Shared Custody is a curatorial research project imagining a future open call for an artwork held in common – shared in its authorship, ownership, and afterlife. Drawing on Rancière, Ahmed, and Barthes, it rethinks ownership as relation: a process of care, negotiation, and accountability. The project explores how meaning might take shape through collective gestures, contracts, refusals, or rituals, challenging the myth of the solitary artist and inviting new ways of engaging with art.


Read more about it here.


Shared Custody is a curatorial research project imagining a future open call for an artwork held in common – shared in its authorship, ownership, and afterlife. Drawing on Rancière, Ahmed, and Barthes, it rethinks ownership as relation: a process of care, negotiation, and accountability. The project explores how meaning might take shape through collective gestures, contracts, refusals, or rituals, challenging the myth of the solitary artist and inviting new ways of engaging with art.


Read more about it here.