Masterarbeit, 2013
114 Seiten, Note: Distinction
Introduction
Section 1 Critical Analysis : The Deadlock of Conventional Exhibitionary Culture
Section 2 The Phenomenon of Expanding Scenography : Its Potentials to Reform Exhibition-making
Section 3 Scenography in Exhibition Context : The Intersection, Mergence and Reformation
Section 4 Scenography and Curating the Contemporary
4.1 Scenographer as Author : Redefining Curatorial Strategies
4.2 Architectural Structure : Embodiment of Ideas
4.3 Field of Experience : Transformative Process
4.4 Layered Narrative : Multiple Viewpoints
4.5 Dramaturgy : Orchestration and Directing
4.6 New Media : Hybrid Expressions
Section 5 Case Studies
5.1 Case Study 1 : BMW Museum (Reopened in 2008) - Scenography as Brandscape
5.2 Case Study 2 : Cultures of the World (Opened in 2010) - Scenography as a Site of Cultural Mediation
5.3 Case Study 3 : Leonardo’s Last Supper: A Vision by Peter Greenaway (2008, 2010) - Scenography as Interference and Discourse
Conclusion
This dissertation examines how the expanding field of scenography acts as a transformative ideological force within contemporary curating, addressing the crisis of traditional exhibitionary systems by reconfiguring spatial narratives and visitor experiences.
4.2 Architectural Structure : Embodiment of Ideas
Prior to further discussing various scenographic strategies and tools in exhibition-making, there is a very important premise to be recognized in the first place. As in Howard’s words, ‘[u]nderstanding scenography starts with understanding the potential of the empty [...] space’ 86, while scenographer Kathleen Irwin also resonated with this idea and asserted that scenographers are professionals capable of ‘recogniz[ing] the intrinsic aesthetic value of a location’ 87. In this sense, to scenographers, as authors in staged exhibitions, the notion of exhibition space is not a container of concept ideas but rather an embodiment of them. They created a site of complex narrative where contents would be inscribed all over the constructed space. The architecture and structure as a whole framework, thus, has gone beyond a mere surface design and becomes an important apparatus to synthesize all elements in the scenographic exhibitions. This could be considered to be a breakthrough from conventional notion of curating. As curator Dr. Vince Dziekan asserted, the spatial translation of the curatorial philosophy are addressed through the form of the exhibition. Aligned with these conceptual concerns are higher-level dialectical objectives expressed through the act of exposition, such as design strategies pertaining to context, exhibition design and scenographic effect. 88
Introduction: Outlines the growing discourse on the "expanding notion of curating" and the emergence of scenography as a response to the traditional limitations of exhibitionary culture.
Section 1 Critical Analysis : The Deadlock of Conventional Exhibitionary Culture: Discusses the identity crisis and structural stagnation of traditional museums, applying Foucault’s theories of space and power to reveal the limitations of the "exhibitionary complex."
Section 2 The Phenomenon of Expanding Scenography : Its Potentials to Reform Exhibition-making: Traces the evolution of scenography from its theatrical roots to an autonomous, transdisciplinary design practice capable of spatial reformation.
Section 3 Scenography in Exhibition Context : The Intersection, Mergence and Reformation: Details the practical integration of scenographic methods into major international exhibitions, highlighting the shift toward dramatic-narrative spaces.
Section 4 Scenography and Curating the Contemporary: Investigates the specific methodologies—authorship, architectural structure, experience, narrative, dramaturgy, and new media—that constitute the new scenographic curatorial paradigm.
Section 5 Case Studies: Presents three diverse examples—BMW Museum, Cultures of the World, and Leonardo’s Last Supper—to demonstrate how scenographic strategies address complex curatorial challenges.
Conclusion: Synthesizes the findings, arguing that scenography serves as a vital transformative force that enables a fundamental reformation of contemporary curating practices.
Scenography, Contemporary Curating, Exhibition-making, Staging, Dramaturgy, Spatial Narrative, Brandscape, Cultural Mediation, New Media, Museum Architecture, Transdisciplinary, Experience Economy, Performative Space, Authoring of Space, Exhibitionary Complex.
The work focuses on how scenography—traditionally a theatrical practice—is being adopted and adapted to transform the ideological and structural landscape of contemporary museum exhibitions.
Key themes include the shift in curatorial authorship, the transition from didactic displays to experience-based staging, the use of architecture as an embodiment of ideas, and the incorporation of new media in spatial communication.
The primary goal is to examine how scenographic methodologies can revitalize the "ailing" conventional exhibition system and address the contemporary crisis of curatorship.
The research employs a qualitative approach, combining critical literature reviews with a detailed analysis of three contemporary case studies to showcase scenographic applications.
The main sections analyze the deadlock of traditional exhibition culture, the evolution of scenography as an independent field, and the specific strategies used by scenographers to reconfigure exhibition spaces and narratives.
Scenography, contemporary curating, spatial narrative, dramaturgy, exhibition design, and museum reform are central to the study.
The author interprets the traditional exhibitionary complex through Foucault’s lens, arguing that static, text-based displays represent a rigid, didactic system that needs to be "opened up" through scenographic intervention.
The author argues for a handover of authority from traditional scholars to scenographers, who act as "authors of constructed situations" rather than mere decorators, enabling a more holistic and immersive curatorial approach.
It demonstrates a vertically cohering three-floor narrative that replaces traditional wall labels with spatial movements and kinetic sculptures, effectively communicating brand philosophy through movement and space.
It shows how contemporary cinematic projections are used to "interfere" with a historical masterpiece, creating a dialogue that challenges the concept of an "original" artwork and engages audiences in a new visual literacy.
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