This research focuses on three of 罢补迟别鈥檚 collections: the art collection, the archive and the institutional records that document the history of the museum. It explores the tensions that arise between them, and how their boundaries can become blurred.
The articles in this section consider the role of the archive in art practice, as it has shifted from repository to medium. This transition is explored through three distinct strands: the challenges posed to 罢补迟别鈥檚 conventional structures and divisions by artworks that generate archive material; the process of establishing an archive for Tate Exchange and their Associates; and the museum鈥檚 decisions and criteria for material that moves between the archive and artwork collections.
Our work has been rooted in an emerging body of critical archival theory. This approach prioritises record creators 鈥 in this context, artists, participants and audiences 鈥 acknowledging that they should also be the priority record user and central to the processes of collecting and cataloguing. In the context of 罢补迟别鈥檚 collections and established archival practices, how and where Tate can make space for such practices?
The publications for this case study include Sarah Haylett鈥檚 essay 鈥Living Archives at Tate: After An Archival Impulse鈥, which summarises the intentions and critical context of the research project. Taking her title from Hal Foster鈥檚 2004 article 鈥楢n Archival Impulse鈥, Haylett seeks to situate artworks that generate archival material within a wider history of archival artworks at Tate, while drawing parallels with archival theory and practice. She explores how 罢补迟别鈥檚 practices might expand to actively collect and engage with these artworks and the archives they generate.
In support of this essay, we have created a working proposal for the care and collection of artworks that generate archival material, and definitions for the three types of 鈥榓rchives鈥 at Tate. The research also informed our update of the Tate 鈥楢rt Term鈥 entry for 鈥Archive鈥. The final output of the project is a book chapter co-authored by the members of the Reshaping the Collectible team and Tate Exchange, which explores preliminary conservations about establishing an archive for Tate Exchange.1
Key texts for this case study
In addition to our 鈥榳hat we鈥檙e reading鈥 working document, some key texts for this archive case study have included:
Okwui Enwezor, Archive Fever: Uses of the Document in Contemporary Art, G枚ttingen 2008.
Ingrid Schaffner and Matthias Winzen (eds.), Deep Storage: Collecting, Storing and Archiving in Art, exhibition catalogue, Museum of Modern Art, New York 1998.
Stephanie Springgay, Anise Truman and Sara MacLean, 鈥楽ocially Engaged Art, Experimental Pedagogies, and Anarchiving as Research-Creation鈥, Qualitative Inquiry, vol.26, issue 7, pp.897鈥907.
Antonina Lewis, 鈥極melettes in the Stack: Archival Fragility in the Aforeafter鈥, Archivaria, vol.86, Fall 2018, pp.44鈥67, .
Michelle Caswell and Marika Cifor, 鈥楩rom Human Rights to Feminist Ethics: Radical Empathy in the Archives鈥, Archivaria, vol.81, Spring 2016, pp.23鈥43.
Stuart Hall, 鈥楥onstituting an archive鈥, Third Text, vol.15, issue 54 (Spring 2001), pp.89鈥92.
Simone Osthoff, Performing the Archive: The transformation of the archive in Contemporary art from repository of documents to art medium, New York 2009.
Kirsten Thorpe, Kimberly Christen, Lauren Brooker and Monica Galassi, 鈥楧esigning archival information systems through partnerships with Indigenous communities: Developing the Mukurtu Hubs and Spokes Model in Australia鈥, Australasian Journal of Information Studies, vol.25 (2021), .