ICA San Diego director Andrew Utt: on the curatorial process, and how to increase the art reputation of a city not known for its art world
Publisher |
Michael Shaw
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Arts
Interview
Roundtable
Visual Arts
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Visual Arts
Publication Date |
Oct 30, 2022
Episode Duration |
01:27:00

ICA San Diego director Andrew Utt talks about:

Moving back to San Diego, where he grew up, after years away in the Bay Area and South America, and why he did; why San Diego’s art community/culture isn’t known as an art destination, and how he tries to address that deficiency; his route to becoming a curator, starting with his undergrad years at California College of the Arts, when he went to grad students’ studios and had the conversations that would inform his prolific studio visits over the years; the importance of bringing in outside artists, sometimes to be shown alongside local artists, but at the same time, the ‘brain drain’ of artists emerging from SD-based art schools and leaving for L.A. (or elsewhere) for more opportunities, the exodus of which becomes a generational loss over time; teaching artists, and the challenge of their retention; the ICA’s 5-foot and 10-foot rules for interacting with new visitors outside the museum; and where art engagement is headed, in terms of infiltrating cities, and through the growth of VR, AI and other interactive platforms.

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