Obviously, the participating museum directors and curators are more adventuresome than most. |
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They were also impressed by the calibre of curators and scholars engaged to write the catalogue. |
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Rather, the curators have used their resources with ingenuity to make us look at Dutch painting in a very different way. |
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The action will involve curators, conservators, technical staff, warders, security and administrative workers and managers. |
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The curators can be applauded in their attempt to give structure to the traditional free-for-all. |
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Since then, museum curators across the world have largely agreed not to exhibit mummified body parts out of respect for the dead. |
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The Whitney Museum recruited six outside curators to help select this year's biennial. |
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Museum curators saw a shift from artists' hopelessness to a desperate need to contribute something to society. |
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Unlike many museum exhibitions, the curators provided the information to the viewer in manageable pieces. |
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Collectors, dealers and curators in specialised areas all knew each other, and there was supply enough to satisfy everyone. |
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The artists are up-and-comers and players in the Sydney art scene and the curators are museum big wigs and people in the know. |
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I know all the museum curators in the world and there is not one to match Tim's genius. |
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This lag in attention has yet to be fully addressed by contemporary West Coast museums and curators. |
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The curators of the museum have changed the content of the turbine room a few times since the museum opened. |
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The noise and lights derive not from history, but from the present manipulations of Imperial War Museum curators. |
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The process involves 30 keepers, curators and registrars making a note of every single creature in the zoo. |
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Very few museum curators have the opportunity or the budget to be so single-minded, to collect in depth in a highly specialised area. |
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Its original simple black frame was more functional than attractive, and curators wanted a more appropriate treatment. |
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It is in the spoons and cutlery section, however, the book will in many ways prove most useful to collectors, dealers and curators. |
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On the Web, however, research materials are accessed online via electronic databases instead of through librarians or curators. |
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It remains notable, however, for the accuracy of its historical narrative and the gusto of its curators. |
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The deep pockets of The Japan Foundation allowed the curators to travel to three other Asian countries for research. |
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More than 40 new curators have been taken on, with experts in everything from Chinese painting to metalwork, taxidermy, armoury and gilding. |
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The curators were judicious in their selection of authors for the exhibition catalogue. |
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The curators have taken away some of the remoteness of medieval art by showing their objects thematically. |
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For several months, conservators and curators carefully wrapped books in acid-free tissue before nestling them in Ziploc bags. |
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Today, these records offer troves of treasures to museum curators, anthropologists, and historians of science. |
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Claiming fusion as the essence of Nigerian modernism, the curators selected works of visual art that exhibited a hybrid character. |
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For example, some museum curators are expected to address criteria such as national identity and indigenousness. |
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The curators have figuratively thrown open the doors to the tomb, let in the light, and shaken out clouds of ancient dust. |
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Three years ago, 550 conservators, curators and technicians began packing 2,000 boxes using 7km of bubble wrap. |
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This accessible, inexpensive technique forms part of the basic repertoire for curators and conservators examining works of art. |
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In the Met's exhibition, the curators do something wonderfully disorienting. |
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They have repeatedly managed to attract an impressive roster of artists and curators to its event. |
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In art galleries curators seem obsessed by mass media and celebrity, audiences and participation. |
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The curators have made an error, I think, in not presenting a sampling of the work Rodchenko created during his shadowy last twenty years. |
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You meet collectors and curators and people who have a passion for the arts. |
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Grateful gallery-owners and curators would also call it courageous, given the type of work Beck's bankrolls. |
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Her masterful brush strokes and use of colour fired up many critics and curators and received immediate recognition. |
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Its wide-ranging reach is a tribute to the breadth of expertise on the ground as creatives and in the white cube as curators. |
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Its initial mission included providing exhibition spaces for independent curators and studios for 20 artists a year. |
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Two other large pavilions within the park are dedicated to group shows organized by the Biennale director and invited curators. |
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As a supporter of all that's low-key, I think the curators deserve commendation for this. |
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There were a few pickets outside, assistant curators and clerical staff having a wage dispute with the museum. |
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The new museology demands that curators create visual and textual structures that address the broadest range of viewers as honestly and profoundly as possible. |
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Liverpool is a perfect example of a group of museums and galleries that now have enough curators and enough conservators, which they didn't have before. |
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We encounter many artists who work online in new media as curators and online journalists. |
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But the curators have spotted one connection I never guessed: they both painted rainbows. |
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It has since been saved, but continues to confound curators in search of a right-angle. |
