MoMA PS1 has a brand new director. Connie Butler, the chief curator of the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, is to depart her place inCalifornia and can be a part of the New York museum on 26 September.
Her appointment to the Queens establishment marks one thing of a return. She labored because the Museum of Trendy Artwork’s (MoMA) chief curator of drawings 2006-13, throughout whichtime she curated or co-curated WACK! Artwork and the Feminist Revolution (2008), Now Dig This! Artwork and Black Los Angeles 1960-1980 (2012) and the posthumous Mike Kelley retrospective (2013-14).
She is going to run MoMA’s affiliate PS1 museum, which is housed in a Nineteenth-century public schoolhouse in Lengthy Island Metropolis. MoMA has an annual working funds of $165m and contributes 25 % of PS1’s $11m funds.
In an announcement, Sarah Arison, chair of the board of MoMA PS1, stated Butler“deeply understands MoMA PS1 and our artist-centric DNA”. Glenn Lowry,MoMA’s director, referred to as Butler a “trailblazing curator and scholar”.
Whereas on the Hammer, Butler not too long ago oversaw the exhibition Choices from the Hammer Modern Assortment (2023), which opened themuseum’s not too long ago accomplished enlargement.
She succeeds Kate Fowle, who resigned in summer time 2022. Fowle’s three-year tenure coincided with the lockdowns and financial travailsof the Covid-19 pandemic, in addition to social unrest caused by occasions such because the homicide of George Floyd. Fowle didn’t publicly provide a motive for her departure.
In an announcement, Butler paid testomony to the work Fowle did to attach MoMA PS1 with native constituencies, pledging to “proceed its mission serving the New York and Queens communities”.
Butler started her profession on the Des Moines Arts Heart in Iowa earlier than occurring to carry curatorial posts on the Neuberger Museum of Artwork and Artists Area in New York. She joined the Museum of Modern Artwork in Los Angeles in 1996 earlier than making an identical cross-country journey to New York to hitch MoMA in 2006.