Time Sensitive

Glenn Adamson on Craft as a Reflection of Ourselves


Listen Later

For curator and scholar Glenn Adamson, craft isn’t a quirky hobby that sits on the outskirts of contemporary culture. Rather, it’s a vital, timeless tool for teaching us about one another, and about humanity as a whole. This belief fuels his writing, teaching, and curatorial projects, which seek to unpack the many ways in which the age-old activity shapes our lives. Adamson’s work shows that craft is bigger than any single skillfully handmade object—each of which itself can serve as an important symbol of the human capacity for honing expertise over time—and influences countless aspects of society, from the Japanese tea ceremony to farming robots devised by Google’s parent company, Alphabet X. In this way, craft acts as a lens for understanding people and places across time.

Adamson, 49, has explored the virtues of craft throughout his two-decade-long career, which has included roles at Milwaukee’s Chipstone Foundation, London’s Victoria and Albert Museum, and New York’s Museum of Arts and Design. In his 2018 book Fewer, Better Things, he positions craft as a means of connecting with fundamental issues and ideas (as opposed to those that hold only momentary or superficial relevance), and explains why taking the time to appreciate handmade objects from a maker’s or a user’s perspective holds particular spiritual and psychological value. Adamson’s account of the discipline in the United States, neatly laid out in his latest book, Craft: An American History (Bloomsbury), reveals how artisans—whose trade often includes people who are disempowered by their ethnicity, gender, or both—have been consistently suppressed throughout the nation’s history, but, paradoxically, are integral to many of its greatest achievements. 

His latest endeavor takes a more forward-looking approach. “Futures,” an exhibition Adamson co-curated that opens in November at the Smithsonian’s Arts and Industries Building in Washington, D.C. (on view through summer 2022), considers how craft can signal where we might be headed, and why we should be optimistic about the time to come. Over and over again, Adamson demonstrates how skilled making is about more than just beautiful objects. “Craft stands in for the whole idea of what it means to be human,” he says, “and why that matters.”

On this episode, Adamson discusses the various facets of skilled making, talking with Spencer about the value of hand-formed objects, the relationship between time and craft, and the discipline’s essential, often complicated role in the history of human progress.

Show notes:

  • Full transcript on timesensitive.fm
  • @glenn_adamson
  • glennadamson.com
  • (16:20): Fewer, Better Things (Bloomsbury, 2018)
  • (52:57): Chipstone Foundation 
  • (53:33): Milwaukee Art Museum
  • (54:16): “Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970–1990” (Victoria and Albert Museum, 2011)
  • (55:56): The Journal of Modern Craft
  • (56:04): Museum of Arts and Design
  • (59:50): Craft: An American History (Bloomsbury, 2021)
  • (01:17:23): “Futures” (Smithsonian Arts and Industries Building, Nov. 2021–Summer 2022)
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Time SensitiveBy The Slowdown

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

148 ratings


More shows like Time Sensitive

View all
Design Matters with Debbie Millman by Design Matters Media

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

1,227 Listeners

The Modern Art Notes Podcast by Tyler Green

The Modern Art Notes Podcast

475 Listeners

Talk Easy with Sam Fragoso by Lemonada Media

Talk Easy with Sam Fragoso

1,222 Listeners

Hyperallergic by Hyperallergic

Hyperallergic

151 Listeners

The Week in Art by The Art Newspaper

The Week in Art

198 Listeners

Scaffold by The Architecture Foundation

Scaffold

37 Listeners

Dialogues: The David Zwirner Podcast by David Zwirner

Dialogues: The David Zwirner Podcast

409 Listeners

City Arts & Lectures by City Arts & Lectures

City Arts & Lectures

375 Listeners

Talk Art by Russell Tovey and Robert Diament

Talk Art

477 Listeners

The Great Women Artists by Katy Hessel

The Great Women Artists

524 Listeners

The Art Angle by Artnet News

The Art Angle

331 Listeners

A brush with... by The Art Newspaper

A brush with...

135 Listeners

NOTA BENE: This Week in the Art World by Benjamin Godsill & Nate Freeman

NOTA BENE: This Week in the Art World

141 Listeners

Critics at Large | The New Yorker by The New Yorker

Critics at Large | The New Yorker

573 Listeners

Fashion Neurosis with Bella Freud by Bella Freud

Fashion Neurosis with Bella Freud

189 Listeners