Difference between revisions of "Kreplak2018"

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(BibTeX auto import 2018-09-06 02:25:03)
 
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{{BibEntry
 
{{BibEntry
|Key=Kreplak2018
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|BibType=ARTICLE
|Key=Kreplak2018
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|Author(s)=Yaël Kreplak;
 
|Title=On Thick Records and Complex Artworks: A Study of Record-Keeping Practices at the Museum
 
|Title=On Thick Records and Complex Artworks: A Study of Record-Keeping Practices at the Museum
|Author(s)=Yaël Kreplak;
 
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Contemporary art; Museum practices; Documentation; Archives; Record-keeping; Instructions; Descriptions
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Contemporary art; Museum practices; Documentation; Archives; Record-keeping; Instructions; Descriptions
|BibType=ARTICLE
+
|Key=Kreplak2018
 
|Publisher=Springer Nature America, Inc
 
|Publisher=Springer Nature America, Inc
 
|Year=2018
 
|Year=2018
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|Journal=Human Studies
 
|Journal=Human Studies
 
|DOI=10.1007/s10746-018-9479-3
 
|DOI=10.1007/s10746-018-9479-3
 +
|Abstract=In 1967 Garfinkel and Bittner were investigating good organizational reasons for bad clinic records, demonstrating how the reading of such records as sociological data should be reported to the understanding of their production’s practical contingencies and to the situated circumstances of their use. This seminal paper opened new avenues of research related to the study of records in various professional contexts and of their transformation, to the development of praxiological approaches to practical and professional texts, or to the study of historical documents and archives. To contribute to this ethnomethodological strand of research, I propose a case-study of artworks’ records management at the museum, investigated as a perspicuous site to reflect upon how artworks are experienced, apprehended and defined in the institutional ordinary business. Drawing on observations and materials collected at the French National Museum of Modern Art, I study records’ careers (how they are produced, used and transformed by museum’s members) and describe their material and organizational properties, by giving a close look at some elements (initial artworks’ descriptions, installation instructions and confidential correspondence). More particularly, I focus on one distinctive property of some records: their thickness, investigated as a scheme of interpretation of the situated features of documentation work. By reading artworks’ records as local collective practices of assemblage, disruptionand reconfiguration of pieces of documentation, I demonstrate that what is documented in this process is not only the artwork: it is also the collective work of working with artworks, dealt with as ongoing achievements of institutional practices.
 
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Revision as of 07:26, 6 September 2018

Kreplak2018
BibType ARTICLE
Key Kreplak2018
Author(s) Yaël Kreplak
Title On Thick Records and Complex Artworks: A Study of Record-Keeping Practices at the Museum
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Ethnomethodology, Contemporary art, Museum practices, Documentation, Archives, Record-keeping, Instructions, Descriptions
Publisher Springer Nature America, Inc
Year 2018
Language
City
Month aug
Journal Human Studies
Volume
Number
Pages
URL
DOI 10.1007/s10746-018-9479-3
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

In 1967 Garfinkel and Bittner were investigating good organizational reasons for bad clinic records, demonstrating how the reading of such records as sociological data should be reported to the understanding of their production’s practical contingencies and to the situated circumstances of their use. This seminal paper opened new avenues of research related to the study of records in various professional contexts and of their transformation, to the development of praxiological approaches to practical and professional texts, or to the study of historical documents and archives. To contribute to this ethnomethodological strand of research, I propose a case-study of artworks’ records management at the museum, investigated as a perspicuous site to reflect upon how artworks are experienced, apprehended and defined in the institutional ordinary business. Drawing on observations and materials collected at the French National Museum of Modern Art, I study records’ careers (how they are produced, used and transformed by museum’s members) and describe their material and organizational properties, by giving a close look at some elements (initial artworks’ descriptions, installation instructions and confidential correspondence). More particularly, I focus on one distinctive property of some records: their thickness, investigated as a scheme of interpretation of the situated features of documentation work. By reading artworks’ records as local collective practices of assemblage, disruptionand reconfiguration of pieces of documentation, I demonstrate that what is documented in this process is not only the artwork: it is also the collective work of working with artworks, dealt with as ongoing achievements of institutional practices.

Notes