HOUSTON, TX.- The Menil Collection announced the appointments of Irene Mei Zhi Shum as Associate Curator of Contemporary Art and Natalie Dupêcher as Assistant Curator of Modern Art. They will begin their appointments in summer 2018. Both positions report to Senior Curator Michelle White, who has reorganized the museums approach to its modern and contemporary collection with an eye to collection-based research, rotating installations drawn from the permanent collection, and the development of special loan exhibitions.
Since 2007, Irene Mei Zhi Shum has served as the inaugural curator and collections manager for the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Philip Johnson Glass House, New Canaan, CT. Prior to the sites public opening, Shum coordinated the transfer of property from the Estates of Philip Johnson and David Whitney to the National Trust for Historic Preservation. She shaped the Glass House Collection and implemented Glass Houses arts initiative, introducing temporary exhibitions, music, and dance performances. Most notably, she organized large-scale, site-specific exhibitions Fujiko Nakaya: Veil (2014) and Yayoi Kusama: Narcissus Garden (2016). She has worked closely with artists such as Frank Stella, Isa Genzken, Bruce Nauman, Julian Schnabel, and Ryuichi Sakamoto & Alva Noto, among others. Previously she served as a curatorial assistant in the Department of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, where she organized the museums first survey of landscape architecture, Groundswell: Constructing the Contemporary Landscape (2005). Shum holds a Masters in Architecture from Yale University, a certificate of architecture from the École des Beaux-Arts of the Ecoles dArt Américaines de Fontainebleau, and Bachelor of Arts degrees in Architecture and Art History from Barnard College, Columbia University.
Natalie Dupêcher is a doctoral candidate at Princeton University, where she is writing her dissertation on the German artist Hans Bellmer (1902-1975). She holds a Masters degree in the History of Art from Williams College and Bachelor of Arts degrees in Art History and Romance Languages from New York University. Among her numerous research and teaching fellowships, Dupêcher served as the Museum Research Consortium Fellow, Department of Painting and Sculpture, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, where she contributed to the exhibition Francis Picabia: Our Heads Are Round so Our Thoughts Can Change Direction (2016).
Menil Collection Director Rebecca Rabinow said, We are delighted to welcome Irene Mei Zhi Shum and Natalie Dupêcher to the Menil Collection. This is a particularly exciting time to join the institution as we prepare to reopen our main museum building in autumn 2018 with a refreshed focus on our permanent collection. Irene and Natalie bring important expertise that will illuminate the Menils holdings of modern and contemporary art and will further the Menils longstanding commitment to living artists.