Definition · 3 min read
What is a curatorial note?
Where curatorial notes come from, why they accompany serious bodies of work, and how to read one usefully.
A curatorial note is a short essay (typically 1,000-2,000 words) written by the curator of a body of work, explaining the brief, references, palette, plate sequence, and rejected directions. It is the museum wall-text equivalent for a private collection — context the work cannot carry on its own surface.
A curatorial note answers the question that a wall card cannot fit: "why this work, in this order, in this palette?" It is the discipline of putting curatorial intent on paper.
What it usually contains
- The brief — the single-sentence thesis the body of work started from
- The reference set — who the curator was thinking with
- The palette — what colors were allowed, what colors were banned
- Plate sequence — why this order, where each plate sits in the body of work
- Rejected directions — what almost made it and what didn't, with reasons
- A note on edition policy
How to read one
Read for the brief first. If the brief is one sentence, the body of work has a thesis. If it takes three paragraphs, the body of work is searching. Both can be honest; only one is editing. Then read for what was rejected — that's the most reliable signal of curatorial intent.