![]() "There’s a real sea change happening in museums, not just art museums but all museums,” she said. With a demonstrated commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion work - Lunde served as vice president of the Western Museums Association Board, where she helped lead its DEI strategy task force - she said she's excited to continue that work at UVM. Visual Art Lunde enters her leadership role as someone rooted in the operational management of such institutions, including 15 years of experience working at art museums, most recently at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah. ![]() She takes over from Janie Cohen, who retired after more than 30 years at the museum. Cohen's tenure - first as chief curator beginning in 1991, then as director beginning in 2002 - brought the Fleming national acclaim, not just among its academic peers but among larger and better-known institutions. ![]() Naturally, digging into the Fleming's art collection to learn more about her grandfather's photographs won't be Lunde's top priority as the museum's first new director in two decades. His work was later featured in an exhibit of Vermont photographers at the Fleming sometime in the 1940s. Navy during World War II, she said, he was recruited as an official military photographer in the Pacific. “Way before anyone was bringing their film to the Fotomat to develop," Lunde recalled, "he had a darkroom in his basement in Barre.” Lunde, 46, who was born and raised in the Rutland County town of Chittenden, had a grandfather known as Nonno - Italian for "grandpa" - who was a self-taught hobbyist photographer. But her relationship to the University of Vermont's Fleming Museum of Art, where she started on October 17 as the new director, dates back even further. ![]() It's been more than 20 years since Sonja Lunde lived and worked in Vermont. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |