CLINTON, MASS.- Dutch art historian and icon expert Simon Morsink, director of the Morsink Icon Gallery in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, has been appointed the new executive director of the
Museum of Russian Icons.
Morsink replaces Founding Director Kent dur Russell, who recently announced his retirement after 16 years at the Clinton museum.
A leading specialist in Russian icons, Greek icons and Ethiopian and Byzantine Art, Morsink is well known to private collectors and museum curators worldwide. For more than 30 years he has run, together with his brother Hugo, the internationally renowned Morsink Icon Gallery in Amsterdam that specializes in icons created between the 15th and 19th centuries. He served as Senior Consultant in Russian and Greek Icons for Sothebys in London from 2007-2020.
Morsink contributed essays to two Museum of Russian Icons publications, Two Museums | One Culture and Twenty Treasures from the Museum of Russian Icons; and was a speaker at the Museums 2021 international conference Collecting Orthodox Art: A History and a Look Towards the Future.
I am delighted that Simon will join our administrative team as the new executive director, said Jack McCabe, president of the Board of Trustees. He is uniquely qualified to guide the Museum into its next phase. His profound knowledge of icons and the orthodox world, coupled with his business acumen, entrepreneurial spirit, and global professional network will invigorate and amplify the role the museum can play in the local and global community. Simons appointment comes in the middle of a busy year of returning, rebuilding, and reimagining at the Museum of Russian Icons after the pandemic, passing of founder Gordon Lankton, and retirement of longtime director Kent Russell. His existing knowledge of and connection to the museum will be invaluable.
Morsink (b. 1967) studied Art History and Slavic Studies in Leiden (the Netherlands) and Leuven (Belgium). In 1991 he obtained his masters degree with a dissertation on Sergius of Radonezh, founder of the Trinity Monastery near Moscow. Since 1994, he and his brother Hugo have been running the Morsink Icon Gallery in Amsterdam, which was founded in 1977 by their father Jan Morsink.
As an art dealer and icon expert, Morsink has built strong relationships with private icon collectors worldwide, as well as with the relevant curators of major museums in Russia, Europe, Great Britain, and the USA. He has been involved in creating several international private collections and was instrumental in the acquisition of important icons by the Icon Museum in Recklinghausen in Germany, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the Museum of Russian Icons, among others.
Morsink has curated numerous exhibitions at his gallery and in European museums; and published several catalogues, most notably The Power of Icons (2006), Collecting Old Icons (2012), and The Colours of Heaven: 15 Cretan Icons from a European Private Collection (2018).
I look forward to strengthening the Museums role as a crossroads for dialogue on the fascinating world of icons and orthodox art, and their place in world culture, says Morsink. I strongly believe that the path forward for a sustainable and modern icon museum is in carefully balancing the academic world with the interests of the general public, which is increasingly socially engaged and diverse. With this in mind, I feel very motivated to lead the museum into a successful future.