Exhibiting for Multiple Senses: Art and Curating for Sensory-Diverse Bodies
Artists and curators have long moved beyond the primacy of the visual in art exhibitions, venturing into other senses. This book traces this shift, gathering curatorial theory, museum research, disability activism and crip theory to demonstrate resonances between curatorial theory and practice and between disability, neurodivergence and crip art activism. The book demonstrates that sensory diversity is not limited to specific target groups, but is relevant for everyone.
Exhibiting for Multiple Senses shares famous and lesser-known examples of experimental exhibitions as well as artistic practices linked to exhibitions. By mobilizing the senses of touch, smell, taste and hearing, as well as applications of multimodal technologies and insights from neuroscience, these examples explore abilities and possibilities of the sensory apparatus that is the human body.
Contributors include David Bobier, Luca M. Damiani, Stephanie Farmer, David Gissen, Adi Hollander, Hettie James, Georgina Kleege, Lilian Korner, Elke Krasny, Renata Pekowska, and Caro Verbeek.
Edited with text by Eva Fotiadi
Illustrations and design by Lotte Lara Schröder
Published by Valiz, 2026
Softcover, 192 pages, b&w offset, 9 × 6.7 inches
ISBN: 978-9-49-324648-5