KNOXVILLE, TN.- Ann and Steve Bailey, longtime supporters of the
Knoxville Museum of Art, recently donated $3 million to establish an endowment for the museum's executive director position. The endowment will establish the David L. Butler Executive Director position, provide funding to cover the salary of the executive director, and honor KMA Executive Director David Butler, who retired in December after 17 years in the role. Steven Matijcio joins the KMA as executive director in late February. He previously served as director and chief curator of the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston.
We are incredibly grateful to Ann and Steve Bailey for their substantial gift to the Knoxville Museum of Art in support of the executive director position, said Taylor Wortham, chair of the KMA Board of Trustees. Ann and Steves contribution helps ensure the KMA's continued success. Their belief in access to arts and culture for everyone is truly admirable.
Steve Bailey serves as a community and arts leader at the local, state, and regional levels. Bailey has held various leadership positions as a Knoxville Museum of Art trustee since 2001. He recently served as chair of the KMA Executive Director Search Committee and currently serves as the KMA Foundation chair. In addition, Steve is a member of the Tennessee Arts Commission board and currently serves as vice chair. He is also the board president of the Arts & Cultural Alliance in Knoxville and a trustee of the Cleveland Museum of Art in Ohio.
Knoxville Museum of Art
The Knoxville Museum of Art celebrates East Tennessees rich, diverse visual culture and its connections to the wider currents of world art. The KMA values diversity and inclusion in exhibitions, programs, staff, volunteers, visitors, and stakeholders; warmly welcomes and embraces all; operates ethically, responsibly, and transparently as a public trust; enhances the communitys quality of life; and strives to meet people where they are, to encourage life-long learning and engagement.
The KMAs predecessor, the Dulin Gallery of Art, opened in 1961 in the elegant Dulin House, a 1915 John Russel Pope architectural masterpiece located in a residential neighborhood on the west side of Knoxville. It was here that the institutional DNA of the KMA as an outwardly-focused, education-oriented, community-rooted organization first took shape. By the early 1980s, it was evident that, in order to reach out to and serve a growing and increasingly diverse community, the Dulin would have to expand, or move its operations to more accessible and spacious quarters. The City of Knoxville offered a tract of land on the downtown site of the 1982 Worlds Fair, and an ambitious community effort raised $11 million to construct a new, state-of-the-art building, designed by renowned American architect Edward Larrabee Barnes. In March 1990 the Knoxville Museum of Art opened in its current 53,200 square-foot facility. The exterior of the four-story steel and concrete building, named in honor of Jim Clayton, the largest single contributor to its construction, is sheathed in locally quarried pink Tennessee marble.
In the decades since the museum opened, its programming has evolved to become increasingly focused on the rich culture, old and new, of the Southern Appalachians. Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee, a permanent exhibition of works from the mid-nineteenth to the late-twentieth century, spotlights the compelling and heretofore largely unknown visual arts legacy of Knoxville and the region. Each year, this installation draws more and more from the museums growing holdings of works by artists with ties to East Tennessee, including Knoxville natives Catherine Wiley and Beauford Delaney. To this has been added a permanent exhibition of modern and contemporary art. Currents: Recent Art from East Tennessee and Beyond features a selection of objects from the KMAs growing collection of works by emerging and established artists and represents a chronological and geographic expansion of Higher Ground that allows viewers to consider the achievements of area artists within a global context. Facets of Modern and Contemporary Glass showcases the KMAs growing holdings of 20th and 21st-century glass. A permanent installation of nine Thorne Rooms, from a series of miniature historic interiors created in the 1930s and later acquired by the Dulin Gallery, provides a tangible link to the KMAs early history. The museum supplements and complements its core permanent installations with a lively schedule of temporary exhibitions that explore aspects of regional culture and its relation to national and international artistic developments. The KMAs permanent and temporary exhibitions are supported by a full menu of educational programming, including school tours, workshops, outreach programs, lectures, concerts, and family activities. More than 70,000 people visit annually. Outreach to area schools, particularly those in economically-disadvantaged neighborhoods, reaches another 10,000 young people annually. Admission to the KMA is always free. Free admission is a core institutional value that creates a friendly exchange at the front door and helps communicate the message that everyone is welcome.