Journal Article (peer-reviewed)

Crip Curation and the Aesthetics of the Undeliverable

2024

Image from Crip Curation and the Aesthetics of the Undeliverable
Bibliographic Reference

Amanda Cachia, “Crip Curation and the Aesthetics of the Undeliverable,” Journal of Visual Culture, Volume 22, Issue 3, 2023

In this article, the author argues how the conceptual curatorial work of Lucy Lippard imbued similar qualities to those that are embodied in the curatorial work of the ‘aesthetics of the undeliverable’. The aesthetics of the undeliverable is a new genre of disability curating that centers the realities of disability and access within curatorial and artistic practice, alongside exhibition design. The line that runs through both styles of curatorial practice, that is, Lippard’s work, and the aesthetics of the undeliverable, is political intent, where the behind-the-scenes labor of the curator is revealed. Specifically, in Lippard’s projects, errors, gaps, and professional time-frames were revealed, whilst the aesthetics of the undeliverable points out inequities towards disabled artists and audiences, yet insisting on time-lines that defy normative frameworks. The author examines these generative comparisons through Lippard’s ‘numbers’ exhibitions curated in the 1960s–1970s, alongside a case study of the exhibition, Undeliverable, curated by artist Carmen Papalia, which was held at Tangled Art + Disability Gallery in Toronto, followed by the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa, Ontario in 2021. In doing this, she aims to show how the aesthetics of the undeliverable is a form of institutional critique within disability arts and culture that has its roots in the proponents of conceptual art of the 1960s and Lippard, to which crip curating is aligned through its oppositional handling of curatorial norms. This dovetails powerfully with a call by Disability Studies scholars to move towards crip methodology, and this article will show how crip curation and the aesthetics of the undeliverable heeds this call.