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Curatorial Notes: Re-evaluating Participation in the Cracks of Control

Last Saturday in In Vitro Gallery’s workshop Fear as a Method, my encounter with moss-clay hybrids echoed Shannon Te Ao’s my life as a tunnel (2018) . Like Te Ao’s deliberate material ambiguities, this tactile encounter became what Claire Bishop describes as “a battleground for contested knowledge” (Bishop 2012, 218). This tactile dialogue forced me to confront the sanitized precision of my ArtSteps reconstruction of Fugitive Frames – a tension mirroring Hito Steyerl’s critique of “digital hygiene” in Duty Free Art (Week 5 reading).

mixed media including unspun wool, twigs, and string, Documenta 14: Daybook. Resonates with tactile epistemology discussed in Week 7 “Embodied Archives”

When the Virtual Consumes the Physical
While reconstructing Fugitive Frames in ArtSteps, I became obsessed with precision: the drag-and-drop animations of the manifesto generator, the pixelated trajectories of burning projections… It wasn’t until test users mechanically clicked “Next” that I realized: technological empowerment often reduces experience to an instruction manual. This forced me to reconsider the metaphor of “data ashes” in my project—should true ephemerality include the absence of the body? Perhaps inserting a “forced contemplation” mechanism (e.g., requiring viewers to watch the full 10-second burning animation) could restore a sense of digital ritual.

The Rebellion of Touch and Curatorial Restraint
During the workshop, the curators handed me a burlap bag filled with ice cubes, instructing me to describe its contents solely through touch. When I misread “coldness” as “blunt sharpness,” it struck me: misinterpretation is itself a power struggle of cognition. In contrast, the over-engineered audio process in Fugitive Frames‘ “Noise Archaeology” zone (scan-listen-archive) might be suffocating raw emotion. Maybe we need less technological mediation—let visitors record directly on vintage tape recorders, embrace sticky buttons, tangled tapes, even accept blank recordings as “silent manifestos.”

Imperfect Proof of Presence
These experiences taught me that curatorial tension lies not in perfect systems, but in exposing cracks in control. When workshop participants froze upon touching unfamiliar materials, the curators prolonged the silence instead of filling it with explanations; when network delays caused data fractures in the virtual exhibition, error codes became the most honest wall labels. I stopped trying to patch every flaw, instead learning to preserve 15% space for chaos—like the intentionally slowed scanner for The Burning Lexicon, turning waiting into a countdown for deconstructing power.

References
Bishop, Claire. 2012. Artificial Hells: Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship. London: Verso.

Lin, Candice. 2021. Pigs and Poison: Exhibition Catalogue. Los Angeles: MOCA Publications.

Steyerl, Hito. 2017. Duty Free Art: Art in the Age of Planetary Civil War. London: Verso.

Zylinska, Joanna. 2014. Minimal Ethics for the Anthropocene. Ann Arbor: Open Humanities Press.

“Publics & Public Programmes” 2025. Week 10 lecture Slides,University of Edinburgh. Accessed March 31, 2025. [https://www.learn.ed.ac.uk/ultra/courses/_117082_1/outline/edit/document/_10845049_1?courseId=_117082_1&view=content&state=view]. 

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Curatorial Notes: Re-evaluating Participation in the Cracks of Control / Zihan Fu / Curating (2024-2025)[SEM2] by is licensed under a
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