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What Happens When the Exhibition Starts Listening Back?
Who decides what an exhibition means? Why are we only allowed to read curatorial narratives, not rewrite them?
Fluid Curatingasks: What if the audience could rename the space? Redraw the paths? Retell the story?
This is a curatorial experiment in shared authorship and disrupted authority. There’s no single narrative. No fixed wall text. Just a living, rewritable system shaped by the people inside it.
If you’ve ever felt that exhibitions speak at you instead of with you— this project is for you.
👇 Click to enter the proposal space: floor plan, visuals, public programme, zine, and a decentralised curatorial vision—ready to be rewritten.
Acknowledgements Looking back, this course has been so much more than I expected. I want to sincerely thank our lecturers and tutors—not just for teaching, but for constantly encouraging reflection, experimentation, and emotional honesty. Your feedback and provocations really shaped how I see curating now.
To my peers—thank you for your openness, support, and all the moments of shared vulnerability and laughter. Working alongside you helped me learn just as much outside the classroom as inside.
And finally, thank you to the way this course was designed: every week built something new, and every assignment felt like an invitation to grow. I’m walking away not just with a project, but with a deeper understanding of what curating can be—and who I am within it.
This week I participated in a special joint event betweenCAT (Contemporary Art Theory) and CAP (Contemporary Art Practice)students. We met not on Teams, but face-to-face in the West Court, and I have to say—it was more inspiring than I imagined.
The format was based on Speed Curating, a method adapted from the UK Arts Council. CAP students introduced their art practices in quick 2-minute bursts, while us CAT students shared five key curatorial interests. It was fast, a little chaotic, but filled with energy and curiosity.
🎨 Meeting Artists, Meeting Possibilities
As a CAT student working on my Fluid Curating project, this event was a goldmine. I heard so many artist presentations that aligned with what I’ve been thinking about—audience interaction, sensory engagement, performative gestures, and curating as a living process.
Some CAP students showed deeply personal work about memory, others presented interactive installations. I had some great chats about how audiences can intervene, not just observe; how we mightco-createexhibitions where the boundaries between artist, curator, and viewer start to dissolve.
✨ My Five Curatorial Keywords
To help introduce my ideas during the event, I shared five key themes that define my practice. I’ll share them here too:
Decentralised Curation I want to challenge top-down models. Can the audience’s decisions, movements, and emotions shape the exhibition just as much as the curators’?
Audience Intervention I’m interested in how viewers might not just observe, but alter—touching, rearranging, or reshaping the work as part of the exhibition itself.
Co-Creation Rather than presenting finished works, I want to collaborate with artists to create open structures where outcomes remain fluid and evolving.
Curation as Process I see curating as something unfolding in time. Not a fixed result, but a process that’s shaped by those who enter the space and what they bring.
Shifting Curatorial Authority What happens when curators give up control, and artists invite intervention? Can letting go create something more alive, more real?
These ideas became beautiful conversation starters. Some CAP students lit up when I described exhibitions as perception practice fields, or when I said, “What if we don’t design the message, but design a mood and let the rest happen?”
One of the artists, Sijia Chen, shared a tree with us—though not just any tree. This one was an installation made of welded steel branches, fuzzy pink yarn, and sparkling hanging ornaments. Right in the center stood a solid metal trunk, something she built herself. She said it represents those immovable forces in our world—systems, structures, or maybe even fate. But what caught my attention were the branches. Around the steel frame, she invited us to add colorful bendable sticks (they had wires inside, so we could twist them into shapes). People made spirals, loops, even strange little symbols. This wasn’t just decoration. She called it “an editable tree.”
And honestly, I loved that phrase.
The idea behind it was so powerful. Sure, the trunk—the core—is fixed. But everything around it? Open to change. It’s a metaphor for participation within structure, for how individuals can intervene, re-shape, and re-narrate even within rigid systems. It reminded me so much of what I’m trying to do with Fluid Curating. Not to destroy the framework of exhibitions, but to invite others into it. To say, “Come, add your branch.” The editable tree became, in that moment, a perfect symbol of co-creation. It was poetic, but also quietly radical.
I walked away thinking: maybe my own curatorial space could offer this same gesture. A framework that’s solid, but soft around the edges. A space where people don’t just observe, but gently re-edit what’s there.
Another work that really stuck with me came from artist Xudong Jia. He showed us a digital interactive piece—on screen, it looked like pink flowers exploding outward, or maybe colorful ink swirling in water. It was beautiful at first glance, almost hypnotic. Then he told us the title: The Evil Flower.
