The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photo by Anna Jochyme
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“The Museum of Dating” exhibition photostory

Online dating has only recently become a culturally and socially acceptable phenomenon, but the use of technology to match singles has a long history. Valentina Peri created the exhibition “The Museum of Dating”, in order to place the contemporary phenomenon of online dating within a spectrum of older technologies, practices, narratives, cultural and media artifacts.

The Museum of Dating_Exhibition View, Timeline and Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photos by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating_Exhibition View, Timeline and Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photos by Anna Jochymek

The early stages of computer dating are shared between the USA and the UK. In the mainstream history of dating, the first instance of the use of computers to match singles dates back to 1965, with the invention of Operation Match by two students at Harvard. In a development very similar to that of Facebook, a service initially intended for students (then separated by gender in campus) was later extended to the general population.

The aim of the exhibition “The Museum of Dating” is to place the contemporary phenomenon of online dating within a spectrum of older technologies, practices, narratives, cultural and media artifacts.

The Museum of Dating, Com-Pat Computer Dating questionnaire, Photo by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating, Com-Pat Computer Dating questionnaire, Photo by Anna Jochymek

Curator Valentina Peri presents an ongoing timeline of the history of dating with a focus on England and the emergence of dating mediated by computerized technology in the 60’s. It traces the path from the family-monitored courtship of the 50’s (“calling”), to the subsequent boom of the personal ads in the press, from the development of marriage bureaus to the emergence of the first computer dating services of the 1960s, from the introductory videotapes of the 1970s to the bulletin board systems of the 1980s and it ends with the creation of the first online dating site in the mid 90s.

The timeline is enriched by cultural, social and political facts and processes, both official and niche, that have contributed to shape the dating phenomenon and the idea of singleness until today.

Part of the exhibition is also a selection of cultural artifacts and mass culture productions, board games, movies, sit-coms, television programmes, books and old technologies, that are put into perspective through this chronological reconstruction.

Lordess Foudre, Text to Speech, digital image, Courtesy of the artist
Lordess Foudre, Text to Speech, digital image, Courtesy of the artist
Lordess Foudre, Always In Touch, digital image, Courtesy of the artist
Lordess Foudre, Always In Touch, digital image, Courtesy of the artist

The work of artist Lordess Foudre resonates with the content and the topics of the exhibition. Her digital collages and drawings interrogate the technological infrastructure of normativity, the social derives of the misuse of social networks, and contribute to a growing body of conversations about transhumanism in the past, present and speculative futures.

According to Zoe Strimpel, who has extensively studied the way people used to seek love in Modern Britain, digital technology has completely changed the appurtenances and affordances of matchmaking via a third party. But the assumption of total rupture on a social level hides how digital matchmaking fits within a longer history of mediated dating, in which the methods of matching have constantly interacted with social dynamics both new and old.

The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Joan Ball. The Lady of Computer Dating, film written, directed and produced by Valentina Peri. Film In collaboration with filmmaker Jhenyfy Muller. Photo by Anna Jochymek.
The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Joan Ball. The Lady of Computer Dating, film written, directed and produced by Valentina Peri. Film In collaboration with filmmaker Jhenyfy Muller. Photo by Anna Jochymek.

“The Museum of Dating” makes it possible to shed new light on key categories of historical understanding such as gender, generation, class, race and social status, through analysis of the power dynamics at play in partner selection within the context of the couple, the family, and the community beyond. This historical study of dating can also help to better understand the ability of seemingly neutral technologies to extend the power and belief systems of particular groups, replicate heteronormative categories and create new social needs.

Valentina Peri, 2023

The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photo by Anna Jochyme
The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photo by Anna Jochyme

The Museum of Dating

Curator: Valentina Peri

Venue: Watermans London 10.02.23 – 23.04.23

Partners: Fluxus Art Projects Curatorial Research Grant
Supported by Arts Council England and London Borough of Hounslow

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[article based on press material]

The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Photo by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Photo by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating, Dateline Computer Dating questionnaire, Photo by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating, Dateline Computer Dating questionnaire, Photo by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photo by Anna Jochymek
The Museum of Dating, Exhibition View, Board Games from Valentina Peri’s personal collection, Photo by Anna Jochymek
Joan Ball. The Lady of Computer Dating, 2023, 35 min. Film written, directed and produced by Valentina Peri. Film In collaboration with filmmaker Jhenyfy Muller. Courtesy Valentina Peri
Joan Ball. The Lady of Computer Dating, 2023, 35 min. Film written, directed and produced by Valentina Peri. Film In collaboration with filmmaker Jhenyfy Muller. Courtesy Valentina Peri

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