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Jens Hoffmann

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Jens Hoffmann Mesèn (born 1974 in San José, Costa Rica) is a writer and exhibition maker. He has organzied exhibitions since 1997 and is currently the Director of the Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco where he also directs the Capp Street Project artist-in-residence program.

Career

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Jens Hoffmann, San Francisco, May 1, 2012

Jens Hoffmann has curated more than 30 exhibitions internationally since the late 1990s. Since 2007 he has been the director of the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts in San Francisco.

His current curatorial projects include "When Attitudes Became Form Become Attitudes" (opening in fall 2012 at the CCA Wattis Institute) and the 9th Shanghai Biennial (opening October 1, 2012, at the new Shanghai Museum of Contemporary Art). He was co-curator (with Adriano Pedrosa) of the 12th Istanbul Biennial in 2011. He co-curated the 2nd San Juan Triennial in Puerto Rico in 2009. With Harrell Fletcher, he developed the People's Biennial (together with Independent Curators International), of which the first edition was presented in 2010-11 at five U.S. museums. In 2009 he founded the publication The Exhibitionist: A Journal on Exhibition Making, and he has been an editor-at-large for Mousse magazine since 2011.

In 2006 Hoffmann began working with the Kadist Art Foundation, which is based in Paris and San Francisco, and has been putting together the 101 Collection, a collection of artworks from the West Coast of the United States, and El Sur, a collection of artworks by young and emerging Latin American artists.

Hoffmann is an associate professor at the Graduate Program in Curatorial Practice at California College of the Arts in San Francisco and an adjunct professor at the Nova Academia di Bella Arti in Milan.

Hoffmann's training in theater has as much influence on his curatorial efforts as his experience with art history and curating. Of key importance for all of his exhibitions is the staging of the experience, from the design of the installation to the conceptualization of the catalogue, the related programming, and the "performances" of the artworks themselves. The stage set of the exhibition space, site, or geographical location is itself an important factor in the development of his ideas, which respond to both time and place. Hoffmann takes into account the larger historical and sociopolitical context in which an exhibition is happening as well as the relevant curatorial and art historical relationships.

Hoffmann trained as a theater director and studied stage directing, dramaturgy, with Andrea Breth and Manfred Karge and cultural sociology with Wolfgang Engler at the Ernst Busch School for Performing Arts in Berlin. He holds an MA from DasArts: School for Advanced Research in Theater and Dance Studies at the Amsterdam School for the Arts were he studied under the Dutch theater pioneer Ritsaert ten Cate.

A defining characteristic of Hoffmann's work is his conception of an authorial role for the curator, as well as applying the ideas and strategies of artists (in particular Conceptual art) to his curatorial efforts. His unique approach has resulted in a highly personal exhibition history that reflects a creative development not dissimilar to that of an artist.

From 1995 to 1997 Hoffmann worked an assistant dramaturg with Tom Stromberg at the legendary Theater Am Turm in Frankfurt. Stromberg and Hoffmann realized the performing arts program for Documenta 10 "Theater Sketches" following an invitation by Catherine David in 1997. The following year Hoffmann became co-curator of the 1st Berlin Biennial, which he organized as artistic coordinator with Klaus Biesenbach, Nancy Spector, and Hans Ulrich Obrist. This was followed by two years at the Guggenheim Museum in New York as an assistant curator of contemporary art.

He worked for Brussels 2000: Cultural Capital of Europe, for which he curated, with Barbara Vanderlinden, the program "Indiscipline," a large scale series of talks, lectures, and performances exploring interdisciplinary links among science, art, political theory, and architecture though the spoken word. From 2001 to 2002 Hoffmann worked as a curator for contemporary art with Jean-Hubert Martin at the Museum Kunst Palast in Dusseldorf, where he organized "SPECTACULAR: The Art of Action," a yearlong examination of the relationship between performance art and the museum's collection, with various stagings and actions taking place throughout the museum.

From 2003 to 2007 Hoffmann was the director of exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London.

He has written more than 150 articles on art and curatorial practice for art magazines such as Artforum, Frieze, Parkett, and others. His writings have been in numerous museum publications, for example those of List Visual Arts Center, Boston; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Documenta X, Kassel, Germany; the 48th Venice Biennale; the 25th and 27th Sao Paulo Biennials; the 9th Lyon Biennial, France; Musée d'Art Modern de La Ville de Paris; Palais de Beaux Arts, Brussels; Museum of Contemporary Art Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt; Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam; Kunst-Werke, Berlin; Fundacio Mies van der Rohe, Barcelona; Museum in Progress, Vienna; Museo Nazionale Delle Arti, Rome; Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver; the Americas Society, New York; Center d'Arte Santa Monica, Barcelona; P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York; Portikus, Frankfurt; Arken Museum of Modern Art, Copenhagen; Kunstmuseum Bayreuth, Germany; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León (MUSAC), Spain; Bunkier Sztuki Gallery for Contemporary Art, Krakow; Nordic Institute of Contemporary Art, Helsinki; Manifesta 4, Frankfurt; Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro; Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver; ArtSway, Hampshire, England; and ArtPace, San Antonio.

His most recent books include "The Artist's Studio" (for the MIT Press series Documents of Contemporary Art and Whitechapel Gallery, 2012), "The Next Documenta Should Be Curated by An Artist" (ed.) (Revolver, 2004), and "Perform" (coauthored with Joan Jonas, Thames & Hudson, 2005). "SHOW TIME," a history of exhibitions from 1990 to the present, is forthcoming from Thames & Hudson in 2012.

Hoffmann has curated a number of exhibitions for commercial galleries, including Sean Kelly, New York (1998); Casey Kaplan, New York (2003); Klosterfelde, Berlin (2000 & 2006); the Project, Los Angeles (2002); Thomas Dane, London (2007); Cristina Guerra, Lisbon (2007), Luisa Strina, Sao Paulo (2008), Johnen Galerie, Berlin (2010), and kurimanzutto, Mexico City (2010).

Since 2005 Hoffmann has worked as a curator for Art Basel, for which he conceived and organized the programs Art Perform (2005-2009), Art on Stage (2006-2007), and Art Parcours (2010, 2011, and 2012).

Hoffmann is a member of the curatorial council of PERFORMA: New Art Performance Biennial, New York, and an advisory committee member at LAXART in Los Angeles. He sits on the artistic advisory board of the Kadist Art Foundation, Paris and San Francisco. He has participated in numerous selection committees for residencies, scholarships, and grants such as DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service), Berlin; ArtPace, San Antonio; Headlands Center for the Arts, San Francisco; Kadist Art Foundation, Paris; the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, New Haven; and the New National Gallery, Berlin.

Hoffmann has been awarded fellowships and research and travel grants from International Artists' Studio Program in Sweden (IASPIS), Stockholm (2000); Nordic Institute for Contemporary Art (NIFCA), Helsinki (2001); Assciation Française d'Action Artistique (AFAA), Paris (2001); the Canada Art Council, Ottawa (2002); Danish Contemporary Art (DCA) Foundation, Copenhagen (2002); Mondriaan Foundation, Amsterdam (2003); Goethe Institute, Munich (2004); OCA - Office for Contemporary Art, Oslo (2005); International Cultural Visits Program Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney (2008); Creative New Zealand (2009); Japan Foundation, Tokyo (2010); and ACAX, Budapest (2010).

References

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