Summary
84
Exhibitions
Spring Summer 2015
In recent decades, numerous artists have rethought the relationship between the artwork and the exhibition, notably by treating the latter as a medium or device. Liberated from being simply a means of display, the exhibition has become an artwork in itself. This issue as a whole thus highlights artists and curators who are working in common to expand the boundaries of the exhibition and offer spectators a very different experience. As a complement to this section, we are publishing a series of articles on the presence of Québec artists at the Venice Biennale and the Havana Biennial.
Editorial
Feature
Exhibition : What Makes an Exhibition Within an Exhibition?
In search of a canon of exhibitions
The Period Room: Tomorrow’s Version
Scenes from the House Dream : The Exhibition as Oneiric Scene
Notes On Curating Autobiographical Art
Circulation et contradiction dans Furnishing Positions d’Adrian Blackwell
Curating-Art: the case of Willem de Rooij
Interviews
Current Issue
Abstractions
Spring Summer 2025
Yet what about abstraction today? Long confined to formalist and self-referential imperatives, abstraction has gradually freed itself from the modernism yolk to recapture its evocative power. This issue proposes to turn away from the dogma of Abstraction as a historical genre to consider its various plastic and semantic avenues. In this invitation to explore abstractions, we wish to re-establish a dialogue between content and form, between the political and the poetic, by engaging with works that evoke reality differently. Whether they are qualified as abstract, non-figurative, or non-objective, these works certainly tell us stories.