When Save the Corcoran formed in 2012, its aim was to keep the museum from selling its historic building. That ship has sailed, though, as the institution prepares to enter a partnership with the National Gallery of Art and George Washington University. The group, led by co-founder Jayme McLellan of Civilian Art Projects, has shifted its focus to what will come next for the Corcoran’s collection — and how they can preserve this piece of Washington history.
In every facet of life or work, or in this case the visual arts, there are yappers, symbiots, hangers-on, grubs, and a tiny, tiny, microscopic number of doers.- Maura Judkis, April 19, 2014, Washington Post
Jayme McLellan of Civilian Art Projects, and an instructor at the Corcoran, is a doer. Not only has Jayme made Civilian one of the leading galleries in the DMV's cultural tapestry - all of that as a result of hard work, which is the only way that an independently owned, commercial fine arts gallery can survive in the DMV - but McLellan has been a leading voice and doer in the effort to find an alternative way to save the Corcoran, and also an instructor at the Corcoran, hired by the Chair of the Corc's Department of Fine Arts. Classes start in two weeks and she's listed as the instructor for the class, which by the way, is full.
Below is the class from the Corc's website:
2014 Fall FA01
FA4170/Lecture/A - Professional Practices for Fine Artists | Credits 3.00
No artist, however famous or successful, had a clear path to succeed from the beginning. Successful artists learn to maximize opportunities and resources available to them, navigating his or her way at every turn. There is not one single approach; a strategy with lots of planning and variables must be created and examined. Artists will develop a resume and artist statement, research and write grants, practice applying for residencies, and participate in information gathering sessions with art spaces. Led by the founder of two arts organizations, the instructor will create opportunities for students to meet gallery directors, curators and professional artists in DC, Baltimore, and New York. These meetings will provide substantive time to discuss practical issues and concerns that will add to a post-school plan. Writing and reading assignments will be two papers including writing a grant application and creating a personal post-college plan plus one exam. Completion of this course will result in a deeper understanding of the specific tools available to emerging artists and the nature of the art world in general. For BFA Fine Art majors only. Prerequisite: FA3091 Fine Art Studio IV.
Registration Type | Traditional |
Fees | N/A |
Instructors | Ms. Jayme McLellan |
Duration | 9/8/2014 - 12/15/2014 |
Schedule | Mon 3:15 PM - 6:00 PM; Corcoran College, Downtown, Room 9-2 |
Prerequisites | FA3091 / Studio
|
Corequisites | N/A |
Credit Types | Audit Credit |
Class | 12 Seats | 1 Remaining |
Open (Target Met) |
Yesterday, Peggy Loar, Interim Director at the Corcoran fired McLellan from a full class that starts in two weeks.
I have sent Ms. Loar a note asking for the reason that McLellan was fired, and if she responds, I will publish it here. In the interim, the "appearance" of this firing, at least to me, smells and tastes like a retaliatory firing of an employee who dared to take a stance opposing the Corc's planned disintegration.
Here's what Ms. Loar wrote to the Corcoran community when she took over as Consulting/Interim Director:
April 8, 2013
Dear Corcoran Community,
While the Corcoran has had considerable experience in cross-pollinating the programs and talents within the College and the Gallery, we now have a whole new roster of colleagues to engage with us on structuring our creative agenda. We will inspire each other. I believe that the University of Maryland and the National Gallery of Art will be catalysts toward an inventive tripartite collaboration.
- As I begin my tenure as consulting director, my goals are clear, ambitious, and achievable:
- To begin immediately collaborating with the Corcoran team on the strategy and design of a strong programmatic partnership with the University of Maryland
- To work closely with the Board and the broader Corcoran community on ideas for the creation of a hybrid and exciting new direction for the Corcoran
- To step up our financial planning and fundraising—discussion and coordination with the Board of Trustees and the University of Maryland
- To move expeditiously in our partnership with the National Gallery, particularly in regard to the first exhibition to be held at the Corcoran
The Corcoran Board’s success in identifying and securing the University of Maryland as a partner—in accordance with the criteria the Board set—was in large part due to the confidentiality of the discussions. It’s a new time now, and transparency and dialogue will bring us all success.
I look forward to those conversations and to working collaboratively with the staff, faculty, and students of this vital and storied institution. Additionally, I hope that members, alumni, and the public will continue to take full advantage of our exhibitions and educational opportunities during this exciting time.
Sincerely,
Peggy
7 comments:
Oh my. To quote Ms Loar, "It’s a new time now, and transparency and dialogue will bring us all success." I believe Ms Loar is correct, but not as she imagines success. The new time will be an independent and vastly improved Corcoran Museum and College of Art and Design, without NGA, GTU or Ms Loar and the entire Board of "Trustees." Stay strong, Jayme McLellan. Your time will be a better time once the air clears. Perhaps someone will allow you to be the first person to fire Ms Loar?
Not surprising coming from that group. The "leadership" at the Corcoran cares much less about the institution and the students than they do about their pockets and the pockets of their friends.
Jayme McLellan has not been fired by the Corcoran.
She resigned from the faculty in 2012 and has not taught here since. (resignation below)
She was never offered a contract for 2014.
From:civilianartprojects@gmail.com[mailto:civilianartprojects@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Jayme McLellan
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 3:16 PM
To: Clare Brown
Subject: resigning
Hi Clare,
I'm going to resign from my adjunct spot at the Corcoran. I have simply lost faith in the leadership and cannot in good conscience continue teaching there.
I can try to help you find a replacement.
Best,
Jayme
Thank you for the opportunity to clarify this situation. - The Corcoran Gallery of Art, The Corcoran College of Art + Design
Jayme McLellan has not been fired by the Corcoran.
She resigned from the faculty in 2012 and has not taught here since (resignation below.)
She was never offered a contract for 2014.
From:civilianartprojects@gmail.com[mailto:civilianartprojects@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Jayme McLellan
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 3:16 PM
To: Clare Brown
Subject: resigning
Hi Clare,
I'm going to resign from my adjunct spot at the Corcoran. I have simply lost faith in the leadership and cannot in good conscience continue teaching there.
I can try to help you find a replacement.
Best,
Jayme
Dear Anon,
Something doesn't make sense here... The Corcoran website, as I shoed in my post, as of yesterday still showed McLellan listed as instructor for that class...
Very confused!
While it is true that I gave up my classes in 2012, reluctantly, because leadership were trying to sell the building and ruin the institution, it is not true that I wasn't slated to teach starting in just a few weeks. I agreed in April to come back to teach one class and because I left two years ago to try to save the Corcoran, and have worked every day of that two years to try to change leadership, I had the hope that leadership would indeed be changing. I still have that hope.
BTW... That's Jayme McLellan in the last comment ...
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