institutional art
[/ˌɪnstɪˈtuːʃənəl ɑːrt/]
nounpl: institutional arts
arte institucional
1. An art movement and critical practice that examines, questions, and critiques the social, political, and economic structures of art institutions such as museums, galleries, and educational systems
Institutional art emerged in the 1960s as artists began to interrogate the role of museums in validating and commodifying artworks.
A arte institucional emergiu nos anos 1960 quando os artistas começaram a questionar o papel dos museus na validação e mercantilização das obras de arte.
2. Artistic practice that uses institutional critique as its primary subject matter and method, often revealing power dynamics within art world structures
Her institutional art project exposed how museum acquisitions reflect existing biases and hierarchies.
Seu projeto de arte institucional expôs como as aquisições de museus refletem preconceitos e hierarquias existentes.
Institutional art is a significant movement in contemporary art criticism, particularly influential in academic and avant-garde circles. In Brazil, it gained prominence through artists and critics engaging with global art discourse. The movement reflects broader questioning of authority and structures that became prominent in the 1960s-70s counterculture. In the US and internationally, institutional art remains central to contemporary art theory and practice, often taught in art history and theory courses.
NYC Slang
institutional critique (more common academic term in NYC art world than slang)
Look up more words on Fala2Me
The free English-Portuguese dictionary with real Brazilian accents, NYC slang, conjugator and more
Open Fala2Me →