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Katy Siegel, senior curator at the Baltimore Museum of Art, will join SF MoMA as research director of special program initiatives. She will develop scholarly research and exhibitions related to modern and contemporary art and SF MoMA's collections.
The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) has opened a new outpost at the city’s historic Lexington Market, the world’s oldest continually operating public market, in an effort to encourage visitors to engage with local, regional, and national issues through the arts.
The exhibition, titled “A Moment’s Pleasure” and on view through May 2021, is the first in a series of biennial commissions calling upon artists to create site-specific works in the most accessible areas of the museum. Below, the matchless painter and patternist discusses this relational project, which aims to ground community in personal ...
The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) on July 12 revealed that it has named James D. Thornton to chair its board. Thornton, who is Black, is the first person of color to assume the role since the museum was established in 1914.
In an election conducted July 14 by the American Arbitration Workers, employees at the Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) voted 89–29 (with 22 abstaining) in favor of forming a union.… Staff at the Baltimore Museum of Art Vote to Unionize
Previously, she was a research consortium fellow in the Department of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, where she worked on its 2017 Robert Rauschenberg retrospective and established the gallery talks program #ArtSpeaks.
The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) has received a gift of $3.5 million from an anonymous donor to endow the directorship for the Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies, which is scheduled to open in the fall of 2021.
The Baltimore Museum of Art has promoted two staffers and hired two new employees who will join the institution’s senior leadership team. Christine Dietze, who served as interim codirector of the…
After weeks of raging debate surrounding the Baltimore Museum of Art’s decision to auction three major works by Brice Marden, Clyfford Still, and Andy Warhol reached a fever pitch days ago when two ex-board chairs withdrew a planned $50 million donation and two artists—Amy Sherald and Adam Pendleton—stepped down from the board in protest ...
The Baltimore Museum of Art announced on Friday that it will deaccession seven works by white male artists, including Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Franz Kline, to make room for works by contemporary female artists and artists of color, according to the Baltimore Sun.