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Ken Rollins, Director of Tampa Museum of Art, Retires


By ARTINFO

Published: July 11, 2008
NEW YORK—Nan Rosenthal, senior consultant for modern and contemporary art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, retired on July 1, the museum announced today. Rosenthal served in the position for 15 years, curating such exhibitions as this year's "Jasper Johns: Gray" and installing numerous single-artist exhibits on the roof, including a 2005 show of Sol LeWitt. Before joining the Met, she was curator of 20th-century art at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. Rosenthal will be replaced by Marla Prather, who served most recently as the curator for American Art at London's Tate Modern from 2005–07. Prather worked at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. prior to joining the Tate. She will assume the position of senior consultant at the Met in fall 2008.

CHICAGO—The School of the Art Institute of Chicago has announced that Wellinger Reiter will be its new president, assuming the position on August 25. Reiter moves to Chicago from Arizona State University, where he has has worked as the dean of the College of Design and a professor of architecture for the last five years. He also helped lead a major expansion of the school's Phoenix campus. Before that, he served as an associate professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A trained architect, Reiter has worked on urban design projects, public art, and museum installations. He succeeds Tony Jones, who, after leading the school for 18 years, with a five year interruption in the 1990s, will become chancellor for a year and then retire.

BARCELONA—Friedrich Meschede has been appointed the new director of exhibitions at the Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA), Artforum reports by way of the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung. Meschede is currently the head of the department of visual arts at the Berliner Künstlerprogramm, an artist in residence program at DAAD Berlin — the German Academic Exchange Service. His work there has involved curating shows and projects with the artists in residence in collaboration with other Berlin contemporary art institutions.

NEW YORK—Parsons The New School for Design has announced the appointment of Coco Fusco as the new chair of fine arts. Fusco has been a member of the faculty at Columbia University since 2001 and previously served as associate professor at Tyler School of Art. She is also a multi-media artist and has shown in venues worldwide, including the Whitney Biennial, London’s Institute of Contemporary Art, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and the Smithsonian Institution. Fusco succeeds Don Porcaro, who served as chair since 2003. 

TAMPA, Fla.—Ken Rollins, director of the Tampa Museum of Art, is stepping down, according to the Tampa Tribune. Rollins was hired in July 2005 as executive director, with the primary purpose of building a new museum. His two-year contract was extended for a third year, as he helped museum board members and city officials resolve a dispute over the museum's new location. Now that construction is underway at the Curtis Hixon Park site — ground was broken in April — Rollins is retiring and returning to his studio in Mexico. The museum board has begun a search for a new director and hopes to fill the position by the end of the year.

LONDON—Sotheby's Institute of Art has announced that Dr. Jos Hackforth-Jones will direct its London institute beginning in September 2008. Hackforth-Jones currently serves as the president and provost of Richmond The American International University in London. She was appointed president of Richmond in 2007 and provost in 2003, prior to which she worked for two years as the university's dean of the School of Arts and Sciences. She has written numerous art historical studies, organized colloquia and conferences, and acted as the lead curator of the 2007 "Between Worlds, Voyagers to Britain 1700–1850" exhibition at London's National Portrait Gallery.

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