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Artists, curators and galleries should seriously consider boycotting these institutions to send a clear message. |
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But instead, curators have carefully balanced the upsides, downsides and, especially, strange sides of tech. |
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Ms. Lipson also has a dozen young artists, curators, event planners and others who are part of her dream. |
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But while the curators offer an inspiringly diverse reading of American art, they end on a grim note. |
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But whereas in Gilman's day curators reigned supreme, now they have to enchant visitors rather than lecture them. |
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Quite often, these conservators and curators are left in a quandary when faced with handling and preserving contemporary art. |
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While visiting the artist, the curators candidly asked Johns to allow MoMA to debut his newest, and then unfinished, collection. |
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The touring programme was made available free to curators, programmers, microcinemas, distributors and websites who are seeking contemporary, experimental, time-based work. |
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The curators have done a marvelous job of assembling high-caliber artists and works. |
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She had similar fears when 2010 biennial curators Bonami and Gary Carrion-Murayari came calling last year. |
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Instead, Costume Institute curators seem more wedded to surface appearance than any connoisseur of Old Master oils could be. |
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I have often felt sorry for the curators at the Royal Collection. |
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These are themes and designers that will then be revisited endlessly by curators. |
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It certainly wasn't a word you heard uttered by museum curators. |
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The curators Pickering and Kaus have painstakingly trawled through the records that may accompany bones for clues. |
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To stimulate discussion that might lead to more attributions, the curators have hung several other disputed works. |
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Researchers in cultural studies and art history can benefit from sponsoring and tutoring by the Centre Pompidou's curators and scientific staff. |
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A businessman with no academic credentials, he has been sharply criticized by curators and scholars for favoring popular entertainment in order to increase attendance. |
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Before each Acquisitions Committee meeting, curators convene to review possible acquisitions and to discuss how they might fit into collections. |
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But as he describes the exhibition, interpolating incidents from Hamilton's career, it's hard to avoid the conclusion that the curators actually got it right. |
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The curators here concentrate upon social and politically inspired art. |
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Overtime, the Bedford's florals and chintz fell out of favor with the artists, art dealers and museum curators who frequented neighborhood theaters, galleries and museums. |
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Professional curators and conservators will look for work elsewhere, and amateurs will be hired who don't care whether light levels are 50 lux or 500 lux. |
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The sale had been eagerly anticipated by collectors and museum curators. |
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We have experts who are curators and who are familiar with these kinds of works. |
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Up to now he has worked on the transfer of the remaining members of staff to the American buyer's structure at the request of the curators. |
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The star feature of Keys to History is a series of fascinating Thematic Tours created by historians and museum curators. |
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The board representatives, directors and curators who participated in this project also spoke of their individual role within the gallery. |
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During the two years between biennials, the committee ensures the participation of venues by continuously meeting with curators, artists and other organizers. |
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More than 100 statues, friezes, ceramics and other objects have been exhumed from storage by curators from Tate and the Yale Centre for British Art. |
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The Museum of London curators Julia Hoffbrand and Jackie Keily said they had chosen objects to illustrate both human stories and developments in detective work. |
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Futurecity work with curators, galleries and clients from around the world, championing artists who are changing the way art is presented in an urban context. |
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You may be wondering how, with all these works by apparently every European artist born since 1600, the curators have found space for the splendid array of dazzling paintings by Rubens at the heart of the exhibition. |
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They need money to hire curators and to collect artifacts. |
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Finally, this Smithsonian Institution director pointed out that hundreds of experts and curators were willing to offer their assistance but that it would be possible only if the Haitian authorities announced their priorities. |
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The French Cultural Service in Atlanta promotes and supports new or emerging artistic form in visual arts, architecture and design, as well as new artists and curators. |
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Yet this rich exhibition, the first of its kind in France, is still a remarkable coup given that curators fear lending fragile tempera paintings on wood. |
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The Whitney show has been vividly installed by the curators Elisabeth Sussman and Thomas Weski with juxtapositions that interrelate like stanzas of a poem. |
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A catalogue edited by the curators, organized chronologically and anthologizing dozens of texts on the painter's work, accompanies the show. |
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For those inspired to become historians and curators themselves, the Database Research function allows users to search through over 60,000 digital images of artifacts in order to create his or her own thematic tour. |
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In a world in which anyone can add to a museum's collection, how will curators — and audiences — cope with the potential limitlessness of user-generated material? |
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This personal history of a huge country, carefully selected both by Sigg and Whitworth's curators, enlightens us painlessly to the turmoil of this amazing country. |
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In May 2007, opposing interpretations clashed in Auschwitz, where Polish curators of a museum at the former death camp did not allow Russia to open its exhibits. |
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Museum curators and an expert Wikipedian, Andy Mabbett will also be on hand to offer practical advice and support throughout the day. |
