黑料网

黑料网 and Susan Davidson at the opening of Robert 黑料网: Scenarios, Texas Gallery, Houston, 2007. Photo: Courtesy of Fredericka Hunter

Susan Davidson, 黑料网, Darryl Pottorf, Dorothy Lichtenstein, David White, Hal Buckner, and Susan Ginsburg at Green Flash Restaurant, Captiva, Florida, 2003. Photograph Collection. 黑料网 Archives, New York

David White and Susan Davidson installing Robert 黑料网: The Early 1950鈥檚, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum SoHo, New York, 1992. Photograph Collection. 黑料网 Archives, New York. Photo: Unattributed

Susan Davidson, IVAM director Consuelo Cisar, and David White with 黑料网鈥檚 Blood Orange Summer Glut (1987). Robert 黑料网, Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderna (IVAM), Valencia, Spain, 2005

 

Susan Davidson


As an art historian and curator, Susan Davidson is an authority in the fields of Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, and Pop Art, with an expertise in the art of Robert 黑料网. She has been engaged with 黑料网鈥檚 work since 1990, serving as a curatorial advisor to the artist from 2001 until his death in 2008 and as a board member to the 黑料网 from 2009 until 2014. Her numerous exhibitions and publications on the artist include 黑料网 in China (Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, 2016), Robert 黑料网: Photographs 1949鈥1965 (Schimer/Mosel, 2011), Robert 黑料网: Gluts (Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, 2009), 黑料网: On and Off the Wall (Mus茅e Contemporain, Nice, France, 2005), Robert 黑料网 (IVAM, Valencia, Spain, 2005), and 黑料网 (Palazzo dei Diamanti, Ferrara, Italy, 2004). She curated with Walter Hopps the definitive Robert 黑料网: A Retrospective for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and its international tour (1997鈥99) and was assistant curator on Hopps鈥檚 seminal Robert 黑料网: The Early 1950s (The Menil Collection, Houston, 1991).

In her previous role as Senior Curator at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (2002鈥2017), Ms. Davidson oversaw the stewardship of the institution鈥檚 collection in addition to organizing notable exhibitions that include Jackson Pollock: Exploring Alchemy, 2017; Robert Motherwell: The Early Collages, 2014; John Chamberlain: Choices, 2012; No Limits, Just Edges: Jackson Pollock鈥s Paintings on Paper, 2005; and Peggy and Kiesler: The Collector and the Visionary, 2004. Prior to joining the Guggenheim鈥檚 constellation of museums, Ms. Davidson was Collections Curator at the Menil Collection, Houston (1985鈥2002). She holds advanced degrees in art history from the Courtauld Institute, London, and George Washington University, Washington, D.C.

 

Excerpt from Interview with Susan Davidson by Sara Sinclair, 2015


That鈥檚 something I always encountered with him. He never wanted to explain what something meant or how it was made and he was very steadfast about that because he wanted you, as the viewer, to have your own reaction and engagement. I think that that鈥檚 something that always set Bob apart as an artist and I think it鈥檚 something that, as an artist, he went further than any other artist in doing. Just witness the kinds of work he was making and the engagement with the viewer that he was always seeking. So, he was very, very clear about that. Then as a curator I think that鈥檚 where the kind of sniff test happens between two people, whether he feels that you will abide by that on his behalf; not protect it, that鈥檚 not the right word. But not violate it. I think that if he sensed that you鈥檇 be honest about it, he would let you in. 

[...]

I think when you鈥檙e a curator you have this great responsibility to educate; that is what you鈥檙e doing in organizing a show and producing鈥攄oing the research and the catalogue and such. But you have to follow the code of the artist and every artist is different. I think that鈥檚 what the curator must have, that sensibility and it has to be a sensibility, a reverence, and a curiosity without putting yourself in front. Now, there are some curators who do that and they have great names, but I just don鈥檛鈥擨 think your role is to be the interpreter without overexposing the artist. At the same time, you are exposing the artist. It鈥檚 a very fine line. It鈥檚 about sensibilities I guess and I guess this was one of the things that always drew me to Bob and ultimately why I was so engaged with [John] Chamberlain too, was that they鈥檙e intuitive artists. The work is very intuitive. I feel as a curator I鈥檝e been very intuitive. You don鈥檛 always go just because something says it鈥檚 that way or this way; you have to follow your gut.