MONHEGAN ISLAND, ME.- Edward L. Deci, the Director and President of the
Monhegan Museum of Art & History, announces his retirement after 36 years in key leadership roles at the museum. Today will be Decis last day as Director, but he will continue to play an integral role at the museum as the President of the Board of Trustees. The museums Chief Curator, Jennifer Pye, and Robert Stahl, Associate Director and Director of the James Fitzgerald Legacy, will take over as co-Directors of the museum.
In 1983, Edward L. Deci became a trustee of the Monhegan Associates, the islands land trust, which at the time owned the Monhegan Museum, which had an annual budget of $200. Deci was instrumental in leading the formation of the museum as a separate new nonprofit organization, which later became the Monhegan Museum of Art & History. Deci was then elected both Director and President of the new museum.
Major museum achievements during Decis tenure include:
● Growth of the collection to include more than 35,000 objects, with 2,000 works of art, including artists George Bellows, Lynne Drexler, James Fitzgerald, Robert Henri, Edward Hopper, Rockwell Kent, Louise Nevelson, Reuben Tam, and Andrew Wyeth.
● More than $3.5 million raised toward a capital campaign goal of $8 million, launched in 2013. In 2018, the Wyeth Foundation, through Jamie and Phyllis Wyeth, donated $1 million as a challenge grant for the campaign.
● Annual attendance of more than 6,000 visitors each summer, with an annual budget that has grown to $378,000.
● Acquisition of the Monhegan Light Tower from the Coast Guard in 1998, which still functions as an important navigational aid in Muscongus Bay, and a complete restoration of the lighthouse in 2009.
● Also in 1998, construction of a replica Assistant Keepers House (razed in the 1920s) to serve as gallery space for art exhibitions, provide curators offices, and furnish a climate-controlled vault.
● Acquisition of the James Fitzgerald estate in 2004 from Fitzgeralds heir, Anne M. Hubert, which includes his house and studio on Monhegan (both built by Rockwell Kent) and more than 600 works of art by Fitzgerald.
● A $300,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to fund environmentally friendly climate control for museum buildings.
● In 2018, acceptance of the Kent-Fitzgerald properties into the Historic Artists Homes and Studios program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
● Also in 2018, celebration of the museums 50th anniversary with a special exhibition of highlights from its collection, along with a commemorative book.
● Exhibitions that have traveled to the Portland Museum of Art, Maine; Lore Degenstein Gallery at Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania; Palmina & Stephen Pace Galleries of Art, Fryeburg Academy, Maine; and the Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire.
New co-directors Jennifer Pye and Robert Stahl both have substantial experience with the museum. Pye has been with the museum for 20 years, beginning as an intern in 1999. In 2003 she was appointed curator of collections, and she was promoted to chief curator in 2015. In addition to her curatorial responsibilities, she has managed the museum offices and has been responsible for cataloguing the collection. Most significantly, she wrote and served as project director for the successful $300,000 grant application to the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) that funded innovative and sustainable approaches to improving the collections environment. Pye has twice been invited to serve on a peer review panel by the NEHs Sustaining Cultural Heritage Collections Grant Program and has presented the results of the museums NEH project at the national conference of the American Institute for Conservation in 2016 and 2019. Since 2013 Pye has been on the board of Maine Archives & Museums, serving as its treasurer from 2015 to 2018. Pye has served on boards and committees of a number of Monhegans associations, including its library, the sustainable community association, and the Quadricentennial Celebration Committee.
Robert Stahl has been associate director of the Monhegan Museum of Art & History since 2008 and director of the Fitzgerald Legacy since 2004. During Stahls 15 years at the museum, he managed the restoration of the Monhegan Light Tower; shepherded the Kent-Fitzgerald properties acceptance into the Historic Artists Homes and Studios program; co-curated this years Maud Briggs Knowlton exhibition and the 2015 Lamar Dodd exhibition; served as the museums treasurer from 2008 to 2019; directed the James Fitzgerald Catalogue Raisonné project; and managed and edited the production of multiple exhibition and collection catalogues. He is the author of James Fitzgerald, The Drawings and Sketches, Selections from the Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1.
Stahl will co-direct the museum with Pye through 2021, when Pye will become the director of the museum.