The screen was equipped with facial recognition. Every time someone approached, the image would shift. The flower would grow bigger, darker, more aggressive. Jia explained that the piece was about the butterfly effect, about online violence—how no single snowflake in an avalanche is innocent. The more people watched, the more the flower “blamed” them.
It hit me hard. The interactivity wasn’t playful, it was accusatory. You weren’t in control of the work—it was confronting you. That twist in perspective really stayed with me. It wasn’t interaction for interaction’s sake; it was interaction as responsibility. I kept thinking about how this could fit into my own idea of Fluid Curating—where audience behavior doesn’t just “complete” the exhibition, it actually shapes its emotional direction. What if interactivity could be unsettling? What if being seen by the artwork is part of the artwork?
This piece challenged me. And that’s exactly what I want my exhibitions to do.
🧠 Reflections and Next Steps
This session wasn’t just useful—it was moving. I left with several artists I’d love to follow up with. Some of them are exploring clay as a soft resistance. Others are working with sound, text, or ephemeral materials. I can already imagine co-curating something gentle, open, and audience-responsive together.
In the next few weeks, I’ll be deepening my readings on participatory art and affective curating. I’ve already started noting quotes from Curating and the Educational Turn that feel like they’re speaking directly to what I’m trying to do:
“They seem to seek not the masterful production of expertise… but the co-production of question, ambiguity and enquiry.” (O’Neill and Wilson, 2013)
Yes. That’s exactly it.
This was more than a networking session. It was a seed-planting moment. And I’m already looking forward to what might grow.
This week, we had our first group induction at Summerhall’s Collective Space, a warm, wood-panelled room tucked inside one of Edinburgh’s most creatively charged venues. I arrived thinking it would be a basic orientation, but I left with a heart full of new ideas. This wasn’t just about booking a space. It was about rethinking what curating can feel like when it’s shared, soft, and sensory.
First Impressions: More than Just a Room
There’s something irresistibly gentle about the space. The soft chairs, the ambient light, the way the layout invites you to sit down instead of just pass through. It felt less like a classroom and more like someone’s lounge. Immediately, I started imagining how Fluid Curating could unfold here. Maybe it doesn’t need pristine white walls or polished installations. Maybe what it needs is presence, care, and an openness to small, shared rituals.
Planning Ahead: Our Group Bookings
We’ve officially booked two slots at Summerhall:
March 20 (1–3pm): A preparation session with film sharing and early interaction testing
March 29 (1–3pm): Our group session with playful, collaborative activities
Both will take place in the Collective Space room, where we hope to build something that feels light, interactive, and deeply personal.
Group Vision: Feeling, Play and Everyday Curation
In our 11:11 team meeting, one thing was clear. We’re not aiming for a flawless exhibition. Instead, we want to create a space where curating feels like friendship.
For the March 20 session, we’re preparing a film-sharing afternoon. Each of us will bring a short experimental video, ideally from UbuWeb or elsewhere, and share why we chose it. We’ll keep each screening around 10 minutes, then take a moment to talk. It’s not a lecture. It’s a chance to let the emotional weight or beauty of the work linger in the room.
We’ve assigned responsibilities too:
Sarah is bringing the projector and extension cable
Yiran Gu and I will bring paper to cover the windows
Beichen is bringing popcorn
Yuman is bringing tape
Everyone will bring their own chosen video and talk about it briefly beforehand
Following the screening, we’ll play a wordless charades-style game, interpreting emotions through body movement. The idea is to explore how feelings are communicated visually and how curation might hold space for non-verbal forms of meaning.
Planning for Week 2 orWeek 3
For Week 2-3, we’re planning a quiet flower arranging session just for our group. Each of us will bring a small bouquet, and together we’ll build a shared installation using what we’ve gathered. There won’t be any audience or pressure. It’s just us, spending time with the materials, moving gently, seeing what happens.
I love how this feels. It’s not about creating something impressive. It’s about noticing small changes, being present with each other, and letting the space shift with our touch. To me, this is also a form of curating. Not fixed, not finished. Just unfolding, slowly and softly.
Group Schedule at a Glance
Date
Time
Activity Title
Notes
March 20
1–3 pm
UbuWeb Film Sharing & Charades
Private group session with discussion and games
March 29
1–3 pm
Playful Collective Curation
Public-internal event with flowers, scent and zine
April (TBC)
TBC
Soft Closing Exhibition
To be confirmed based on outcomes and group feedback
📝 Final Thoughts
This week wasn’t just about getting access to a venue. It was about co-creating a space that might host something delicate, something in process. I feel lucky to be part of a group that values process over polish and vulnerability over perfection.
Curating, I’m beginning to see, doesn’t need to shout. Sometimes it’s about whispering softly and making room for someone to hear themselves.