Time to open up... my apologies in advance for the cursing - you can retire the Navy out of a former sailor, but you can never retire the sailor out of a sailor.
In the spirit of open transparency: As most of you know by now, I am now almost finished organizing a monster of a survey show for 2025 with the aim of not only exhibiting a curated, 15-venue exhibition to survey a snap shot of women artists working in the DMV region, and catalog them digitally, but to also leave a digital footprint of their 2025 presence for the future.
That show is "Women Artists of the DMV." More than 400 artists in (so far) 15 major art venues across the capital region!
As part of that process, starting in December 2024 I wrote multiple emails and mailed multiple old-school snail mail letters to offer the Smithsonian Institution the opportunity to archive the exhibition materials as part of a survey snapshot in time for DMV area female artists - at no acquisition cost - FREE!
The materials that I offered to the SI would consist of a flash drive which would contain a Powerpoint presentation documenting all curated female artists and one image per artist - I also made it clear that any digital format could be used as needed/recommended by then. Additionally, in view of how fast technology ages, I would also include (at no cost) a digital screen device (a digital frame) to “play” the digital presentation as needed in the future.
Throughout January, February, March, and April I was ignored, and in May I blasted a: "Did you get my email?" email to every email address that I could find online from them.
On May 9, 2025, I got this response:
From: AAACollectionReview - AAACollectionReview@si.edu
To: lenny@lennycampello.com
Copy: Helmrich, Anne L.
Dear Lenny Campello,Thank you for your interest in the Archives of American Art. Upon reviewing your inquiry, the Archives is not the proper home for the proposed collection. This decision reflects the ongoing needs, priorities, scope, and resources of the Archives rather than the value of the collection.We are excited to see the exhibition when it comes together. A more suitable repository for a local survey show and a PowerPoint documenting the artists who submitted might be the National Museum of Women in the Arts, though each institution has their own priorities and archival acquisition strategy. Such records of exhibition submissions can be challenging for archival accessions, particularly regarding rights issues around images as well as preservation concerns around born-digital materials.Thank you again for reaching out to the Archives of American Art —The curatorial teamArchives of American Art | Smithsonian Institution
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Lenny that is the nature of this place. I have noticed no change in this regard since 1994.
ReplyDeleteYou got it!!! I'm on board. And I'm with you. They do not know who they're fucking with. You just lit a fire!!!
ReplyDelete100% on target - this is not only a shame stain on the SI, but clearly they're bowing down to the current anti-women stances of you know who. I will make sure that Sen. Warner is aware of this.
ReplyDeleteI recall that you once said on the old Kojo Nmandi radio show something along the lines that "it was easier for a DC area museum curator to take a cab to Dulles to fly to Berlin, or London, or Madrid to visit emerging artists there, than to take a cab to Georgetown, Rockville or Alexandria to visit ANY artists in their own backyards."
ReplyDeleteThis is a case of the SI just not caring about their own "backyard."
JN
We continue to be treated as ‘less than’
ReplyDeleteWe continue to be treated as less than…
ReplyDeleteBetcha 100 clippers that the head lady works remotely
ReplyDeleteAs John Dewey wrote, ‘Art as aesthetic experience is a manifestation, a record, and celebration of the life of a civilization, a means for promoting its development … it is the ultimate judgment upon the quality of a civilization.’
ReplyDeleteLenny’s devoted efforts to preserve and uplift the living voice of women artists in our time is nothing short of visionary.
It is deeply disappointing that the Smithsonian Institution chose to turn away from such a meaningful cultural record—one that could have served as a vital testament to our era’s artistic legacy. Some opportunities are too important to overlook.
Lenny im on board. Will do what it takes.
ReplyDeleteLenny. I'm on board! Will do what it takes
ReplyDeleteLenny, I'm on board. Will do what it takes
ReplyDelete