Abstract

When, in 1990, artist Joachim Schmid mobilized people who wanted to get rid of unwanted pictures to send them to the Institute for the Reprocessing of Used Photographs, an “official” institution responsible for gathering the First General Collection of Used Photographs, he was clearly overcoming the simple role of the “artist as curator” to assume another museum function as part of his artistic statement. Addressing the relationship between museums, contemporary art and photography, this paper further investigates the complementary ways by which Joachim Schmid has incorporated conflicting museological notions in his work, not only to question the established values and assumptions museums help validate, but also to challenge and reject the very art–museum relationship. Particular attention is devoted to materiality and to the ways by which photographic appropriation was able to resist the impacts of the digital revolution. While carefully looking at the particular work of artist Joachim Schmid, this text examines how art has learned to adapt to the new technological landscape, developing new ways for the photographic appropriation to survive. Finally, it also analyzes how the artist tries to oppose the museum, as a legitimating institution, by nevertheless activating institutionally charged artistic gestures.

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