V&A curator Kieran Long argues against obsession with authorship and celebrity in design, and sets out his theories for contemporary museum curation.
Scooped by
Robin Good
onto Content Curation World September 13, 2013 2:32 PM
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When I read the excellent opinion piece on DeZeen by Kieran Long and his 95 theses for contemporary museum curation, I could not restrain myself from desiring to see, how inspiring and useful some of his theses would be if applied to the world of content curation.
What happened if I took some of Kieran Long's most inspiring theses and replaced the word "museum" with the word "content curator"?
The results were more than surprising. Here my set of favorites:
» Nothing should be out of bounds for a content curator. Everything is potentially relevant.
» Content curators have a special role in presenting topics neglected by other institutions and the media.
» Content curators should be topical, responding quickly to world events when they touch our areas of expertise.
» Content curators have as much in common with investigative journalists as they do with university academics.
» Like journalists, content curators have political views, and should not pretend to abandon them when they show up to work.
» Also like journalists, content curators have a responsibility to contextualise their opinions.
» When a content curator checks out and reviews something new, it is revealing as much about himself as it is about the object.
» Content curators should take intellectual risks.
But there is a lot more to be inspired from, by reading through this excellent list of 95 guiding principles for how museums and curators should approach their mandates.
Very inspiring. 9/10
Full article: http://www.dezeen.com/2013/09/12/opinion-kieran-long-on-contemporary-museum-curation/
This idea of curating is of interest to me as I contemplate how to help teachers create digital learning spaces and digital teaching ideas.