Met Museum to Inaugurate Global Museum Leaders Colloquium in Spring 2014
Program is Designed to Broaden Dialogue on Museum
Management among International Museum Directors
Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, announced today the spring 2014 launch of the Global Museum Leaders Colloquium, a two-week pilot program created and hosted by the Metropolitan Museum in New York. Designed to stimulate and broaden international dialogue on museum management and collections care among directors from collecting institutions, it will bring together 12-15 directors, in particular from museums in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The colloquium will take place April 7-18, 2014.
Mr. Campbell commented: “The Met was founded as an international museum 143 years ago, and this global approach is now reflected in our collections, programs, and audience. Given the breadth and depth of our holdings, it is our responsibility to encourage a dialogue that can benefit museums worldwide, one that reinforces their relevance and encourages their appropriate stewardship. The Global Museum Leaders Colloquium has been designed specifically to address a broad range of museum management issues, and we look forward to welcoming our colleagues to the Met next spring.”
The program, organized by the Office of the Director at the Metropolitan Museum, will include directors of institutions with collections ranging from archaeological and historic artifacts to modern and contemporary art. Participants will be based at the Metropolitan, meeting with the Museum’s curators, conservators, and administrative staff and also participating in intensive dialogues about museum management.
The series of sessions held during the 12 working days of the colloquium will offer an overview of various aspects of museum operations—from curatorial research, collections management, and conservation to fundraising, education, governance, and digital communications—providing a 360-degree view of current museum practices, using the Metropolitan Museum’s experts and experience as a springboard for discussion. Site visits to cultural institutions in New York and Washington, D.C., will complement the program.
A significant portion of the schedule will also be set aside for open dialogue among the visiting directors, who will discuss strategic challenges facing their institutions and engage in workshops to explore timely issues confronting museums worldwide, such as how to formulate cooperative policies and how to advocate effectively for institutions at a time of scarce resources. In this way, the colloquium will function as a laboratory for crystallizing viable approaches to common challenges in museum leadership.
András Szántó, a museum analyst and writer on arts institutions, has advised the Metropolitan on the development of the Global Museum Leaders Colloquium and will serve as its moderator. “There is a surprising lack of opportunity for museum directors, especially from developing regions, to come together for a sustained exchange of ideas and expertise, said Mr. Szántó. “This global colloquium will be such a forum. It is founded on the premise that, despite our cultural and economic differences, institutions and their leaders have much to learn from each other.”
At a time when globalization is rapidly reshaping museum audiences as well as programming mandates, the colloquium has been created to promote strong, well-informed, culturally sensitive museum leadership. A key aim of the program will be enhanced international collaboration for all of the participating institutions and their leaders.
Participation in the Global Museum Leaders Colloquium is by invitation. Most participants will be museum directors, although in some cases the program will accept deputy directors or chief curators who have oversight responsibility for their institutions, as well as public officials with jurisdiction over museums.
The 2014 participants of the program will be announced by November of this year.
The Met Around the World
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is one of the world’s largest and finest museums, with collections spanning more than 5,000 years of world culture, from prehistory to the present and from every part of the globe. The Museum’s main building, located at the edge of Central Park along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, and The Cloisters museum and gardens, its branch museum for medieval art and architecture in northern Manhattan, received 6.28 million visitors last year.
International visitors last year numbered 2.2 million, or 35% of the Museum’s total attendance, and they hailed from 191 countries, a 60% increase since 2008. Annual visitation from China, Korea, and Brazil has more than tripled since 2009. And in the twelve-month period ending in April 2012, 14 million visits to the Museum’s website (approximately 36% of total visits) originated from outside the United States.
The Museum’s far-ranging international activities include loans of individual works of art and exhibitions, which travel to and from institutions around the world. Last year, 865 works of art from the Met’s collections were on loan abroad. This year, the exhibition Earth, Sea, and Sky: Masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art traveled to the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum and the National Museum of China, Beijing; and in 2014, The American West in Bronze: 1850-1925 will be on view at the Nanjing Museum in China. Each year, the Met also takes part in hundreds of international conservation projects, excavations, fellowships, and other exchanges of scholars, researchers, and staff.
Extensive general information about the Metropolitan Museum’s exhibitions, collections, programs, and other activities is available on its website at www.metmuseum.org. Details about the Museum’s international activities can be found on the Met Around the World page of the website atwww.metmuseum.org/met-around-the-world.
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July 25, 2013
VISITOR INFORMATION
*New Hours: As of July 1, 2013, the Main Building and The Cloisters are open 7 days a week.
Main Building
Friday-Saturday
10:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Sunday-Thursday
10:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
The Cloisters Museum and Gardens
March-October
10:00 a.m.-5:15 p.m.
November-February
10:00 a.m.-4:45 p.m.
Both locations will be closed January 1, Thanksgiving Day, and December 25, and the main building will also be closed the first Monday in May.
Recommended Admission
(Admission at the main building includes same-week admission to The Cloisters)
Adults $25.00, seniors (65 and over) $17.00, students $12.00
Members and children under 12 accompanied by adult free
Express admission may be purchased in advance at www.metmuseum.org/visit
For More Information (212) 535-7710; www.metmuseum.org
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