I have received a few questions about the curatorial round
table that I had proposed for the upcoming UAAC conference in Montreal this
November and I wanted to let folks know that I decided to pull the plug on that
one. It was a difficult decision
and I felt rather selfish about it so I would like to explain what
happened. In a nutshell, I could
not get the talent I wanted around the table for the conference dates: November
1st to the 3rd.
When I proposed the panel I was typically very excited
about the idea and prepared to work hard to make it happen. I reached out to my colleagues across
Canada and got some disappointing results. Without naming names, I was told by some of the people I
most respected that the answer would have to be no because they had time
conflicts. It turns out that the SOFA Chicago dates are November 4
to 6. There is also another
conference that is cannibalizing the UAAC conference; this is a craft symposium
at the Renwick Gallery, which belongs to the Smithsonian American Art Museum in
Washington, D.C. It will be held
November 8 to 9 and its theme is Craft and American Culture. I had already known about this event
because I had received the Call for Papers and considered sending in a paper
myself as I thought the UAAC conference would be held in late October as it has
been for the past few years that I had participated.
Now if you know me you will not be surprised to learn that
I didn't let the first few upsets derail the project. I am seasoned enough not to let glitches throw me off my
game; the bend in the road does not have to be the end of the road as the
saying goes. So, I decided to see
what the UAAC's own call for papers would produce. I decided not to throw in the towel just yet. I continued to invite folks whose work
I admired to join me at the round table as well. That was Plan B.
Well, I got a few interested nibbles in response to my
direct invitations but only a few formal proposals. In the process of
corresponding with people about their proposals I also realized there were
potential translation snags because we would be presenting in Montreal and
likely speaking to a mixed audience of Anglophones, Francophones, and some
bilingual delegates. This could
get tricky. My French is half
decent but is limited to informal conversation or reading in French. I am no translator.
The UAAC call only produced one formal proposal. It was a rather interesting paper from
a Phd student. I gnashed my
teeth. The panel I had envisioned
was a discussion between practicing curators of craft. That's what I wanted to offer an
audience of scholars, students, artists and craftspeople. So, with some misgiving I decided to
withdraw the proposal by the appropriate date. Big sigh.
This is one of the images I have submitted for the curatorial chapter. It is from the In Praise of Function show at the Craft Council Gallery in St. John's.
On a brighter note I'd like to share that I have heard
back from Alla Myzelev who is the professor who is editing the volume on
Curatorial Strategies that I have contributed to.
And I am happy to say that she reports that Ashgate
Publishers in the UK and Duke University Press in the States are considering
the manuscript. So, I'd better
finish rewriting my chapter for the next deadline!
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