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Artist/critic/curator Mark Clintberg is a multitalented guy; he's published research on artist restaurants, installed signage at the Banff Centre, and is working on his PhD at Concordia University.
So I felt lucky to connect with this busy man a few weeks back on the occasion of his installation Behind this lies my true desire for you at at the Art Gallery of Alberta.
Building on past works where Clintberg had used signage and text to address ideas of love and relationship, Behind this lies my true desire for you seems to speak of a kind of longing that museums themselves may have.
LS: Thinking along the lines of passion and desire and your
past work, as well as this new project, it came to mind for me that one
purpose of an art institution is to encourage admiration or desire or
passion for art among viewers. What do you think of that? MC: Well, I think that’s absolutely true for me. The
AGA, which used to be Edmonton Art Gallery, was the first place I
learned to love art. I grew up in Stony Plain, about a 45-minute drive
from the gallery, and my family used to take me there to see shows from
an early age.
I remember seeing a lot of shows there that really fostered a strong
love for art. There was a Stan Douglas show that was really meaningful
for me as a teenager. I definitely remember an early Janet Cardiff and
George Bures Miller work there, which, as someone growing up in a small
town, really exploded my idea of what art could be on a material level.
There was an Attila Richard Lukacs show; it was the first time I had
ever heard of an art exhibition with a mature content rating, so that
you needed to be a certain age or have a parent’s permission to go. I
made sure to see it as soon as I could!
Since I’m also pursuing a PhD in art history, it’s very easy to fall
into a pattern of considering art from an analytic, thoughtful
perspective that is built around proving something or demonstrating an
argument that’s purely about reason. I really believe that art
institutions are places for reason and for thinking, but they are also
places for feeling, too—for passionate feeling.
I think if art institutions are serious about being places that are
about inviting publics to engage, then they need to be willing to allow
publics to engage on an emotional level, not just on the level of
thought or rationality.
"Q&A with Mark Clintberg at Canadianart.ca"
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