Valerie
Cassel Oliver has been named the Sydney and Frances Lewis Family
Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine
Arts. A curator with a proven eye for emerging artists and the
integration of new disciplines with traditional art forms, Cassel Oliver
was selected after a comprehensive national search. She will join VMFA
on July 7, 2017.
Cassel
Oliver comes to the museum from the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston,
where she rose to the position of senior curator during her 16-year
tenure. Her experience includes co-curating the Whitney Museum of
American Art’s Biennial Exhibition in 2000; directing the Visiting
Artists Program at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; and
administering grants as a program specialist with the National Endowment
for the Arts in Washington, D.C.
“Valerie
is one of the most dynamic and respected contemporary curators in her
field,” said Alex Nyerges, VMFA Director. “She brings an impressive
network of contacts from across the arts community, and she has an
established record of organizing exhibitions that explore topical themes
that resonate with viewers. Now, in her new curatorial role at VMFA,
she will have the resources to apply her talents in building our museum
collections. Based on her previous experience, as well as her curatorial
vision, she will undoubtedly push the institution in exciting new
directions.”
Cassel
Oliver’s first priority at VMFA will be to review the modern and
contemporary art holdings, and develop a collection plan. A primary
focus for her acquisition strategy, in line with the museum’s strategic
plan, will be to add more works by African American and
African-diasporic artists. Indeed, VMFA’s commitment to diversity, both
in its staff and collections, encouraged her to apply for this position.
“I
look forward to working in partnership with Alex, Michael, and the
entire curatorial team to open up the canon to include not just African
American and African-diasporic voices, but many different voices,”
Cassel Oliver said. “There are artists from myriad social and cultural
backgrounds who are not fully represented in today’s art world, and we
need to ensure their stories are part of the rich narratives we bring to
life in our museum. I bring a perspective of inclusivity, and I want to
create a context that engages a public that can see itself reflected in
the museum. Doing so allows the discussions around art to be broader
and only serves to make the entire field stronger.”
At
CAMH, Cassel Oliver conceived and orchestrated numerous group
exhibitions that generated greater audience engagement by extending the
artist’s reach beyond traditional institutional walls. Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art (2012)
tracked black performance in the visual arts since the 1960s. This
groundbreaking exhibition toured nationally until 2015. An earlier
exhibition, Cinema Remixed and Reloaded: Black Women Artists and the Moving Image (2008),
which she co-curated with Andrea Barnwell Brownlee, was nominated for
the prestigious AICA (International Association of Art Critics) award in
the digital media, video or film category and was later presented at
the 11th Havana Biennial in 2012. She also organized Hand+Made: The Performative Impulse in Art and Craft (2010), a CAMH exhibition that featured works by Virginia Commonwealth University alumni and faculty including Sonya Clark.
Other key exhibitions she has curated include Splat Boom Pow! The Influence of Cartoons in Contemporary Art (2003); the acclaimed Double Consciousness: Black Conceptual Art since 1970 (2005); and Black/White Noise: Sound and Light in Contemporary Art (2007). She also has organized several major retrospectives and single-artist exhibitions: Born in the State of FLUX/us
(2010), which was devoted to the work of Benjamin Patterson, a
contrabass musician, long-time arts administrator and founding member of
Fluxus; the survey Donald Moffett: The Extravagant Vein (2011); Trenton Doyle Hancock: Skin and Bones, 20 Years of Drawing (2014); Compilation (2015), a retrospective of work by sonic and visual artist Jennie C. Jones.; and most recently, Everything and Nothing (2016), a 10-year survey of work by painter and sculptor Angel Otero.
“Valerie
has a reputation for getting to know artists through numerous studio
visits and conversations that build trust and respect with them,” said
Dr. Michael R. Taylor, Chief Curator and Deputy Director for Art and
Education. “Artists such as Trenton Doyle Hancock, Jennie C. Jones, and
Benjamin Patterson have opened up to her in a way that they might not
with other curators. That’s been a hallmark of her curatorial work. In
her exhibitions, the viewpoint of the artist comes first.”
“This
VMFA appointment is a wonderful opportunity to begin a new chapter in
my curatorial career,” Cassel Oliver said. “Recent, considered
acquisitions have positioned VMFA for sustained dialogues in
contemporary art. I’m excited to continue that conversation, thinking
not only of the current collection and the legacy of these works from a
new perspective—a perspective that takes into account my own imprint
through new acquisitions and exhibitions.”
At
the same time, Cassel Oliver noted that contemporary artists are
continually pushing traditional definitions of art, in part with the
integration of new media and approaches to art making. “I’m particularly
interested in artists who are constantly evolving in the studio and who
are employing multiple strategies,” she added. “Artists today move in
and out of different mediums, and they never sit in one place. There is a
constant need for innovation and experimentation in the studio.”
Sonya
Clark, Chair of Craft and Material Studies at VCUarts, praised Cassel
Oliver’s appointment. “Richmond’s history is an American story and, in
fact, a global story. What we do here in the arts and how we do it is
impactful locally, nationally, and globally,” she said. “I’ve known
Valerie for almost 20 years, and her approach is a model for the art
community. She is artist-centered, committed to inclusion, globally
connected, and well-respected. Valerie’s appointment as the Curator of
Modern and Contemporary Art at the VMFA comes at a pivotal time in our
history. I’m absolutely thrilled she will be joining us in Richmond.”
More about Valerie Cassel Oliver
After
earning her undergraduate degree from The University of Texas at Austin
in 1987, Cassel Oliver completed her master’s degree in art history at
Howard University in Washington, D.C. in 1992. In 2009, she was a
fellow at the Center for Curatorial Leadership in New York through which
she received a certificate in executive management from Columbia
University.
Cassel
Oliver started her career at the National Endowment for the Arts, where
she managed a combined $1.5 million portfolio in the Expansion Arts
Program from 1988 to 1995. The next year, she joined the School of the
Art Institute in Chicago, where she directed administrative and
curatorial functions for the visiting artists program presenting
national and international artists. She joined CAMH in 2000 as an
associate curator, becoming full curator in 2006, and, in 2010, moved
into the senior curator role, where she assisted in shaping and
articulating the museum’s curatorial vision.
In
2011, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta presented Cassel Oliver with
The David C. Driskell Prize, named for the renowned African American
artist and art scholar. This distinguished award recognizes individuals
who have made an original and important contribution to the field of
African American art or art history.
Among
her additional accolades are serving as this year’s Senior Fellow for
the curatorial studies program at the School of the Art Institute of
Chicago; the Carol and Arthur Goldberg Foundation To-Life Visiting
Curator at Hunter College in 2016, and being named to the YBCA 100 by
the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco in 2015. In 2007,
she also was a non-resident curatorial fellow at the Los Angeles-based
Getty Foundation, where she continued her scholarship on Benjamin
Patterson. Cassel Oliver has also published widely and lectured
extensively throughout her career.
Cassel
Oliver’s first exhibition project at VMFA will be a retrospective for
the acclaimed African American artist Howardena Pindell, which she is
co-curating with Naomi Beckwith at the Museum of Contemporary Art in
Chicago. It will open at VMFA in January 2019. When she asked Michael
Taylor for his opinion on future projects at VMFA, he gave her one
directive in developing new exhibitions: “Go big.”