paradoxes and contradictions as well as differences and specificities. Equally, the potential for dialogues, crossings, exchanges, and movements between different times,
sites, and perspectives as provided by feminist thought is central to historicising,
theorising, and practicing curating. What can be learned from studying feminist
thought is to turn to the question yet again. I have raised the what-is-question.
Now I will proceed with the what-does-question. What does feminist thought do?
What does doing feminist thought imply? What does curatorial thought do? What
does doing curatorial thought imply? Seen through the lens of doing, thought is a
specific social practice. Susan Archer Mann emphasises “the social agency involved
in theory production – how constructing theory is a social practice and a form of
labor.”17 She also points out that “Feminism is not simply a body of thought: it is a
politics directed toward social change.”18 I follow this line of thinking, that thought
is a specific social practice, and want to underline its importance for both feminist
and curatorial thought. While the political claim has been constitutive to the emergence of feminist thought, the same cannot be said about curating. While feminist
thought can look back onto an historical claim of emerging out of the feminist
movement(s) and being directed toward social change, the situation for the latter is
quite different. Curating’s beginnings did not emerge out of political movements or
social movements, yet curating is part of (critically addressing) the politics of how
art and culture are produced, shown, mediated, analysed, and made public. Curating cannot be understood without the concrete historical conditions of which they
are a part. Therefore, I not only locate issues of politics and social change in feminist thought, but also understand curating and curatorial thought as always already
profoundly entangled with political and social questions. It is specifically the feminist turn in curating that foregrounds how feminist thought needs to address the
politics of curating. Feminist thought provides the methods of analysis in working
out how curating is responding to specific historic conditions and how curating
does or does not address the social changes wrought by feminism within these
specific historic conditions. Curating as a social practice is part of the historic conditions which feminism seeks to change. As I have shown via Mann, Massey, and
Meskimmon, feminist thought provides the tools to confront uncritical chronology
and to activate critical cartography.
Feminist thought relies on opening up, over again and again, both of these
questions: What is feminist thought and what does feminist thought do? I will put
this method to use in order to approach and question curating. The resistance to
definition and to categorization, another legacy of feminist thought, opens up the
potentials for ongoing questioning, considerable conflicts, transformation, and
future change. The resistance to processes of stabilizing via definition is to be discerned in feminist thought. This can be used in analysing curatorial practice to
understand both such a resistance and processes of differentiation. Feminist
thought has historically emerged as a politics. Curatorial practice has emerged as a
distinctly cultural practice. In historical terms, it was bound up with hegemonic
logics of collecting, conserving, categorizing, producing, representing, and mediating art and culture. Institutions like the museum, or exhibition formats like the
biennale, are powerful expressions of representative and dominant models of culture. It was via feminist critique in the 1960s and 1970s that curating was confronted with its own hegemonic and exclusionary politics. It has also been via feminist critique and feminist practice that curating has undergone considerable
changes since the 1960s and 1970s. While the first is by now well understood in
museum studies and curatorial historiography, the latter still warrants future
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research and thorough exploration. Looked at from this vantage point of critiquing
hegemonic power, feminist thought is useful for the analysis of curatorial practice
as an inherently social practice with regard to its (changing) politics. And, this is my
key point, feminist thought is much needed when it comes to gaining deeper
insights into how curating is addressing and making public the social changes
wrought by feminism, feminist thought, and feminist art.
On the Chronopolitics of Feminist Historiography
As noted, feminist thought is not monolithic, and feminist historiography
seeks to mobilize strategic critical resistance against the logic of linear progress.
Paradox and contradiction, as I will show in more detail later, are part of feminist
thought’s legacy and of its current transformations. Yet, there is a troubling tendency to be made out within the historiography of feminism as an object of study.
Both a large number of feminist movements and the body of most diverse feminist
thought have been written into what is now a rather canonical history hinging on
chronopolitically charged terms of before versus after, pioneering versus obsolete,
older versus younger. Crucial to my chronopolitical critique of feminist thought’s
historiography are art historian Griselda Pollock’s work on paradox and Sarah
Bracke’s and Maria Puig de la Bellacasa’s re-reading of contradiction via feminist
standpoint theory.
What follows now is an outline mapping the conventional narratives of
feminist thought. I will move through a number of different yet closely related
narratives. As I move through these narratives, I will point out a number of chronopolitical implications and contradictions. The history of feminism has been written as a history of waves: First Wave, Second Wave, Third Wave, and, most recently,
Fourth Wave. The history of feminism has also been written in terms of pre and
post: prefeminist, feminist, postfeminist. Both the waves model and the pre/post
model suggest a “progressive chronology.”19 Susan Archer Mann points to the
linearity implied in the wave model. “No doubt, many histories of U.S. feminism
have employed a linear, wave approach.”20 Linear constructions of historical time
are inherently Eurocentric. They share common legacies with modernism, modernity, progress, and universal history. Amongst many other things, feminist historiography sought to actively intervene into such concepts of historical time, to
deconstruct and challenge its enduring hegemonic underpinnings, and to transgress such concepts and the resulting models of constructing history via linear
narrations. First-wave feminism commonly refers to movements around suffrage
and to activities taking place through the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries. Second wave and third wave on the contrary are separated by a mere decade.
“The second wave denotes the resurgence of women’s organizing in the 1960s and
ends (…) with the defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) in 1982. The third
wave refers to the resurgence of feminist activism in the 1990s, especially by
younger feminists who came of age after the second wave.” The wave approach
suggests a causal linearity that is very much following a chronopolitical logic owed
to modernist ideas of progress. It is exactly such a progress-centric model of historiographic narration that feminist thought rejects and deconstructs. Yet, with feminism as the object of historical study, this progress-based narrative has become
canonical and hegemonic. Therefore, Mann argues for a more nuanced model of
feminism’s historiography. She offers a number of reasons why the waves model is
problematic.
First, wave approaches too often downplay the importance of individual and
small-scale collective actions as well as indirect and covert acts. Second, they
ignore feminist writings and activities before and between different waves.
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Third, wave approaches generally draw attention to the common themes
that unify each wave and focus on the largest and most hegemonic feminist
organizations. Hence, they tend to obscure the diversity of competing feminisms within each wave as well as the contributions of more politically radical
feminists and of women activists and theorists marginalized within each
wave.21
I share Mann’s thoughts on such necessary problematisation. I conceive feminist thought as historically and geographically situated. Therefore, more nuanced
concepts and more detailed research with regard to individual and small-scale
actions, uncommon or marginal themes, and competing positions are not only
welcome, but a necessity.
