Curatorial platform

A curatorial platform is: A curatorial platform is an organization or an organized social group whose principal activity is focused on the development and presentation of cultural artifacts according to clearly defined and coherent themes or organizational principles.

Following the development of the independent or freelance curator following 1969’s watershed exhibition Live In Your Head: When Attitudes Become Form[1] and Harald Szeemann's subsequent defiance of then-established career trajectories,[2] the role of the curator in the development of modern art has become ever more important.

The notion of a curatorial platform extending and reinforcing these studies and attitudes is relatively new.

Rhizome's activity—‘the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art’—is nonetheless recognizably curatorial.

Meanwhile, there are also digital curatorial platforms that either collect curators with specific interests, or focus more on artist interaction, such as in the case of Curatron There is general agreement about the aims of such platforms as that last—in the Peregrine Arts [3] manifesto, the organization clearly states that their curatorial platform does not replace ‘traditional ensemble-based or exhibiting institutions, such as orchestras, museums, and theater companies, [but] provides a foundation and structure for organizing and amplifying current artistic resources in the pursuit of true innovation and artistic impact.’ The term curatorial platform can also refer to a curatorial management system (usually an application software) that helps curators and curatorial groups (see "as organization") in their focus, social organization, and administration tasks.