Anne Pasternak

Anne Pasternak (born 1964) is Director of the Brooklyn Museum. She is the current Shelby White and Leon Levy Director of the Brooklyn Museum.

Anne Pasternak
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Born1964
Alma materUniversity of Massachusetts, Amherst, Hunter College
OccupationMuseum director, curator, art critic
OrganizationBrooklyn Museum, Creative Time, Real Art Ways
Known forDirector of the Brooklyn Museum

Education

Pasternak was born in Baltimore and received her undergraduate degree in Art History and Business Management from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She went on to take graduate courses at Hunter College but left without taking a degree.

Pasternak has been awarded honorary doctorates from Pratt Institute[1] and Hunter College[2]

Career

Pasternak's career began with an internship turned directorship at the Stux Gallery in Boston in the 1980s. She then served as Curator at Real Art Ways, an arts nonprofit in Hartford, Connecticut. She curated public art projects with such now acclaimed artists as Mel Chin and Mark Dion as well as the groundbreaking exhibition "Hip Hop Nation".

Creative Time

In 1993 Anne Pasternak left Real Art Ways and became the Executive Director of Creative Time. There she curated and organized numerous exhibitions, events, discussions, and public art projects including the annual "Tribute In Light" memorial honoring the lives lost on September 11, 2001; Paul Chan's Waiting for Godot in Post-Katrina New Orleans, and Kara Walker's A Subtlety in Brooklyn's Domino Sugar Factory in the Williamsburg neighborhood.[3]

Brooklyn Museum

In 2015, Pasternak left Creative Time and replaced Arnold L. Lehman as the director of the Brooklyn Museum.[4] Pasternak's directorship at the Brooklyn Museum marks the first time a woman has kept a directing role in an encyclopedic New York museum.[5] As a former director of a public art organization, this new position represents a shift in her career from a broader public sphere into the architecture of a museum.[5] In October 2019, the museum has deaccessioned a Francis Bacon painting through a Sotheby's auction. During his lifetime, Bacon wrote the museum that “It was a throw-out and it depresses me […] that it has years later found its way onto the art market and I would prefer if it were not exhibited.”[6] At this time, the museum was still running on a multi-million dollar deficit.

Awards and Recognition

  • Ufficiale dell’Ordine della Stella d’Italia, 2018[7]
  • Crains 50 Most Powerful Women in New York, 2019[8]

Controversies

Since becoming director, two prominent Brooklyn Museum chief curators have left; each staying less than a year—Nancy Spector[9] and Jennifer Y. Chi[10]

Recent community protests have brought up the issue of diversity in hiring at the Brooklyn Museum[11], and Pasternak has faced issues pertaining to community relations[12]. Pasternak has also taken strong political positions on current topics such as the #metoo movement[13]

References

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