This text is dedicated to the study of The International Dinner Party in Feminist Curatorial Thought. The International Dinner Party project was originally conceived
by Suzanne Lacy as a tribute to her mentor Judy Chicago. The Dinner Party by Judy
Chicago opened on March 14, 1979. During the exhibition opening at the San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the International Dinner Party was performed by
Lacy. The Dinner Party is considered a powerful and controversial icon of feminist
art and by extension a symbol of second-wave feminism. The International Dinner
Party both shares, and as I seek to show, transgresses the legacy constructed by the
historiographic operations at work in the wave model. Therefore, it is of importance to understand how the wave model operates. This offers the basis for working out how The International Dinner Party is conventionally situated in historical
terms. The International Dinner Party is constituted via complex relations within a
network of many different individual feminist activists and artists, but also feminist
groups and organizations. Therefore, both actions representing different scales,
ranging from the individual to organizations, are of interest to this study. In addition, the individuals and organizations contributing to The International Dinner Party
are situated in regional and geographical contexts differing widely from each other.
This confirms that all the critical points raised in Susan Archer Mann’s problematisation need to be taken up in research and theorisation. Yet, I want to argue that a
“cultural feminist analysis”22 of The International Dinner Party and its situating in
trans-historic feminist curatorial thought also needs to critically challenge the foundational assumptions of the waves narrative. The waves model suggests development and progress. It is this progress-centric model of historiographic narration
that feminist thought sought to reject and deconstruct. Therefore, it is important
to understand the waves narrative in historical terms, yet to not reproduce its
chronopolitical hegemony. Prefeminist or protofeminist, feminist, and postfeminist
suggest a similar progress-centric and linear conception of historic development.
Feminism has come to be understood through this specific, chronopolitically
charged terminology and ordering. Not only does such an ordering construct a
linearity, it also suggests that one model replaces the other, or put differently,
makes it obsolete. The differences between pre- and post- or between different
waves are therefore not only temporal, but ideological. They are commonly understood as ideologically split, especially between second wave and third wave feminism or feminism and postfeminism. Meskimmon’s critical cartography is helpful to
recognize that chronology and ideology are complexly connected with geographies
and geopolitics. Such a linear ordering implies the “displacement of one set of
approaches by others.”23 This means first of all that the waves model was applied
outside of the U.S. context from where it originated. It means secondly that this
displacement has to be critically analysed with regard to what is referred to as
centres and margins. Revisiting March 14, 1979, the evening of The International
Dinner Party, a moment in time commonly fully associated with second-wave femi-
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nist thinking, will necessarily entail confronting inherent hegemonic assumptions
and working out nuanced differences of historic feminist thought and movement. I
aim to critically address the chronopolitical implications and to actively address the
paradox that feminist historiography has critically deconstructed meta-narratives,
progress, and linearity, yet the historical study of feminism has, to some degree,
reproduced such concepts. I will take up Mann’s points of paying attention to
individual and small-scale collective actions as well as to uncommon actions in
order to better understand the diversity of feminisms articulated via the messages
of The International Dinner Party. I engage with “situated knowledges and politics of
location”24 throughout my analysis. Therefore I will link the points raised by Mann
with Meskimmon’s concept of critical cartography in order to counteract both a
progress-centric wave-based model and a centre (U.S.)-to-margin-based chronological model.
Questions and Paradoxes
Let me now turn once more to asking a question. I have already pointed out
that asking what feminism is, or what feminist art is, or what feminist thought is,
can actually be considered a paradigmatic feminist method. I cannot emphasize
strongly enough the importance of the question as method. First, to keep the
question open as a method implies to theoretically bear the consequences that it
can in fact not be answered. Or put differently, that it is part of the question’s
method to resist closure and to uphold this ongoing process of producing new
answers. Second, it is not only necessary to reopen the question again and again
from a critical and deconstructivist theoretical perspective, as noted before, but
also because of the transformations of the concrete historical conditions that need
to be addressed. Looked at through the lens of the question as method, feminism is
based upon this paradox of never fully answering and, at the same time, never
ceasing to ask over and over again. In particular, I will now focus the histories of art
histories and their pivoting on the question as method and the paradox as constitutive. In so doing, I aim to transfer insights gained from art histories’ critical historiographic project to my analysis of The International Dinner Party with regard to curating’s historiography. In her essay, The Politics of Theory: Generations and Geographies in
Feminist Theory and the Histories of Art Histories, Griselda Pollock activates the tradition of the question as feminist method.
The term ‘feminist theory’ has a wide currency now. But what is it? Does it
mean that there is a coherent perspective on all areas unified under the
rubric feminism? […] Raising the question catapults us from the neatly
ordered universe/university of intellectual knowledge with this clear disciplinary division into a field of practice. The feminist question—the key question
of feminism—brings down the load bearing walls which compartmentalize
academic knowledge to reveal the structure of sexual difference by which
society and culture is riven, showing that all disciplines are impregnated with
the ideological premises of a sex/gender system.25
Following Pollock and many other feminist scholars and theorists, an important aim for feminist thought is therefore to transform compartmentalized intellectual knowledge production into a field of practice. Feminist knowledge practices
pivot around the social and ideological implications of sexual difference. Turning
knowledge production into a field of practice is important for my understanding of
curating’s underpinnings. A feminist turn in curating also addresses the social and
ideological implications of sexual difference. For this reason, curatorial knowledge
production can be understood as a practice, and, as I want to suggest, curatorial
knowledge production as a feminist practice. I will return to this in more detail later
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in this essay. For now, I want to emphasize that, from a feminist standpoint, practicing knowledge includes the activities of dis/ordering, un/learning, inter/vening, and
moving inter/disciplinarily. This is in line with opening the question of what feminism is and what feminism does. Feminist knowledge production also needs to
extend such a practice of dis/ordering and inter/vening to the body of knowledge
produced by feminist thought. Yet, in doing so, feminist thought ought to be careful not to repeat the ideological splitting and displacing of one set of approaches by
others based upon a progress-centric chronopolitical argument of before/after,
obsolete/new, earlier/future-oriented. “Feminism demands that certain issues
remain in view, and it functions as a resistance to any tendency to stabilize knowledge or theory around fictions of the generically human or the monolithically universal or any other androcentric, racist, sexist or ageist
myth of imperial West26
ern culture and its (often not so) radical discourses.” Such a movement of
destabilizing needs to be practised not only with regard to the monolithic regimes
to which Pollock critically points, but also with regard to by now hegemonic and
canonical chronopolitical regimes within feminism itself.
Then, I would assert that feminism signifies a set of positions, not an essence;
a critical practice not a doxa; a dynamic and self-critical response and intervention, not a platform. It is the precarious product of a paradox. Seeming to
speak in the name of women, feminist analysis perpetually deconstructs the
very term around which it is politically organised. (…) Yet there has been no
linear progress from early thoughts to mature theories. Rather we have a
synchronic configuration of debates within feminism, all of which have something valuable to contribute to the enlarging feminist enterprise. Yet they are
all, none the less, caught up in the very systems of sexual difference they
critique. The issue becomes one of how to make that paradox the condition
of radical practice.27
Both, synchronic configuration and the paradox as a condition of radical
practice are of methodological importance for my study of Suzanne Lacy’s International Dinner Party in Feminist Curatorial Thought. Even though I am committed, as I
pointed out earlier, to critical cartography and politics of location, I am equally
interested in mobilizing synchronic configurations, both over times and in time. In
bringing together cultural feminist analysis, archival studies, feminist art history,
critical feminist theories, philosophy, curatorial research and curatorial practices, I
seek to counteract the academic compartmentalization in order to destabilize
intellectual knowledge as field of practice. This process brings together feminist
cultural analysis and curating in order to create new insights into feminist artmaking and into emerging feminist histories of curating’s histories by being attentive to
The International Dinner Party’s contributors’ situated knowledge and by associating
affinities and links within a historiography of feminist curating.
Following Pollock, I refuse a linear succession from earlier feminist practice
and theory to a mature feminist practice and theory. This follows a line of feminist
thought that is aimed against monolithic and universal(izing) structures of hegemonic Western thought and culture. I join Pollock’s critical analysis of the histories of
art history, which offers a model for critically analysing histories of curating’s history, with Sarah Bracke’s and María Puig de la Bellacasa’s re-working of feminist
standpoint theory. In historical terms, standpoint theory came into being during
the same decade The International Dinner Party took place. An important example
for standpoint theory from this period is Dorothy E. Smith’s 1974 Women’s Perspective as a Radical Critique of Sociology. Both the feminist activist art practice of The
International Dinner Party and standpoint theory share the active questioning of
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power relations and seek to take the production of knowledge into women’s own
hands in order to turn it into a political practice. Activist feminist art practice and
feminist research practice converge in the strategy (if not the practice) of consciousness-raising to “produce oppositional and shared consciousnesses in
oppressed groups—to create oppressed peoples as collective ‘subjects’ of research
rather than only as objects of others’ observation (…).”28 Both The International
Dinner Party and standpoint theory share the historical horizon of second-wave
feminism. Again, it is of importance to critically point to the chronopolitical regime
at work. “The main critique on standpoint we are confronted with is, roughly
stated: standpoint feminism is modern and essentialist and left little space to other
parameters of analysis, such as “race,” ethnicity, class, and sexuality, facilitated by
postmodernisms.”29 For my pursuit of an anti-monolithic project within feminist
thought and a politics that actively seeks to re/disorient canonical orderings of feminist thought as a passage from earlier essentialist and collectivity-oriented to antiessentialist and individualist-based approaches, joining Pollock’s arguments with
Bracke’s and de la Bellacasa’s work is crucial. Speaking of the paradox, Pollock
argues that it shaped the period of feminist thought from the late 1970s to the late
1990s.
This paradox has shaped the history of the last twenty years of feminist
practice, which can perhaps be characterized by the passage from essence (a
strong sense of identity of woman and the collectivity of women) to difference (a more anguished recognition not only of that which divides and
undoes the collectivity of women, but also the structural condition of the
term ‘Woman’ as an affect of psycho-symbolic systems which produce and
differentiate subjectivities across the formations of class, race, and sexuality).30
In my attempt to follow not only the logic, but also the history of the paradox, I reach an impasse. The paradox’s history shares the chronopolitical regime of
the ideological split governing the progress-centric narration of the wave model.
This is marked by a constellation of earlier/later and, as described by Pollock here,
by essence/difference. Critical cartography cannot solve this problem of using the
paradox as a condition for critical practice, yet avoiding a linear chronology. Therefore, I turn to Sarah Bracke’s and Maria Puig de la Bellacasa’s “genderational“ discussion of standpoint theory. They express their hope that standpoint theory’s
“constant reformulation (…) through feminist practices of theory (…) perpetually
challenges theoretical dichotomies, in particular modern/postmodern oppositions.”31 Their work presents a possibility to proactively work with the oppositions
that are inherent to the chronopolitical regimes of progress and displacement
within feminist thought. “As academics we have been raised as ‘modernists’
because we are supposed to show that we know better than those who came before
us. As feminist academics, we feel we ought to resist this modernist attitude because
we are aware that we do not know ‘better than’ but ‘better with/because of’ those
who came before us.”32
With Pollock I showed that feminist thought turns intellectual knowledge
production into a field of practice that allows for synchronic configurations. Following Meskimmon, I showed how critical cartography makes chronopolitical regimes
of progress understood within feminist thought. Therefore, special attention [now]
needs to be paid to the politics of location emphasized by Lykke. Following Bracke
and Puig de la Bellacasa, I seek to show how orientations via dichotomies, which
play out both with regard to chronopolitics and to the politics of location, can be
politically addressed within a field of practice. Bracke and Puig de la Bellacasa intro-
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duce a line of thought that suggests “better with/because of” rather than “better
than.”33 This opens up the potential of a very different chronopolitical orientation
towards the past. It does by no means obviate the need for a critical revisiting of
the past nor the necessary deconstruction of monolithically universal and Westerncentric historiographic knowledge production, but it avoids the ideological split of
before/after or obsolete/current that functions as an impasse in much of feminist
thought’s history. ‘Better with/because of’ opens up an envisioning of different
cross-temporal and transgressive affinities, or to put it differently, synchronic alignments. It also creates the possibility of envisioning how opening the traditional
question of what feminism is and what feminist practice does allows it to no longer
be governed by the chronopolitical imperative of “better than,” but by a continuous
dialogue and debate based upon “better with.”34
Binaries/Dichotomies
I have demonstrated that feminist thought actively engages with binaries and
dichotomies. These are not only part of feminist thought’s legacy but also part of
ongoing debates and discussions. Binaries and dichotomies are part of the paradox
that constitutes feminist thought as a form of knowledge production considered a
field of practice and a field of practicing theory politically. Binaries and dichotomies
are equally part of the chronopolitical ordering of feminist thought’s canonical
historiography. Before/after is conventionally equated with an ideological split and
a move toward progress. Before/after is constitutive for the displacement narrative.
Even though the displacement narrative supposedly overcomes binary structures
central to Western thought, it is, paradoxically, itself governed by yet another
binary: the before/after binary. This closely resembles a progress-based model of
advancement. Binaries express power relations and hierarchies.
Examples include the division of sexes into male/female or of sexualities into
heterosexual/homosexual. While these categories are used to define and distinguish one from the other, they are not just different; they are unequal;
they entail hidden hierarchies where one side is privileged and the other is
viewed as abject or lesser. There is also a sinister tendency to link up the
lesser side of the binary with other demeaning or demonizing terms. For
example, male/female is often linked to rational/irrational, culture/nature,
order/chaos, and so forth.35
Binaries, and dichotomies, are part of the politics of location. ‘Here’, equated
with U.S. or Western feminist thought, is understood as a location of origin, a
chronopolitically charged “before”. “There”, equated with non-Western feminist
thought, then becomes “after”. Here/there is equated with centre/margin or centre/periphery. Here/there has commonly been understood as unequal. Bound up
with the chronopolitical regime, this here/there model has been conventionally
turned into a U.S.-centric or Western-centric hegemony of feminist thought which
then spread to other parts of the world. This model can therefore be expressed in a
binary that is spatially and temporally constructed as follows: here-before/thereafter. This reveals that U.S. or Western feminist thought has not operated outside
the hegemonic chronopolitical regimes governing modernity’s relations between
Western and non-Western societies with regard to temporal value judgements
such as advanced or developing.36 Even though feminist thought actively challenged
modernism and modernity, it is therefore paradoxically bound up with the power
politics of its binary thought structure on many levels. It is not only important to
challenge the binary between Western and non-Western, but equally the construction of a monolithic West and a monolithic non-West. Displacement narratives
therefore not only concern the temporalities structuring feminist thought’s histori-
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ographies, but spatialities expressed through specific locations as well. To complicate matters further, the wave model has to be joined with the before/after model
in order to critically examine the chronopolitically charged hierarchical logics and
power relations. At times, “before” is equated with first-wave feminism, which is
rediscovered and praised for its engagement with civil and political rights. At times,
“before” is equated with second-wave feminism, which is dismissed on grounds of
essentialism and lack of attention paid to race-based, class-based, ethnic, religious,
or immigrant diversity. At times, “before” is equated with first-wave feminism and
dismissed on grounds of privileging the right to vote over economic or social rights.
At times, “before” is equated with second-wave feminism and rediscovered in its
dimensions of social reproduction, standpoint, and eco-feminism. Some feminists
argue for a twenty-first century fourth-wave feminism.37 At times, “before” is
equated with third-wave feminism, which is criticised for its failure to establish a
coherent feminist movement. At times, “before” is equated with third-wave feminism, which is rediscovered for its deconstruction of binaries. “The post-structuralist generation should be given credit for loosening up the binary scheme of dialectical thought and confronting the issue of negativity and power in a more
multi-directional, embodied and embedded manner.“38 Fourth-wave feminism is,
yet again, the dis/continuation of the wave model. The previous waves are overcome, yet the waves model itself is continued. Postcolonial debate, critical positions
by women of colour feminists both living in the global South and the global North,
transgenderism, as well as the changes wrought by social media in activism, politics,
and networking, are some of the features considered central to the emergence of
current fourth-wave feminism.
Paradoxically, before/after is the central binary that remains, despite feminist thought’s deconstructing of and loosening up of binary thought. Amelia Jones
has pointed out ways of critical engagement with the binary legacy of much of
Western thought, and by extension, much of Western art. 39 Jones proposes a
“queer feminist durationality.”40 She elaborates: “I suggest that feminism must take
on queer theoretical insights (particularly the dissolution of binary thinking and the
putting in motion of meaning) as well as the insights of Marxian, anti-racist and
postcolonial theory in order to accommodate the new global world order.” And, as
I want to add, with regard to my study of The International Dinner Party, a further
extension to such an approach with regard to the chronopolitical regimes revealed
by Meskimmon’s critical cartography beyond the historic moment of the new
global world order, toward a critical engagement with both the past and the future.
Far from disregarding the impact of binary thought, Jones acknowledges the reverberations of its power relations. Therefore, she proposes a (self-)critical feminist
engagement that thinks “beyond or away from the binary,”41 and she does so by
opening up a question which is, as I have shown before, very much part of feminist
thought’s tradition.
How can we think beyond or away from the binary, or more explicitly put,
how can we understand images and performances in more nuanced ways as
articulating potential identificatory structures that are not simplistically
binary? How can we explore these flows of inter-relationality through visual
practice in ways that still convey a feminist politics—an attention to inequities
among subjects relating to gender broadly construed as experienced and
understood through class, national, ethnic, religious, and other modes of
identification?42
Amelia Jones carefully opens up possible associations and alignments
between the more recent emergence of a queer feminist durationality and the
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longstanding tradition of feminist politics. She cautions that there is the risk of
binary simplicity, and therefore emphasizes the need for critical deconstruction.
Yet, she equally cautions to dismiss identification entirely, and in extension identity
politics. For that reason, Jones suggests to work critically with both the dangers
and potentials of identificatory structures. Looked at through the lens of chronopolitical regimes, Jones carefully navigates different waves of feminist temporalities
and proposes new alignments via the temporal category of durationality. She suggests ways of critical engagement activated by ‘away and beyond’ as well as new
alignments activated by ‘inter, trans, and between.’ This is of methodological
importance for my research and my cultural feminist analysis of the issues raised by
The International Dinner Party.
The binary before/after is very much part of movements of displacement
and advancement/development and their respective value judgments. Before/after
governs much of feminist thought’s historiography and is actively challenged by
concepts such as queer feminist durationality and better with/because of. In her
book Why Stories Matter. The Political Grammar of Feminist Thought, Clare Hemmings
offers a precise analysis of how narratives about Western feminist theory are constructed. Hemmings addresses the politics at work with regard to recurrent tropes
that can be found in the historiographic narratives of academic Anglo-European
feminist theory. She differentiates between three different modes of storytelling in
the narratives that are to be discerned in essays published in feminist journals such
as Signs, Feminist Review, and Feminist Theory. These three modes are progress (p.
31-58), loss (p. 59-94) and return (p. 95-130). Progress aims to leave behind essentialism. Loss laments the absence of a current feminist movement. Return suggests
that, “We can combine the lessons of postmodern feminism with the materiality of
embodiment and structural inequalities to move on from the current and theoretical impasse.”43 Taken together, progress, loss, and return offer a model to understand how the before/after dichotomy is activated and re-negotiated. Hemmings’
analysis is of importance in working out chronopolitical pitfalls and in understanding better just how chronopolitically charged any historiography of feminist
thought is. In historical terms, The International Dinner Party is part of the concrete
conditions of the year 1979 and can thus be considered part of second-wave feminism. Such a historiographic ordering bears the danger of the project being dismissed on grounds of essentialism. (= progress) This could also lead to its romanticization or glorification because of the project’s representation of a celebratory
moment of a worldwide feminist movement. (= loss) It could also lead to using the
lessons gained from the project in contemporary feminist artistic and curatorial
practice. (= return). In order to counteract these chronopolitical dangers and to
actively address its paradoxes, I will use a research-based approach to the contributors to The International Dinner Party. This approach relies, as I explained earlier, on
the politics of location and situated knowledge in order to counteract a hegemonic
chrono-cartography of here-before (U.S. or Western feminism) and there-after
(non-U.S. or non-Western feminism). Special attention will be paid to demonstrating how The International Dinner Party foregrounds concerns that resist categorization via the wave model, and therefore allow for a more nuanced understanding of
feminist thought by way of avoiding simplifying dichotomic constellations between
before/after and here/there. My research-based approach toward the feminist
subjects who contributed to the making of The International Dinner Party seeks to
counter-act the here-before/there-after binary. Central to my feminist cultural
analysis of the issues raised by The International Dinner Party is a theoretical alignment between queer feminist durationality and ‘better with/because of.’
