ABSTRACT

This groundbreaking book is the first to provide a critical overview of the relationship between contemporary ceramics and curatorial practice in museum culture. Ceramic objects form a major part of museum collections, with connections to anthropology, archaeology and other disciplines that engage with the cultural and social history of humankind. In recent years museums have provided the impetus for cutting-edge artistic practice, either as a response to particular collections, or as part of exhibitions. But the question of how museums have staged contemporary ceramics and how ceramic artists respond to museum collections has not been the subject of published research to date. This book examines how ceramic artists have, over the last decade, begun to animate museum collections in new ways, and reflects on the impact that these new initiatives have had in the broad context of visual culture. Ceramics in the Expanded Field is the culmination of a three-year AHRC funded project, and reflects its major findings. It brings together leading international voices in the field of ceramics, research undertaken throughout the project and papers delivered at the concluding conference. By examining the benefits and constraints of interventions and the dialogue between ceramics and museological practice, this book will bring focus to an area of museology that has not yet been theorized, and will contribute to policy debates and art practice.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Ceramics in a place of cultural discourse

part 1|50 pages

The expanded field

chapter 1|10 pages

Productive friction

Ceramic practice and the museum since 1970

chapter 2|14 pages

The walls come tumbling down

chapter 3|14 pages

Damaging the historic fabric

Keith Harrison at the Victoria and Albert Museum

chapter 4|10 pages

Out of the studio 1

part 2|40 pages

The museum as context

chapter 5|9 pages

Ceramics on show

Domesticity, destruction and manifestations of risk-taking

chapter 6|7 pages

Ceramics process in the museum

Revolution or recidivism?

chapter 7|13 pages

The anatomy of a home

Saarinen House

chapter 8|9 pages

Jung's amphora

Ceramics, collections and the collective unconscious

part 3|38 pages

Audience engagement

chapter 9|8 pages

Ceramic art in social contexts

chapter 10|10 pages

A show of hands

The spectacle of apprenticeship

chapter 11|6 pages

Cotton fields and baseball fields

chapter 12|12 pages

Crinson jug from clay to the grave (and beyond)

Exploring the ceramic object as a gathering point

part 4|42 pages

Process and material

chapter 13|11 pages

The art of appropriation

chapter 14|8 pages

Collected activity

Making in the museum

chapter 16|10 pages

Love notes to Buddhas

Are you land or water?

part 5|48 pages

Curation and authorship

chapter 17|9 pages

Possibilities regained

Transitions through clay

chapter 18|10 pages

Edmund de Waal at Waddesdon 1

chapter 19|13 pages

Queering the museum