Among the exhibitors of the fair, you have important institutions and museums, such as MACBA, Fabra i Coats: Centre d'Art Contemporani, or TBA21 Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary, as well as independent and self-publishing editors. What is your selection process, and how do you choose the right institutions and editors to present inside the fair?
We are mainly interested in having a wide range of publishers. We try to include in ArtsLibris all kinds of projects. Museums and art centers are doing relevant work with publications, but we are also very interested in independent projects and self-published artists. The phenomenon of self-publishing right now is gaining a lot of prominences, especially thanks to the digital tools that technology brings to artists.
Artists always have self-published. In the 1960s, they began to bypass the figure of the editor that usually forced them to function within certain margins. We believe that this figure of the publisher is important. Still, it is also essential to give rise to these processes that are closer to the artist's book itself in this freer and more rebellious aspect works that question the mechanisms of the art market and therefore are also very enriching.
With digitization, creators have appropriated technology, which instead of being a danger to artists' books, has opened up new possibilities and has motivated a greater quantity and quality of projects. Nowadays, disseminating these projects is also possible; you can work on demand and not depend on the publisher or the obligation to make long runs for the publication to be profitable. This fact favored the great photobook boom and currently covers other types of self-publishing.
So, with the ArtsLibris calls, we select projects from quality and contemporaneity and always looking for variety. That's why we choose projects from these large institutions that you mentioned or from influential publishers, but we also included other independent or very small and self-managed ones, which are also of excellent quality and interest.
What advice do you have for editors, especially independent and self-publishing ones? Any recommendations to be successful?
To me, the key is perseverance. In the art world, it is crucial to think in the medium and long term, be consistent, and never stop learning, working, or proposing new projects. I do not believe in success, but in constructing a path, that will have its ups and downs, to try to make a living with what you enjoy doing and achieve the goals that each one sets in their projects.
One of the things I am most proud of with ArtsLibris is that we are helping to professionalize the sector. Little by little, we have seen how projects with a very alternative and self-publishing origin now are working as professional publishers.