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Angela Kingston

She uses a lateral process in curating 3am: Wonder, Paranoia and the restless night (2013), making the exhibition poetic as well as factual. There’s a chapter in the catalogue on how she went about curating the exhibition – she drew information from poems, books, radio and TV programmes.

http://www.angelakingston.co.uk/

James Peto and Emily Scott-Dearing

They curated the exhibition, Teeth, at the Wellcome Collection in 2018. It was less poetic and I found it more political than 3AM (it was mainly about the history of teeth and how it represented social standing and wealth). I found it interesting because the Wellcome Collection is a science and art museum. It reminds me of the previous lecture about museums, and the discussion that they’re linked with power.

https://wellcomecollection.org/articles/W1HPDCYAACgAlLN2

Danh Vo

He curated Slip of the Tongue in Venice in 2015, and curated a show in South London Gallery last year. He’s an artist as well, his work deals with self identity and cultural heritage. I think with the Slip of the Tongue exhibtion, he takes the place, and the building’s architecture into consideration.

https://www.frieze.com/article/slip-tongue


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