HomeCFP: Reactivating Archives in Contemporary Art
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Published on Thursday, March 06, 2025

Abstract

For this international conference, researchers and cultural practitioners are invited to explore the articulation of archives in contemporary art. We are interested in exploring how archival materials and frameworks have been mobilised in artistic projects to facilitate and amplify processes of transmission, re-organisation and interrogation. We also welcome papers that foster debates around the role of archival-based art in building the present and the future.

 

Announcement

International Conference: Reactivating Archives in Contemporary Art - 2-3 October 2025, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (Lisbon)
Supported by the Leverhulme Trust and the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT)

Argument

Since the late 1990s, the archive has paradoxically become both a buzzword and an integral part of the vocabularies of academia and contemporary art (Callahan, 2022). Scholars, art critics, artists and museums have increasingly addressed the production, articulation, curation and destruction of archival material to discuss matters of presence and visibility, which can also be situated in a wider problematization of the relationship between art and documentation (Groys, 2008). Debates on the archive as a structure, a technology and an institution have also taken centre stage: through its processes of montage, deconstruction and reassemblage, archival-based art has challenged “official” histories and exposed the power relations that permeate our visual repertoires.

The archive has therefore always been a space of dispute and has played a key role in memory activism struggles. Archival documentation can be seen as a symptom of the contemporary obsession with memory, and archival-based art holds a multifaceted relationship to notions of evidence, referencing and (re)appropriation. This is because, on the one hand, the archive can facilitate the exploration of past practices and affective knowledge, opening up new paths for collaborative work and shared lexicons. On the other, the archive is also a site for the fetishization of past experiences, the imposition of meaning, and processes of censorship or self-censorship. In this sense, archive-based contemporary art has often negotiated between the poetic and the political, offering opportunities for constant (un)learning, reconstruction and reinterpretation.

For this conference, our focus is two-fold: on the images, objects, themes and narratives we (do not) see or “find” in archives, and on the ways in which peoples, histories and knowledges are connected and disconnected through archival structures and apparatuses. We invite contributing scholars to reflect on how contemporary artists have been mobilising archival materials and frameworks in their practices to facilitate and amplify processes of transmission, re- organisation and interrogation. What do artistic archival projects tell us about the impulse (Foster, 2004) and impossibility to archive everything? In their processes of excavation, how can artists bring to the surface stories that have been buried, erased, hidden or displaced? And how can these (re)activated archives help us challenge notions of narrative stability, temporal linearity and neutrality?

Notions of access and who has the right to (the) archive (Azoulay, 2019) are also central to this conference. We are interested in exploring the intersections between autobiographical, fictional and documentary archival narratives and welcome papers that question and renegotiate dichotomies such as personal and institutional, affective and objective, preservation and neglect. How can we ensure that caring for artistic documents and images is done critically and in common? How might artistic archival projects challenge the notion of collective memory, and what are the artistic strategies employed for building multidirectional or conflicting narratives (Huyssen, 2003, 2022; Rothberg, 2009)? How do artists manage to remain aware of how archives were constituted, but also think creatively beyond it?

Submission guidelines

We want to celebrate the diversity and heterogeneity of archival-inspired art and are therefore keen on learning from and about practices and projects from different geographical contexts. We are also particularly interested in the interdisciplinary and multimedia ways in which archives are mobilised and (re)activated to the public. Possible topics for presentation might include (but are not limited to):

  • Artistic archival research: how, when, where, for whom?
  • The artist as archivist: questions of authorship and self-reflexivity
  • Documenting and (re)presenting ephemeral works
  • Audience engagement with archival-based, multimedia works
  • Archives and activism: how images can be a political tool
  • The past in the present: rethinking images of resistance today
  • Archiving now and for the future: institutional, practical and conceptual challenges
  • Making space for unreliable memories and informal knowledges within the archive

We welcome both academic papers and creative contributions (i.e., visual essays, interactive workshops). Please submit abstracts (max. 300 words for 20-minute presentations) and a short biographical note (max. 250 words) to reactivatingarchives@gmail.com,

by 31 March 2025. 

While this is an in-person conference, we might accept a small number of online presentations for accessibility reasons; if this applies, please let us know when you submit your abstract. We aim to respond to authors in April. No conference fees will be charged. Following the conference, we will invite selected papers for inclusion in an edited volume.

Scientific committee

  • Amanda TavaresIHA-NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST, Nouvelle université de Lisbonne
  • Ana Balona de Oliveira, IHA-NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST, Nouvelle université de Lisbonne
  • Émilie Goudal, Centre d’Étude des Arts Contemporains, l'Université de Lille
  • Margarida Brito Alves, IHA-NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST, Nouvelle université de Lisbonne
  • Moira Cristi, Institut de recherche Gino Germani, L'Université de Buenos Aires

Organising Committee/Presidents

  • Amanda Tavares, Chercheur post-doctorant, IHA-NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST - Financé par le Leverhulme Trust
  • Tainan Barbosa, Chercheur au doctorat , IHA-NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST, Nouvelle université de Lisbonne - Financé par la FCT

Places

  • Auditório B1, Torre B - Universidade Nova de Lisboa: Avenida de Berna, 26C
    Lisbon, Portugal (1069-061)

Event attendance modalities

Hybrid event (on site and online)


Date(s)

  • Monday, March 31, 2025

Keywords

  • archive, contemporary art, memory, activism, documentation, engagement

Reference Urls

Information source

  • Amanda Tavares
    courriel : reactivatingarchives [at] gmail [dot] com

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« CFP: Reactivating Archives in Contemporary Art », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Thursday, March 06, 2025, https://doi.org/10.58079/13fjx

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