__link__: Exhibition Catalogue

This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later.

An exhibition catalogue is a book or publication that documents an art exhibition, featuring images and information about the artworks on display. It is typically published in conjunction with the exhibition and serves as a permanent record of the show. The catalogue may include essays, artist statements, and curatorial texts that provide context and insights into the artworks and the exhibition.

(e.g., modern sculpture, local photography) Artist Profiles Drafting a Foreword

The world of the art catalogue is also embracing the digital age in exciting ways. Projects like "Enriching Exhibition Stories" (EES2) are helping museums more easily create a wider range of digital resources for their exhibitions. This project uses and extends Quire, an open-source software developed by the Getty, which creates rich documents such as exhibition catalogues that are easy to author, build, deploy, and maintain, even for smaller institutions and individuals. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE

Your (academic researchers, museum visitors, or commercial art collectors?)

Exhibition catalogues are books or booklets published specifically for a gallery or museum exhibition, ranging from small, curated shows to major artist retrospectives. They provide official documentation for all items displayed—including titles, dimensions, mediums, and creators.

Because exhibitions are temporary, the catalogue acts as the sole lasting record, capturing the "flavor" and "temper" of the show long after it has closed. This public link is valid for 7 days

In the digital age, where a high-resolution image can be shared globally in milliseconds, the physical art object finds a resilient companion in an unexpected format: the book. Specifically, the . Far from being a dying relic of the pre-internet era, the exhibition catalogue has evolved into a critical pillar of art historical documentation, a curatorial tool, and a collectible artifact in its own right.

Reviewers typically focus on specific criteria to determine the value of the publication: The Aerodrome exhibition catalogue: a review - Ikon Gallery

This is a specification for a standalone, conceptually complete (often the “solid piece” required for a catalog). It is written as a curatorial statement that could anchor a contemporary exhibition. Can’t copy the link right now

A curator is not always a designer. Hire a graphic designer with art book experience. Typography matters; the font should never distract from the art.

I can provide more targeted details about this topic if you tell me how you plan to use this text. Let me know if you want to focus on: The of publishing museum books A step-by-step guide on how curators write them The most famous and collectible catalogues in art history Which angle should we expand on next? Share public link

The exhibition catalogue has changed dramatically over the last two centuries. Early Formats