Associations and Transgressions
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So far, I have firmly placed my approach to method in a tradition of feminist
thought, and have tried to use it to approach curating in a theoretical and historical
framework. Equally, I have opened a critical perspective on feminist thought’s historiographic project with regard to the chronopolitical regime by which it is governed. I am activating the anti-monolithic intent expressed in feminist thought. Yet,
I am actively counteracting the structural binary of advancement and obsolescence
that is part of feminist thought’s conventional historiographic narratives. Counteracting this chronopolitical binary of advancement/obsolescence is a task to be
more fully theoretically acknowledged and addressed within the feminist historiographic enterprise. I bring this counteracting to the project of curating’s historiography. And I invoke again the method of the question. Feminism is the question, I
suggested. By association, I want to suggest, curating is the question. In her 2001
essay Survey for Art and Feminism, Peggy Phelan returns to the question of feminism
within the context of a book that is curatorially organized across several generations of artists.
The troublesome question emerges: what is feminism? When faced with
such an amorphous and ambivalent term, the shrewd often answer that it
must be plural—not feminism but feminisms. […] The ideological stakes in the
question ‘what is feminism?’ have often led to increasingly sophisticated but,
it must be admitted also, increasingly evasive responses. I prefer a bold, if
broad definition: feminism is the conviction that gender has been, and continues to be, a fundamental category for the organization of culture. Moreover, the pattern of that organization usually favours men over women.44
Opening the question again is not only a feminist tradition and a theoretical
operation. It is equally a historiographic operation that pays close attention to the
transformationality of theories and practices bound up with the concrete historic
conditions of any given time in any given location. Therefore critical cartography,
situated knowledge, and politics of location are of theoretical importance to my
feminist cultural analysis. Through Griselda Pollock, I introduced the paradox of
being bound up with the very system of sexual difference one critiques and how to
make this paradox the very condition of radical practice. I would now like to proceed by way of joining questions and paradoxes and binaries/dichotomies with
associations and transgressions. In the already quoted essay, Survey, Peggy Phelan
also writes: “Alluringly open, deceptively simple, art and feminism is a seductive
subject. Among the most provocative words for critical writing, the conjunction
and compels an associative logic.”45 I fully agree with the potentials of an associative
logic and want to foreground that this very logic is open to questions, paradoxes,
and renegotiations of binaries and dichotomies. And/and multiplies this associative
logic and directs its interest to the space that is opened up by the mark of the forward slash that, theoretically speaking, can make itself part of the questions and
paradoxes. Therefore, the forward slash, or whack,46 is of methodological importance to my approach in order to understand how feminist thought works and
moves. I aim to work conceptually as well as methodologically with the forward
slash or whack, “/”. This becomes a tool of thinking in order to activate this line, this
border, or ultimately this space that both separates and connects. Taken together,
the conjunction and as well as the forward slash motivate transnational as well as
transhistorical associations. Based upon association and transgression, I turn to the
theoretical and practical concept of transnational feminism as developed by Charda
Talpade Mohanty. Suzanne Lacy’s The International Dinner Party project motivated
the contributions of more than 2000 women organizing 200 dinners. Taken
together, the 200 different dinners can be understood as an ad-hoc community
originating through the support system of the 1979 women’s movements. Local
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women’s organizations, individual artists, or feminist communities organized dinners. Therefore, the framework of transnational feminism is of importance to
understand both the possible associations between women around the globe and
the complexities and contradictions with regard to the politics of location and
situated knowledge as discussed earlier. Mohanty uses these terms “imagined communities” and “communities of resistance” not because they are not “real” but
because it suggests commitment and potential alliances and collaborations across
divisive boundaries.47 Understood as such, community is not an essentializing given
or a ready-made localizable entity. I associate The International Dinner Party with the
concepts of both an imagined community and a community of resistance. In historical hindsight, this community can be joined by accessing their messages, by tracing
the cultural and political legacy of change produced by this community of women,
and the ad-hoc March 14, 1979 feminist archive they created. I use Mohanty’s
concept of imagined communities and communities of resistance to counteract
notions of essentializing women’s communities, which is very much part of how
second-wave feminism has been historicized and criticized. This is conceptually part
of my reading conventional feminist thought’s historiography against its grain.
The idea of imagined community is useful because it leads us away from
essentialist notions of Third World feminist struggles, suggesting political
rather than biological or cultural bases for alliance. It is not color or sex that
constructs the ground for these struggles. Rather, it is the way we think
about race, class, and gender–the political links we choose to make among
and between struggles. Thus, potentially, women of all colors (including
white women) can align themselves with and participate in these imagined
communities. However, clearly our relations to and centrality in particular
struggles depend on our different, often conflictual, locations and histories.48
My research-based approach to a selected number of the different communities or individuals who hosted the 200 different dinners is owed to understanding
their different locations and histories. Yet, I also seek to pay close attention to
possible affinities based upon the politics of association. Therefore, association is
understood both as a theoretical method and a political practice. The first follows
Phelan’s suggestion of an associative logic creating new, unexpected, and, at times,
surprising constellations (something closely resembling curatorial constellations).
The second understands associations politically and follows Mohanty: “Communities of resistance like imagined communities is a political definition, not an essentialist one.”49 Associating is thus understood as the political practice of producing
and reproducing communities. “Community, then, is the product of work, of struggle.”50
Peggy Phelan’s suggestion of an associative logic led me to place The International Dinner Party in feminist curatorial thought. Amelia Jones’ 1996 exhibition
Sexual Politics. Judy Chicago’s Dinner Party in Feminist Art History inspired the choice of
my title Suzanne Lacy’s International Dinner Party in Feminist Curatorial Thought. In her
exhibition catalogue essay, “Sexual Politics: Feminist Strategies, Feminist Conflicts,
Feminist Histories,” Amelia Jones emphasizes that she aims to “work within a historical and theoretical (rather than aesthetic or monographic) framework.”51 Both
Jones’ curatorial work and her essay writing use a historical and theoretical framework. This strongly inspired my approach toward The International Dinner Party. By
way of using a historical and theoretical framework, I placed The International Dinner
Party in its multi-locational historical context and in feminist curatorial thought,
both historically and currently. Central to my interest are the project’s social politics, or put differently, the politics of communities of resistance or imagined com-
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munities. Equally central to my interest is the project’s complex constellation
between activism, art-making, feminism, political struggles, curating, and the institution of the museum. I came to understand the different tasks performed by artist
Suzanne Lacy as curatorial in nature. Lacy acted as artist, inviter, feminist community organizer, and bridge between the art world and women’s/feminist communities, between women’s and feminists’ intellectual, convivial, social, and political
work and the institution of the museum. Therefore, not only the critical transgression of the waves model is of importance to my analysis, but also curatorial and
theoretical transgressions of hegemonic narratives of the history of curating. This
history, for the better part, has been written from the perspective of curators-asauthors. This, in fact, revives the monographic model of historical narration. Interestingly enough, the art historical convention of the monographic model very
much suits the neoliberal model of star curators.