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Hassled curators attend to last-minute adjustments. |
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Scientists and museum curators typically use tiger or dermestid beetle larva enclosed in containers to clean a skull perfectly. |
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Not surprisingly, few museum curators jumped at the chance to give Neanderthal bones from their collections to a bunch of stripling geneticists who wanted to saw lumps off them. |
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My job consisted of doing research, working with other docents, curators, teachers and art managers, in order to create tours that would be interesting and educational for children. |
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It all advanced a common cause of swinging the identity of art away from handmade objects, marketed by dealers, to cogitated manifestations, administered by curators as auteurs. |
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In certain countries, notably Japan and some Latin-American nations, curators are required by law to have graduated in museology before they can practice. |
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Museum and gallery staff, volunteers, curators responsible for the care of paintings, faculty and students of art history or museology, artists, and art teachers. |
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I drifted at random, punching buttons, through Greek and Roman, African and Malaysian, modern, and Old Masters, harkening to present and bygone curators as they murmured considerately across the ages of creative endeavor. |
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As the lepidoptera section of the National Insect Collection in Ottawa continued to grow, full-time lepidopterists were hired as curators and researchers. |
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Mahler had never been listened to by so many people at once. In Britain more than 70 celebratory events are plannedHappily for curators and impresarios, 2011 offers new anniversaries that promise to be just as inspiring. |
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In 2005, Ambra Medda and Amy Lau saw the opportunity to create a nexus for the far-flung community of cutting-edge designer dealers, collectors, creatives, curators and critics. |
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While some artists adopt the model of sociality in their practices, organisers, curators and programmers are looking for distinction, individuality seen as an admirable capital. |
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Without improved immunology, curators would have to be far more reticent about letting their animals move into larger and more populated enclosures. |
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Presentation travel allows independent curators to attend the presentation of an exhibition or program of independent works by Canadian media arts professionals that they have curated. |
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But she found herself pigeon-holed by curators. |
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Where possible, curators also shared their knowledge with groups of visitors with special interests, and on occasion hosted visits of collection storage facilities for colleagues and specialists. |
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He mentions the museums' Youth Forum scheme, now gone, which his Year 10s could sign up for and continue with through their A levels: it meant long-term involvement with curators and artists, and hands-on museum experience. |
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The curators scoured the individual sheets of paper, looking for clues to their original order, such as pigment transference, age and type of paper. |
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Every so often an artist comes along who defies the easy labeling that curators and critics feel obliged to stick on everything under their rapacious gaze. |
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In collaboration with exhibition curators Alfred Pacquement and Serge Lemoine, the artist has selected some 25 works of varying scale that retrace the key inflections in his artistic development from 1963 to the present. |
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Although the primary target group for this database is archaeological resource managers, the information will also be of interest to marine curators, archivists, historians and avocationals. |
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Various curators and whatnot became just like impresarios. |
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All the other museum curators were in a blur of blue blazers or heathery tweeds, and she was an exclamation point with her disciplined hair, vivid red lips and black jersey tube dresses with eccentric ruching. |
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And the novelty this year is that the show's six curators have chosen to take the Biennial's original brief to provide an American cross-section with refreshing literalness. |
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This book, published by the National Gallery in Washington, is an encyclopaedic reference for curators, conservators, scientists, art historians, and artists. |
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Participants of the workshop consisted of architects, engineers, project managers, curators and human rights activists from the United States, Canada, Haiti, France and elsewhere. |
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Through films and scale models, curators James Peto, Max Risselada, and Dirk van den Heuvel hope to throw light on a maverick, visionary body of work. |
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Staging the global weltschmerz but not making a fetish of it, these curators and artists wrest compelling propositions from the vexations of their respective forms. |
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In tracing the relationships between Western Modernism and the arts of Africa, Oceania and the Americas, the curators took a universalist approach. |
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Instead, its curators continually question the idea of the artist as an autonomous creator, a paramount myth of the postwar abstract expressionist movement. |
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With contributions by potters, artists, curators and scholars, the book offers a history that has been previously overlooked by the academic art world. |
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In 1997 SCEMFA presented Collision, a public lecture series by artists, writers, and curators working with interactivity, telematics, and digital works. |
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Rather than a full march through time, museums employ curators who assemble objects into exhibitions, often with unique commentary that is later reinterpreted by docents. |
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As museums in the United States have become increasingly more digitized, curators find themselves constructing narratives in both the material and digital worlds. |
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The prerock tradition has acquired so many layers of cultural implication that singers who take it too seriously tend to sound more like curators than entertainers. |
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The curators took preservative actions to maintain the ancient collection. |
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The Museum of Modern Art, for example, approves requests to view undisplayed work only from curators, scholars and auction house professionals, a policy common among museums. |
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The curators combined early self-portraits and portraits of friends and collectors with monumental works and a great succes de scandale, A Burial at Ornans. |
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