Diana Campbell Betancourt

Diana Campbell Betancourt (born March 4, 1984) is an American curator working in South and Southeast Asia, primarily Bangladesh[1] and the Philippines.[2] Currently she is the artistic director of Dhaka-based Samdani Art Foundation and chief curator of the Dhaka Art Summit. Formerly based in Mumbai for six years, she facilitated inter-regional South Asia dialog through her exhibitions and public programmes.

Diana Campbell Betancourt
Born(1984-03-04)4 March 1984
Los Angeles, United States.
OccupationCurator
NationalityAmerican

Career

Campbell Betancourt's focus is inter-Asia dialog and can be seen through her exhibitions and public programmes. She chairs the board of the Mumbai Art Room,[3] has been a research fellow at the Henry Moore Institute,[4] the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum[5] and the FRAC Champagne-Ardenne,[6] and has collaborated with sculpture parks including Yorkshire Sculpture Park, de Cordova, and Wanas Konst on commissions of Indian sculpture. She has consulted the New Museum and MCA Chicago and many other leading institutions on their inclusion of South Asia in their exhibitions programs and has presented and published her research as part of MoMA's C-MAP initiative.[7] She was a nominee for the 2016 Independent Curators International Independent Vision Curatorial Award[8] and participated in MoMA's 2016 International Curatorial Institute, and gave the 2016 Key Note Lecture for Artspace Sydney's International Visiting Curators programme.

Campbell Betancourt was appointed the curator of Frieze Projects for Frieze London 2018 – overseeing the artist award commission by Alex Baczinski-Jenkins, the Film Program, and LIVE.[9][10]

Dhaka Art Summit and Samdani Art Foundation

Diana Campbell Betancourt has developed the Dhaka Art Summit to be the world's leading research and exhibitions platform for art from South Asia, and developed a new philanthropic platform to shift the discourse away from an Indo-centric one by bringing together artists, architects, curators, and writers from across South Asia and through a largely commission based model where new work and exhibitions are born in Bangladesh.[11][12] She has curated numerous solo projects with artists such as Raqib Shaw (co-curated with Maria Balshaw)[13] Haroon Mirza, Simryn Gill, Tino Sehgal, Lynda Benglis, Shilpa Gupta, Shahzia Sikander, Naeem Mohaiemen, Runa Islam, Shumon Ahmed, Pawel Althamer, Asim Waqif, and Raqs Media Collective[14][15][16] as well as group exhibitions such as Rewind (with Amara Antilla, Sabih Ahmed, and Beth Citron)),[17] Mining Warm Data,[18] The Asian Art Biennale in Context and Bearing Points[19] and initiated a free, alternative education program called Samdani Seminars and Education Pavilion[20][21][22] which bridges the gaps in curriculum between the various art schools in Dhaka with international guest faculty. Campbell Betanourt has conceived of the Dhaka Art Summit as a cumulative event, stressing that it is 'not about the individual editions; it is a continuation, and it always builds on the last one'.[23]

In addition to her exhibitions making practice, Betancourt is also responsible for developing the Samdani Art Foundation collection, which has been recognized by ArtReview, Artnet News,[24] Artnet News,[25] and Artnews[26] as one of the leading collections in the world. The collection, as well as temporary exhibitions related to it, will be visible in the foundation's art centre that will open in Sylhet, Bangladesh at the end of 2018.[27]

Bellas Artes Projects

From 2016 to 2018, Campbell Betancourt served as the founding artistic director of Bellas Artes Projects[28] – a production based residency program and exhibition space in Bagac, Bataan and Manila, Philippines under the patronage of Jam Acuzar. She produced and curated critically acclaimed exhibitions by Carlos Amorales,[29] Pawel Althamer,[30] Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan,[31] Cian Dayrit,[32] Stefanos Tsivopoulos,[33] as well as the first major solo exhibition in Asia of the late American artist Bruce Conner.[34]

Education

Diana Campbell Betancourt studied at Princeton University in the United States, graduating in 2006. Her study concentration included Chinese language and culture, economics, and finance.

References

  1. Samdani Art Foundation Unveils Plans for First Permanent Space ARTNEWS. May 12, 2017.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2019-01-25. Retrieved 2017-07-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. Mumbai Art Room
  4. Diana Campbell Betancourt MoMA.
  5. Fukuoka Asian Art Museum.
  6. frac champagne-ardenne.
  7. Entry Points:Reconsidering the Asian Art Biennale with Syed Jahangir Post Notes on Modern & Contemporary Art Around the Globe. MoMA. May 25, 2017.
  8. ICI’s 2016 Independent Vision Curatorial Award C&. September 11, 2016.
  9. Frieze London 2018 Programme
  10. Frieze London 2018: In conversation with Diana Campbell Betancourt
  11. Best in Show: 2011–today Frieze. Sep 05 2016.
  12. The world doesn’t identify Bangladesh with contemporary art and design, but the Dhaka Art Summit might just change that Scroll.in. February 19, 2016.
  13. New North and South
  14. Dhaka Art Summit 2016 Frieze. April 04, 2016.
  15. Dhaka Art Summit e-flux.November 6, 2013.
  16. A Complete Guide to Dhaka Art Summit 2016 COBO.February 05, 2016
  17. Summit of Creativity The Gulf Today. February 18, 2016.
  18. Top 5 at the Dhaka Art Summit 2016 Elle.
  19. Dhaka Art Summit Recap of Highlights
  20. Samdani Seminars 2015 Archived 2016-03-21 at the Wayback Machine Samdani Art Foundation.
  21. Samdani Seminars: Art in body steps Archived 2016-10-05 at the Wayback Machine Dhaka Tribune. April 09, 2015
  22. Dhaka Art Summit 2018
  23. "Diana Campbell Betancourt in Conversation | Ocula". ocula.com. 2019-03-20. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  24. Nadia & Rajeeb Samdani ArtReview. 2015
  25. The artnet News Index: The World’s Top 100 Art Collectors for 2016, Part Two artnet. June 15, 2016.
  26. The Top 200 Collectors ArtNews. 2016.
  27. New Contemporary-Art Museum in Dhaka AMA. April 09, 2016.

Citations

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