(…) [T]he shift from the mechanically chronological display to the thematic
or monographic exhibition all dramatise the role of the curator in the mediation of art. The visibility of figures like Harald Szeemann or, more recently,
Hans-Ulrich Obrist and Nicolas Bourriaud as the authors of signature exhibition practices is another effect of the evolution of the neoliberal museum
and its search for constant innovation and dynamism, and is a development
that has produced a voluminous literature on the curator.52
Again, it is the chronopolitical regime of progress and advancement, this
time in the guise of originality, innovation, dynamism, or “novelty,”53 that governs
much of curating’s historiography. Dimitrakaki and Perry propose to “move beyond
the normative distinction between a mothers’ and a daughters’ generation (…).”54
Based upon this suggestion, it is my aim to make a critical contribution to counteracting the chronopolitical regime of advancement/obsolescence within feminist
historiography’s waves model and the art historical monographic/neoliberal starcurator model dominating much of curating’s historiography. “There is in fact a
long and continuous history of feminist curating that has tended to be submerged
by the weight of the search for novelty.”55 I want to turn once more to Sarah
Bracke’s and Maria Puig de la Bellacasa’s ‘better with/because of’ to support my
resistance against novelty. Novelty also tends to obscure that we build on the work
of others in order to both associate (with) and transgress (beyond). I draw on Dorothee Richter’s critical analysis of the curator’s structural position with regard to
modernism’s artistic genius and neoliberalism’s curatorial networker in order to
understand curating from a feminist standpoint.
The figure of the curator (as a structural model) is in many ways a draft of a
new post-Fordist accented authorship. This figure takes on in many ways, as I
have expressed elsewhere, the paradigmatic attributes of the masculine
mythos of “artistic genius”, connects this with mobility and networking
– and there you have the new role model for the Western post-industrial
lifestyle.56
The structural model is, per Richter, embedded in a historiographic construction of genealogical filiation. The neoliberal dynamism and novelty is joined
with the monographic narrative model that is multiplied via a father-son genealogy.
Therefore, critical feminist historiography is key in terms of counteracting the
discursive power relations of such constructions.
Just think of current publications, such as Hans Ulrich Obrist’s (H.U.O.)
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Curating. It may be symptomatic
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that there is only one contribution by a woman in it, with the exception of a
one-page foreword by April Lamm, in which the figure of the curator is
identified in the same father-son line of Harald Szeemann – Pontus Hultén
– Alexander Dorner – H.U.O. […] Not only is the absence of women symptomatic, but above all, this discourse about curatorial activity returns to the
subject of the “genius curator.”57
I draw on Rozsika Parker and Griselda Pollock’s Framing Feminism. Art and
the Women’s Movement 1970-1985 to understand that much of feminist art making
also led to exhibition organizing, exhibition making, and was in fact marked by
collective curatorial energy and endeavour. I draw on exemplary curatorial models
such as Sexual Politics. Judy Chicago’s Dinner Party in Feminist Art History by Amelia
Jones to understand how feminist art history and theory impacts on curating and
via curating. Another feminist way of approaching curatorial practice is offered by
curator and critic Renée Baert’s “who thinks through curating as a dialogical practice: exhibitions talking to other exhibitions.”58 ‘Because of’ all of this feminist
thought on which to build, I can move toward a different understanding of curating’s practice and curatorial historiography. I seek to build upon feminist associations and transgressions with regard to curatorial thought. My critical refusal of
the displacement narratives and the novelty imperative leads me to using an associative logic and a transgressive feminist imagination of linking The International Dinner Party with a possible extension toward curating’s history, embodied in the salon
model, and toward curating’s future via feminist and queer feminist living archive
practices and imagined communities of resistance.
In concluding, I want to return to my opening question: What if there is a
feminist turn in curating? And I want to suggest that there is in fact a feminist turn
in curating. I understand my feminist cultural analysis of The International Dinner
Party that pairs a research-based approach with a theory-based approach to be part
of this feminist turn in curating. Methodologically I build on feminist thought to
historicise, theorise, and practise curating. I want to emphasize that it is my aim to
counteract the chronopolitics that would proclaim such a turn as novelty-centric,
and therefore ultimately bound up with the advancement/obsolescence binary. On
the contrary, throughout my study I follow the earlier mentioned feminist method
of ‘better with/because of’ those who came before us.”59 It is my firm conviction
that a feminist turn in curating builds upon questions raised, answers suggested,
and transgressions risked by many, many others. Because of these possible associations with the work of many others, such a feminist turn in curating will, throughout my study, be extended both toward the past and toward (possible) futures.
Elke Krasny is professor at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. She was Guest Professor at the University of Bremen in 2006, at the Academy of Fine Arts Nuremberg in
2013, and at the Vienna University of Technology in 2014. She received the Austrian Outstanding Artist Award for Women’s Culture in 2011. In 2012 she was Visiting Scholar at the
CCA, Canadian Centre for Architecture, in Montréal. Her work as a curator, critic, cultural
theorist and urban researcher clearly shows her interest in urban transformation processes,
the critical history of architecture, the politics of history, and the historiography of feminist
curatorial practices. The edited a book on the history of self-organization Hands-On Urbanism 1850-2012. The Right to Green appeared in 2012 and her exhibition by the same name
was shown at the Architecture Centre Vienna, the Museum for Contemporary Art Leipzig
and included in the Venice Biennale of Architecture in 2012. She curated the discursive event
Women’s Movements: Feminist Agency. Intersections of Activism, Archiving, Art, Art History, Critical Research and Curating at Rotor, association for contemporary art Graz. She
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co-edited the 2013 volume Women’s:Museum. Curatorial Politics in Feminism, Education,
History, and Art. Krasny did take part in the “Research Platform for Curatorial and Crossdisciplinary Cultural Studies, Practice-Based Doctoral Programme”.
Notes
1 A number of exhibitions, conferences, research
networks, symposia, and publications do suggest that we
can in fact speak of a feminist turn in curating. Examples
include the 2006 Curatorial Strategies issue of n.paradoxa:
international feminist art journal, the 2006 essay Feminist
Curatorial Strategies and Practices since the 1970s, 2007
exhibitions WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution and Global
Feminisms. 2008 witnessed La Mirada Iracunda/The Furious
Gaze and 2009 witnessed Gender Check. Femininity and
Masculinity in the Art of Eastern Europe. Publications include
the 2006 essay Issues in Feminist Curation: Strategies and
Practices, the 2010 volume of Feminisms is Still Our Name:
Seven Essays on Historiography and Curatorial Practices, the
2013 Politics in a Glass Case. Feminism, Exhibition Cultures and
Curatorial Transgressions and Women’s:Museum. Curatorial
Politics in Feminism, Education, History, and Art, and nparadoxa’s A Chronological List of International Exhibitions on
Women Artists and Feminist art Practices (http://www.ktpress.
co.uk/pdf/feministartexhibitions.pdf, last updated
October 2014). Symposia and conferences include the
1999 Dialogues and Debates Symposium on Feminist Positions in
Contemporary Visual Arts hosted by Künstlerinnenstiftung
Höge, Bremen; the 2008 The Furious Gaze conference at
Centro Cultural Montehermoso Kulturunea; the 2010
Frauen:Museum: Zwischen Sammlungsstrategie und Sozialer
Plattform (Women’s:Museum: Between Collection Strategies and
Social Platforms) at the Vienna Library, the 2012 Civil
Partnerships? Queer and Feminist Curating conference at Tate
Modern London, the 2012 The First Supper Symposium at
Handverkeren Kurs- og Konferansesenter, the 2014
Curating Feminism Conference hosted by Sydney College of
the Arts, School of Letters, Arts and Media, and The Power
Institute, University of Sydney, and Feminist Turn in Curating
panel at the 2015 Curating Everything (curating as symptom)
symposium at Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst
Zurich.
