An Interview with curator and CRUMB co-founder Sarah Cook.

What can curators of contemporary art learn from the distributed and 
participatory systems of new media art? Sarah Cook and Beryl Graham, 
co-founders of CRUMB (The Curatorial Resource for Upstart Media Bliss, 
www.crumbweb.org), are the authors of the recent volume Rethinking 
Curating: Art After New Media (MIT Press). While in residence at SAW 
video in Ottawa, Sarah Cook took a pause from a flurry of activity to 
expand upon concepts evoked between the covers of the book and during 
her presentation at the National Gallery of Canada. As Nathaniel Stern 
observes in his review (http://rhizome.org/editorial/3617) of this 
collaborative work (authored with drafts exchanged via email and Wiki), 
the number of examples and citations provide a provocative constellation 
of possibilities. They argue that the connectivity of new media art 
challenges default modes of artistic authorship and curatorial operation 
and points towards new metaphors and modes of curating as a distributed 
activity.

http://artengine.ca/blog/?p=1318
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