Marie Muracciole

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Born
OccupationsArt curator, art critic and author
Organization(s)Beirut Art Center director (2014–2019).
Member of the cultural department at Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume from 1991 then its director (2005–2011).
Marie Muracciole
Born
OccupationsArt curator, art critic and author
Organization(s)Beirut Art Center director (2014–2019).
Member of the cultural department at Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume from 1991 then its director (2005–2011).

Marie Muracciole is a writer and curator based in Paris and Beirut.[1][2]

Marie Muracciole studied at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris. She shifted her visual art practice to writing in 1991.

Career

Muracciole has held positions as head of the cultural department at Paris's Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume until 2011.

She taught in ESAD, Amiens, as a contemporary art professor until 1998, then as film theory professor at the École Supérieure des Beaux Arts de Bordeaux until 2017.

She has been the director of the Beirut Art Center[3] from February 2014 to February 2019.[4]

She is now an External Visiting Lecturer and Tutor in Fine Art at the Malmö Art Academy, Sweden.

She was curator of 2024 biennial of Québec.

Selected exhibitions

Muracciole curated numerous exhibitions in museums and art centers, including Claude Closky Climb at your own risk at Madre (Naples, 2007);[5][6] Yto Barrada RIffs at the Deutsche Guggenheim (Berlin, 2011),[7] Fotomuseum (Winterthur), the Wiels (Brussels),[8] The Renaissance Society (Chicago, 2012);[9] Allan Sekula Disassembled Movies 1972–2012 at Akbank Sanat, Istanbul in collaboration with Ali Akay.l[10] A Wonderfully Inadequate Medium: Allan Sekula and Photography, at Marian Goodman Gallery London, March to May 2019. Yto Barrada, Holes in the moon, ENSAPC (école des beaux-arts de Paris-Cergy), l’Été culturel, August to September 2020.

At Beirut Art Center (BAC) Muracciole curated monographies of Zineb Sedira,[11] Joachim Koester,[12] Marie Voignier,[13] Danièle Genadry,[14] Naeem Mohaiemen, Allan Sekula, Marwa Arsianos, Tony Shakar, Rana El Nemer, Hassan Khan,[15] Otobong Nkanga, as well as many group shows.[16] Francis Alÿs Knots'n Dust at the Ikon Gallery[17] and the BAC.[18][19]

Selected writings

References

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