2 Susan Archer Mann, “Introduction,” in Doing
Feminist Theory: From Modernity to Postmodernity (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2010), xvii.
3 Marsha Meskimmon, “Chronology through
Cartography: Mapping 1970s Feminist Art Globally,” in
WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution, ed. Cornelia Butler
and Lisa Gabrielle Mark (Los Angeles: The Museum of
Contemporary Art and Cambridge and London: The MIT
Press, 2007), 335.
4 Meskimmon (2007), 335.
5 Doreen Massey, “Imagining Globalization: Power-
67
Geometries of Time-Space,” in Global Futures: Migration,
Environment and Globalization, eds. Avtar Brah, Mary J.
Hicman, and Máirtín Mac an Ghaill (New York: St. Martin‘s
Press, 1999), 31. quoted in Meskimmon (2007), 324.
6 Meskimmon (2007), 324.
7 To give but a very few examples: What is Feminism? by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1916; What is Socialist
Feminism? by Barbara Ehrenreich, 1976; What is Feminism?
edited by Juliet Mitchell and Ann Oakley, 1986; What is
Feminist Art? Interview with Mary Kelly by Rozsika Parker, 1977;
What is Feminist Art? by Judy Chicago (no date); Chris
Beasley, What Is Feminism? An Introduction to Feminist Theory,
1999; What is Feminist in Feminist Theory? by Cathrine
Egelands, 2004; What is Black Feminism?, The Black International, 2014.
8 Chris Beasley, What Is Feminism? An Introduction to
Feminist Theory (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1999) 21.
Quoted in Susan Archer Mann (2010), 4.
9 see Susan Archer Mann (2010), xvi.
10 Rosemarie Tong, “Introduction. The Diversity of
Feminist Thinking,” in Feminist Thought. A More Comprehensive Introduction (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2014), 1.
11 Tong (2014), 1.
12 Tong (2014), 1.
13 There are a number of publications that in fact
suggest a turn toward curating’s history and a number of
different journals establishing a discourse on curating.
Examples include: Nathalie Heinrich and Michael Pollak,
“From Museum Curator to Exhibition Auteur: Inventing a
Singular Position,” in Thinking about Exhibitions, ed. Reesa
Greenberg, Bruce W Ferguson and Sandy Nairne (London
and New York: Routledge, 1996), 23–250; Peter White,
ed., Naming a Practice: Curatorial Strategies for the Future
(Banff: Banff Centre for the Arts, 1996); Barnaby Drabble
and Dorothee Richter, eds., Curating Degree Zero: An
International Curating Symposium (Nuremberg: Verlag für
Moderne Kunst, 1999); Susan Hiller and Sarah Martin, eds.,
The Producers, (Newcastle upon Tyne: University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Department of Fine Art, 2000); Karsten
Schubert, The Curator’s Egg: The Evolution of the Museum
Concept from the French Revolution to the Present Day (London:
One Off Press, 2000); Catherine Thomas, The Edge of
Everything: Reflections on Curatorial Practice (Banff: Banff
Centre Press, 2000); Gavin Wade, ed., Curating in the 21st
Century (Walsall: New Art Gallery Walsall; Wolverhampton:
University of Wolverhampton, 2000); Hans Ulrich Obrist,
Interviews, ed. Thomas Boutoux, vol. 1 (Milan: Charta,
2003); Christoph Tannert, Ute Tischler, and Künstlerhaus
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Bethanien, eds., MIB–Men in Black: Handbook of Curatorial
Practice (Frankfurt am Main: Revolver, 2004) Revolver,
2004; Hans-Joachim Müller, Harald Szeemann: Exhibition
Maker (Munich: Hatje Cantz Publishers, 2006); Paul
O’Neill, Curating Subjects (London: Open Editions/de
Appel, 2007); Hans Ulrich Obrist, Brief History of Curating
(Zurich: JRP Ringier, 2008); Hans Ulrich Obrist, Everything
You Always Wanted to Know About Curating* But Were Afraid
to Ask (Berlin and New York: Sternberg Press, 2011);
Dorothee Richter, “Artists and Curators as Authors,
Competitors, Collaborators, or Teamworkers?“ in Cultures
of the Curatorial, eds. Beatrice von Bismarck, Jörn Schafaff,
and Thomas Weski (Berlin and New York: Sternberg Press,
2012); Terry Smith, Thinking Contemporary Curating (New
York: Independent Curators International, 2012); Paul
O’Neill, Paul, The Culture of Curating and the Curating of
Cultures, (Cambridge, Mass and London: MIT Press, 2012);
Hans Ulrich Obrist, Ways of Curating (London: Faber &
Faber, 2014 Jens Hoffman, (Curating) From A to Z (Zurich:
JRP Ringier, 2015)
Another route into writing curating’s history is
provided by Afterall’s Exhibition Histories Series. “This
series is the result of a research project developed by
Afterall at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design,
University of the Arts London, in collaboration with the
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and the Van Abbemuseum,
Eindhoven. The first publication was launched in 2010. In
2012, a new partnership was formed with the Center for
Curatorial Studies, Bard College.” (Cornelia Butler and
other authors, From Coneptualism to Feminism: Lucy Lippard’s
Number Shows 1969–74, London: Afterall, Central Saint
Martins College of Art and Design, University of the Arts
London, 2012) flyleaf.
Journals on curating’s theory and practice, on
curatorial discourse, and to some extent, curating’s
histories include: Curator The Museum Journal (this peerreviewed academic journal was founded in 1958); Exhibitionist (published by the National Association for Museum
Exhibition since 1981); Manifesta Journal. Around Curatorial
Practice, http://www.manifestajournal.org/about (founded
in 2003); OnCurating, http://www.on-curating.org (this
international journal focuses on curatorial practice and
theory, it was founded in 2008); The Exhibitionist, http://
the-exhibitionist.com (this journal by curators and for
curators was founded in 2009); Red Hook Journal, http://
www.bard.edu/ccs/redhook/about-the-red-hook-journal/
(the Center for Curatorial Studies Bard started this journal
in 2011); Journal of Curatorial Studies (this peer-reviewed
print journal was started in 2012); Artist as Curator, http://
www.theartistascurator.org (this publication project was
started in 2013)
14 Dorothee Richter, “About On-Curating.Org,
ONCURATING.org, issue 01 (2008): 1. Accessed May, 24,
2015. http://www.on-curating.org/index.php/issue-1.
68
Curating Degree Zero Archive: Curatorial Research
html#.VWq_EUuWHwI.
