INDEPENDENT CURATORS INTERNATIONAL exhibitions

do it

Collection of do it catalogues.
Michelangelo Pistoletto’s Sculpture for Strolling.
do it opening at Kunsthalle Ritter, Austria, 1994.
Rirkrit Tiravanija’s Untitled, 1994 from do it Serra di Rapolano, Italy, 1996. Photo: Bruno Bruchi.
Claire Fontaine, do it instructions, 2011. Courtesy the artist.

In May, join Hans Ulrich Obrist, ICI and D.A.P. in celebrating the launch of do it: the compendium. Get your book at Frieze, New York (May 10–13) or NADA, New York (May 10–12); celebrate the book launch with a signing at MoMA PS1 (May 12, 2–3pm). Find out more here.

Curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist, do it began in Paris in 1993 as a conversation between Obrist and the artists Christian Boltanski and Bertrand Lavier. Obrist was concerned with how exhibition formats could be rendered more flexible and open-ended. This discussion led to the question of whether a show could take “scores,” or written instructions by artists, as a point of departure, each of which could be interpreted anew every time they were enacted. To test the idea, Obrist invited 12 artists to send instructions, which were then translated into 9 different languages and circulated internationally as a book.

Nearly 20 years later after the initial conversation took place, do it has been featured in at least 50 different locations worldwide, including Australia, China, Denmark, France, Germany, Mexico, Costa Rica, Slovenia and Uruguay. The driving force behind the exhibition is aptly summarized in the words of Marcel Duchamp, who states that “art is a game between all people of all periods.” He is only one of several predecessors to have shaped the modus operandi of this exhibition, which also draws from Conceptual and Minimalist art of the 1960s and 1970s as well as Fluxus practices. Each do it exhibition is uniquely site-specific because it engages the local community in a dialogue that responds to and adds a new set of instructions, while it remains global in the scope of its ever-expanding repertoire. This also means that the generative and accumulative aspects of do it’s ongoing presentation are less concerned with notions of the “reproduction” or materiality of the artworks than with revealing the nuances of human interpretation in its various permutations and iterations. In this way, do it is able to bridge the gaps between the temporalities of past, present and future.

This open exhibition model has become the longest-running and most far-reaching exhibition to ever take place, giving new meaning to the concept of the “Exhibition in Progress.” In addition to the production of an on-line version of do it created by Obrist in conjunction with e-flux in 2004, other versions that do it has grown to encompass include “do it (museum)”, “do it (home)”, “do it (TV)”, “do it (seminar)”, as well as some anti-do its, a philosophy do it and most recently a UNESCO children’s do it.

In building off the 1997 collaboration of ICI with Obrist to create a do it that took place in 25 cities across North America, a new version of the exhibition, which marks the 20th anniversary of this landmark project, will present the largest selection of instructional works to date—including 50 newly commissioned pieces from artists selected by Obrist and ICI. Organized around the instructions submitted by artists, venues will select at least 20 instructional works to present from a list of almost 250.

Curator

Hans Ulrich Obrist

Hans Ulrich Obrist (b. 1968, Zurich, Switzerland) lives and works in London, where he is co-director of exhibitions and programs and director of international projects at the Serpentine Gallery. Before that, he was curator of Museum in Progress, Vienna, from 1993 to 2000 and has been a curator at the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris since 2000. Obrist has curated and co-curated more than 200 solo and group exhibitions and biennials internationally since 1991, including World Soup (1991), Hotel Carlton Palace (1993), do it (1994), Take Me, I’m Yours (1995), Manifesta 1 (1996), Live/Life (1996), Cities on the Move (1997), Nuit Blanche (1998), 1st Berlin Biennial (1998), Laboratorium (1999), Utopia Station (2003), Dakar Biennale (2004), 2nd Guangzhou Triennial (2005), 1st & 2nd Moscow Biennale (2005 and 2007), Lyon Biennale (2007), and Yokohama Triennial (2008). In 2007, Hans Ulrich co-curated Il Tempo del Postino with Philippe Parreno for the Manchester International Festival, also presented in Basel (2009), organized by Fondation Beyeler Art Basel and Theater Basel. In the same year, the Van Alen Institute awarded him the New York Prize Senior Fellowship for 2007–08. In 2008 he curated Everstill at the Lorca House in Granada. Obrist is contributing editor of Abitare Magazine, Artforum, and Paradis Magazine.

Touring Schedule

  • Samek Art Gallery
    Bucknell University, Lewisburg PA
    September 16, 2013 - December 12, 2013
  • Manchester Art Gallery
    Manchester, UK
    July 5, 2013 - September 22, 2013
  • MU artspace
    Eindhoven, Netherlands
    May 17, 2013 - July 19, 2013
  • tranzit
    Budapest, Hungary
    May 17, 2013 - June 21, 2013
  • Gund Gallery at Kenyon College
    Gambier, Ohio
    May 12, 2013 - August 25, 2013
  • Socrates Sculpture Park
    New York, NY
    May 12, 2013 - July 7, 2013

Booking Info

Number of artists or artists groups: Approximately 250
Number of works: Approximately 250
Space required: extremely flexible, though at least 1,000
square feet is recommended
Tour dates: May 2013 through December 2015
For additional information, as well as to check specific dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman, Exhibitions Coordinator, at 212.254.8200 x 127, or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)