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Exhibiting Parafictional Artists: Curatorial Approaches to Fiction and Authorship

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This article identifies and analyses parafictional strategies in artistic and curatorial practice. By examining exhibitions that have included artists working under fictitious identities from the mid-1990s to the present, I argue that they emerged in response to the conflictual demands of the art world. These case studies have been organized into three categories according to their main curatorial approach: projects in which artists remained anonymous or were asked to produce work under a purposely invented personality; exhibitions that turned the intersection of fiction and authorship into a theme to be researched; and curatorial initiatives that embraced the working logic of fiction in their own methodology. These strategies investigate how authorship, agency, style and self-promotion function in the contemporary art world.
Title: Exhibiting Parafictional Artists: Curatorial Approaches to Fiction and Authorship
Description:
This article identifies and analyses parafictional strategies in artistic and curatorial practice.
By examining exhibitions that have included artists working under fictitious identities from the mid-1990s to the present, I argue that they emerged in response to the conflictual demands of the art world.
These case studies have been organized into three categories according to their main curatorial approach: projects in which artists remained anonymous or were asked to produce work under a purposely invented personality; exhibitions that turned the intersection of fiction and authorship into a theme to be researched; and curatorial initiatives that embraced the working logic of fiction in their own methodology.
These strategies investigate how authorship, agency, style and self-promotion function in the contemporary art world.

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