15 Tong (2014), 1. Recitation is owed to Clare
Hemmings who introduced this method in her 2011 book
Why Stories Matter. The Political Grammar of Feminist Theory.
16 Beasley (1999), 21.
17 Mann (2012), xvi.
18 Mann (2012), xviii.
19 Meskimmon (2007), 335.
20 Mann (2010), xvii.
21 Mann (2010), xvii–xviii.
22 Griselda Pollock, “A Lonely Preface,“ in Old
Mistresses. Women, Art and Ideology, Rozsika Parker and
Griselda Pollock (London and New York: I.B. Tauris, 2013),
xxiv.
23 Clare Hemmings, Why Stories Matter: The Political
Grammar of Feminist Theory (Durham: Duke University Press,
2011), 32.
24 Nina Lykke, Feminist Studies. A Guide to Intersectional Theory, Methodology and Writing (New York and London:
Routledge, 2010), xiii.
25 Griselda Pollock, “The Politics of Theory:
Generations and Geographies in Feminist Theory and the
Histories of Art Histories,” in Generations and Geographies in
the Visual Arts: Feminist Readings, ed. Griselda Pollock
(London: Routledge, 1996), 4.
26 Pollock (1996), 4-5.
27 Pollock (1996), 4-5.
28 Sandra Harding, “Introduction: Standpoint
Theory as a Site of Political, Philosophical and Scientific
Debate,“ in The Feminist Standpoint Theory Reader. Intellectual
& Political Controversies, ed. Sandra Harding (New York and
London: Routledge, 2004), 3.
29 Sarah Bracke and María Puig de la Bellacasa,
“Building Standpoints,“ in The Feminist Standpoint Theory
Reader. Intellectual & Political Controversies, ed. Sandra
Harding (New York and London: Routledge, 2004), 309.
30 Pollock (1996), 5.
31 Sarah Bracke and María Puig de la Bellacasa,
“Building Standpoints,“ in The Feminist Standpoint Theory
Reader. Intellectual & Political Controversies, ed. Sandra
Harding (New York and London: Routledge, 2004).
32 Bracke and Puig de la Bellacasa (2004), 309.
33
34 To provide an example here. In Depression. a
Public Feeling, Ann Cvetkovich describes the work of artists
Sheila Pepe and Allyson Mitchell to emphasize that “their
work does not celebrate the ‘third wave‘ at the expense of
the second wave.“ (p.188) Cvetkovich states that artist
Sheila “Pepe proactively names as her influences both Judy
Chicago and Eva Hesse, slyly referring to them as the
parents who didn‘t speak to one another and expressing a
conviction that work that can be simultaneously sexy and
abstract.“ (p. 182) see: Ann Cvetkovich, “The Utopia of
Ordinary Habit. Crafting, Creativity, and Spiritual Practice,“
Issue 26 / September 2015
Feminist Thought and Curating: On Method
in Depression: a Public Feeling, (Durham and London: Duke
University Press, 2012), 154–202.
35 Susan Archer Mann (2010), 216.
36 See: Stuart Hall, “The West and the Rest:
Discourse and Power“ in Modernity: An Introduction to
Modern Societies, ed. Stuart Hall, David Held, Don Hubert
and Kenneth Thompson (Malden and Oxford: Blackwell
Publishing, 1996), 185–225.
37 Examples are: Eliasaid Munro, “Feminism: a
Fourth Wave?” Political Insight 4, 2 (2013) 22–25 or
Jennifer Baumgardner, “Is there a Fourth Wave? If so, does
it matter,“ In F‘EM! Goo Goo, Gaga, and Some Thoughts on
Balls. (Berkeley: Seal Press, 2011), 243–252.
38 Rosi Braidotti, “Powers of Affirmation,” in The
Unexpected Guest: Art, Writing and Thinking on Hospitality, ed.
Sally Tallant and Paul Domela (London: Art Books Publishing, 2012), 281.
39 Amelia Jones, “Art as a binary proposition;
identity as a binary proposition,” in Seeing Differently: A
History and Theory of Identification and the Visual Arts
(London and New York: Routledge, 2012), 17–62.
40 Amelia Jones, “Queer Feminist Durationality:
Time and Materiality as a Means of Resisting Spatial
Objectification,“ in Seeing Differently A History and Theory of
Identification and the Visual Arts (London and New York:
Routledge, 2012), 170–217.
41 Amelia Jones (2012), 178.
42 Amelia Jones (2012), 178
43 Hemmings (2011), 32.
44 Peggy Phelan, ”Survey,” in Art and Feminism, ed.
Helen Reckitt (London and New York: Phaidon, 2001), 18.
45 Phelan (2001), 16.
46 In writing about an associative logic, I was
delighted to see that the forward slash whack is homophone to “WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution“, the
title of the 2007 large-scale feminist exhibition that was
curated by Cornelia Butler and first shown at the Museum
of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Widely acclaimed for
its scope, the show was also heatedly debated by feminist
art theorists, curators, and historians with regard to the
paradoxes between institutions‘ desires and the willingness
to put on one feminist blockbuster show and institutions‘
resistance to structural, economic, political, and organizational feminist transformation.
47 Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Feminism Without Borders (Durham: Duke University Press, 2003), p. 47.
48 Mohanty (2003), p. 46.
49 Mohanty (2003), p. 47.
50 Mohanty (2003), p. 104.
51 Amelia Jones, “Sexual Politics: Feminist Strategies, Feminist Conflicts, Feminist Histories,“ in Sexual
Politics: Judy Chicago‘s Dinner Party in Feminist Art History, ed.
Amelia Jones (UCLA at the Armand Hammer Museum of
Art and Cultural Center in association with Berkeley, Los
69
Curating Degree Zero Archive: Curatorial Research
Angeles, London: University of California Press, 1996), 24.
52 Dimitrakaki and Perry (2012): 10–11.
53 Angela Dimitrakaki and Lara Perry, “How to be
Seen: An Introduction to Feminist Politics, Exhibition
Cultures and Curatorial Transgressions,” in Politics in a Glass
Case: Feminism, Exhibition Cultures and Curatorial Transgressions, ed. by Angela Dimitrakaki and Lara Perry (Liverpool:
Liverpool University Press, 2013), 12.
54 Dimitrakaki and Perry (2012): 5.
55 Dimitrakaki and Perry (2012): 12.
56 Dorothee Richter, “In Conversation with False
Hearted Fanny: Feminist Demands on Curating,” in
Women’s: Museum. Curatorial Politics in Feminism, Education,
History, and Art, ed. by Elke Krasny and Frauenmuseum
Meran (Wien: Löcker, 2013), 92.
57 Richter (2013): 93.
58 Malin Hedlin Hayden and Jessic Sjöholm
Skrubbe, “Preface“, in Feminisms is Still Our Name: Seven
Essays on Historiography and Curatorial Practices, ed. Malin
Hedlin Hayden and Jessica Sjöholm Skrubbe (Newcastle
upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2010), xviii.
59 Bracke and Puig de la Bellacasa (2004): 309.
Issue 26 / September 2015