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THE INCURABLE IMAGE

The Incurable-Image: Curating Post-Mexican Film and Media Arts book release and panel discussion with author Tarek Ehlaik

Author Tarek Elhaik is assistant professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Davis.  Join us for a special presentation and discussion with guest readers:   Silvia Gruner (artist, Mexico City) Tobias Rees (anthropologist, McGill University) Dominic Willsdon (curator of education, SF MOMA)  From the 1990s onwards the ‘ethnographic turn in contemporary art’ has generated intense dialogues between anthropologists, artists and curators. While ethnography has been both generously and problematically re-appropriated by the art world, curation has seldom caught the conceptual attention of anthropologists.  Based on two years of participant observation in Mexico City, Tarek Elhaik addresses this lacuna by examining the concept-work of curatorial platforms and media artists. Taking his cue from ongoing critiques of Mexicanist aesthetics, and what Roger Bartra calls ‘the post-Mexican condition’, Elhaik conceptualizes curation less as an exhibition-oriented practice within a national culture, than as a figure of care and an image of thought animating a complex assemblage of inter-medial practices, from experimental cinema and installations to curatorial collaborations.   What has been said of The Incurable-Image:  “This is a path-breaking book. Drawing on intensive and innovative participant-observation as well as a deep background in curatorial practice, Elhaik opens the way for a deterritorialization into new spaces and modes of thought and practice. As a result, the book takes the anthropological study of images beyond method into new sites of inquiry.” — Prof Paul Rabinow, University of California, Berkeley  “For those tired of preachy and essentialist accounts of anthropologists and artists as handmaidens to other people’s authentic, “bare” culture, Tarek Elhaik’s book will be a shot in the arm. Elhaik agues that anthropology and art, by succumbing to the trope of radical alterity, have lost their speculative edge, while the international art market renders their sincere efforts irrelevant. His vivid and mordant analysis of the dramatic power dynamics of rivalry, complicity, contamination, and diagnosis among artists, curators, and anthropologists in Mexico will stimulate all who seek a bold new understanding of art-anthropology relations.” — Prof Laura Marks, Simon Fraser University

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