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Friday, November 22, 2024 |
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High Museum announces curatorial promotions |
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Michael Rooks. Photo: Ted Pio Roda Photography.
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ATLANTA, GA.- The High Museum of Art announced promotions for two of its curators today. Katherine Jentleson, who has served as the Merrie and Dan Boone curator of folk and self-taught art since 2015, will continue in that role and now also serve as senior curator of American art, overseeing the American art program. Michael Rooks, who joined the High in 2010, is now the Wieland Family senior curator of modern and contemporary art.
To support the growth of their respective departments, Jentleson and Rooks will expand their staff with new curatorial hires. Jentleson is directing the effort to fill the vacant post of Margaret and Terry Stent curator of American art, and Rooks has begun a search for the new position of assistant curator of modern and contemporary art.
These promotions reflect the high level of accomplishment and responsibility that Katie and Michael have exhibited and embraced in their work, said the Highs Director Rand Suffolk. Organizationally, these changes will also support the growth and connectivity of our collections, presenting opportunities for new exhibitions and scholarship as well as cross-departmental collaboration.
Jentlesons new role leading the American art program acknowledges and reinforces the importance of folk and self-taught art within the larger canon of American art as well as the Highs exceptional collections in those areas. Under Jentlesons leadership, the museum will continue to make strategic acquisitions that bridge work by trained and untrained artists in the collection, creating new opportunities for both canonical and previously marginalized artists to be seen as American innovators.
The addition of a new assistant curator of modern and contemporary art respectively acknowledges the great activity, diverse scope and strategic development of that department. Under Rooks leadership, the contemporary collection has grown by 26 percent with more than 800 acquisitions and presented nearly 50 special exhibitions featuring international artists including Yayoi Kusama, Michael Lin and Julie Mehretu.
Chief Curator Kevin W. Tucker added, The creation of new leadership positions within these two departments is key to furthering our overall goals around curatorial excellence and distinctiveness, championing diversity across the Highs collections and exhibitions. I look forward to the results of Katies and Michaels efforts as they take on their new roles.
Katherine Jentleson
Katherine Katie Jentleson, Ph.D., is the senior curator of American art and the Merrie and Dan Boone curator of folk and self-taught art at the High Museum of Art. Her recent exhibitions include George Voronovsky: Memoryscapes (March 24-Aug. 13, 2023) and the nationally traveling exhibitions Gatecrashers: The Rise of the Self-Taught Artist in America (Aug. 20-Dec. 12, 2021) and Really Free: The Radical Art of Nellie Mae Rowe (Sept. 3, 2021-Jan. 9, 2022).
Since joining the High, she has overseen nine exhibitions and doubled the size of the collection with major acquisitions of work by Thornton Dial, Lonnie Holley, the Gees Bend quilters and Henry Church, many of which debuted in the newly expanded and thematically integrated folk and self-taught art galleries as part of the museums 2018 reinstallation. Her exhibitions, publications and collection-based initiatives have been awarded major support from Bank of America, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Art Bridges Foundation, the Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation, Society for the Preservation of the American Modernists, the Terra Foundation for American Art and the Wyeth Foundation for American Art. Currently she is spearheading an ongoing quilt collecting initiative to build the museums holdings of quilts by Black artists. Many of the museums recently acquired quilts will go on view for the first time in Jentlesons upcoming exhibition Patterns in Abstraction: Black Quilts from the Highs Collection (June 28, 2024-Jan. 5, 2025). Jentleson is also an active leader in the larger field of American art as co-executive editor of Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art, a digital peer-reviewed publication that celebrates its 10th anniversary this year.
Before she became a curator, Jentleson worked as an arts journalist in New York. Through her editorial assignments and general experiences at galleries and museums there, she discovered her passion for self-taught artists and their historical legacy in the United States. In 2010, she began her graduate studies in art history at Duke University, where she studied American art broadly and focused her research on how the first generation of celebrated self-taught artists fit into the larger landscape of American modernism between the World Wars. During her graduate career she received awards and fellowships from the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Archives of American Art and the Dedalus Foundation, and she contributed research and writing to exhibitions at the American Folk Art Museum, the Ackland Art Museum, the Nasher Museum of Art, the Studio Museum in Harlem and Prospect.3 New Orleans. Jentleson adapted her dissertation into a peer-reviewed book Gatecrashers: The Rise of the Self-Taught Artist in America (University of California Press, Spring 2020) and the High Museum of Arts 2021 exhibition of the same name.
Michael Rooks
Michael Rooks is the Wieland Family senior curator of modern and contemporary art at the High Museum of Art. His recent exhibitions include Monir Farmanfarmaian: A Mirror Garden (Nov. 18, 2022-April 9, 2023), What Is Left Unspoken, Love (March 25-Aug. 14, 2022) and Al Taylor, What Are You Looking At? (Nov. 17, 2017-March 18, 2018). Since joining the High in 2010, he has overseen more than 40 exhibitions and grown the collection by more than 26 percent with the addition of more than 800 artworks, including major acquisitions of work by prominent and influential artists of the 21st century including Amoako Boafo, Monir Farmanfarmaian, Teresita Fernández, Jeffrey Gibson, Arthur Jafa, Rashid Johnson, Alex Katz, Julie Mehretu, Shirin Neshat, Ebony G. Patterson, Sarah Sze, Kara Walker and Mary Weatherford, among many others. His exhibitions have been awarded major support from the U.S. Department of State, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation.
Early exhibition highlights at the High include Alex Katz, This Is Now (June 21-Sept. 6, 2015) and two historical survey exhibitions in collaboration with The Museum of Modern Art, New York: Picasso to Warhol: Fourteen Modern Masters (Oct. 15, 2011-April 29, 2012) and Fast Forward: Modern Moments, 1913-2013 (Oct. 13, 2012-Jan. 20, 2013). In addition to his responsibilities at the High, Rooks served as commissioner and cocurator of the U.S. Pavilion at the 12th International Architecture Exhibition, La Biennale di Venezia, in 2010.
Prior to joining the High, Rooks held curatorial positions at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA); The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu; and the Honolulu Academy of Arts (now Honolulu Museum of Art). At MCA, Rooks curated a dozen exhibitions including major career retrospectives of Roy Lichtenstein and H. C. Westermann, for which he was the principal author of the H. C. Westermann catalogue raisonné. As curator at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, Rooks curated more than 15 exhibitions, including projects by Michael Lin, Paul Morrison and Yoshitomo Nara, introducing audiences in Hawaii to a new generation of international contemporary art.
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