Aay Preston-Myint appointed Executive Director of SF Camerawork
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Aay Preston-Myint appointed Executive Director of SF Camerawork
Aay Preston-Myint, new Executive Director of SF Camerawork. Photo Credit: Ryan Edmund Thiel.



SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.- SF Camerawork announces the appointment of Aay Preston-Myint as Executive Director. Preston-Myint will begin in their new role January 1, 2023. A Bay Area-based artist, educator, and curator with over 20 years of experience in arts administration, justice and equity work, and programming, Preston-Myint comes to SF Camerawork from the Headlands Center for the Arts, where they have served as Senior Manager of Public Programs and Fellowships since 2018. Preston-Myint stewarded Headlands’ Bay Area Fellowship, a program that radically shifted the organization’s focus to artists rooted in the Bay Area. They also oversaw residencies and grants and produced public programs for over 60 local and international artists that Headlands serves annually. Preston-Myint was a leader of Headlands’ diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, and for the policies they developed to transform organizational culture, they received the Alliance of Artist Communities’ Diversity and Leadership Fellowship in 2019.

“Aay Preston-Myint brings to the table the background, mindset, knowledge, and energy of a seasoned cultural leader,” says SF Camerawork President Jonathan Calm. “As Executive Director, they will combine these assets to build and transform our new Fort Mason space into a vital center of creative programming and practice as well as community outreach and connectivity for everyone in the Bay Area who is invested in photography. I am confident that Aay’s exceptional range of personal and professional qualities will usher our organization into an era of unprecedented achievement and appeal.”

Preston-Myint is currently Adjunct Faculty of Curatorial Practice at California College of the Arts. They are also on the Board of Directors of Small Traffic Press and a member of Southern Exposures’ Curatorial Council as well as Oakland’s Real Time and Space collective art studio. Recently, they curated Southern Exposure’s 2022 exhibition Dewdrops in the Garden. Valerie Imus, Artistic and Co-director of Southern Exposure, says of Preston-Myint, “Aay Preston-Myint’s deep commitment to artists, to community, and to dialogue are central to their approach. Aay will bring so much intelligence and grace to the role of SF Camerawork Executive Director, as they do to everything.”




“As an arts professional, Aay Preston-Myint works thoughtfully and diligently to cultivate community and foster meaningful dialogue about how we can all be accountable for driving social change and supporting cultural diversity,” concurs Christina Linden, Director of Academic and Public Programs at Stanford University’s Cantor Arts Center. “In this new role, I know Aay will lead with integrity, empathy, and a demeanor that is both calm and compassionate, as they do in all contexts. I am consistently inspired by the original and thought-provoking artwork Aay champions, and I am excited to see how this next chapter unfolds under their leadership at SF Camerawork.”

Previous to their time at Headlands, Preston-Myint was based in Chicago, where they were a founder of No Coast, an artist partnership that prints and distributes affordable contemporary artwork. They founded and co-directed the Chicago Art Book Fair, a national arts event dedicated to showcasing emerging directions and diverse legacies within small press arts publishing. They were Studio Manager and Equity Committee member at ACRE Residency, as well as DJ and organizer for Chances Dances, a party supporting and showcasing the work of queer artists in Chicago. Preston-Myint worked as Editor-in-Chief of Monsters and Dust, an independent art journal on queer thinking and poetics, and Adjunct Professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where they were also elected Faculty Senator to represent the needs and interests of over 600 part-time faculty to the school administration. They hold an MFA in Studio Art from the University of Illinois at Chicago (2011) and a BFA in Studio Art from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2006).

“It really feels like a homecoming to be trusted with the leadership of an organization as beloved as SF Camerawork,” says Preston-Myint about his new Executive Director role. “I'm delighted to be at the helm of an organization that began as an institution for and by artists almost half a century ago. Since arriving in the Bay Area, I have been impressed by the future-facing changes happening at SF Camerawork, as it invests in critical thought and artist leadership to sustain and grow a distinguished, accessible art space for the region and beyond. I am excited for the opportunity to leverage my career experience in community and non-profit work, my life experience as a queer artist of color, and the legacy and resources of SF Camerawork to build a world that is better equipped to serve and represent contemporary artists and their respective communities.”

Founded in 1974, SF Camerawork stands for discovery, experimentation and exchange for all who value new ideas in photography. Over the decades, SF Camerawork has provided a launching pad for many artists' careers, supplying invaluable financial support, exhibition space, curation and patronage. In its early years, SF Camerawork was the first organization in the Bay Area to host exhibitions and lectures by controversial, yet ultimately highly influential artists such as Sally Mann, Robert Mapplethorpe, Susan Meiselas and Joel-Peter Witkin. More recently, the organization has presented the first West Coast exhibitions for John Chiara, Binh Danh, Erica Deeman, Jennifer Karady, Jason Lazurus, Chris McCaw, Wang Ning De and Meghann Riepenhoff—artists who have emerged as leaders of a new generation gaining international prominence. The organization also offers a rich array of programming beyond artist exhibitions. An annual calendar of critiques, workshops, lectures, panel discussions, and curator-led museum and gallery tours offer unique insight in and access to San Francisco’s local photography network.










Today's News

December 17, 2022

MoMA's daydream of progress

Cincinnati Art Museum discovers hidden work under a Cézanne painting in its collection

The best art books of 2022, varied and lavish

Venice Biennale names a Brazilian trailblazer as its new Curator

Exhibition of new work by Yun-Fei Ji on view at James Cohan

Disney's renaissance films and 'Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol' ring in $3.4 million at Heritage Auctions

Figge Art Museum: Let there be Light $4 Million Evanescent Field Public Light Sculpture Receives Funding

Laddie John Dill: Intimate Light at the Malin Gallery

Agam Museum opens 'This Order' with Yaacov Agam, Uri Kloss, Ronen Sharabani, Shirley Wegner, and Guy Zagursky

Phillips achieves the highest annual total in company history for the second consecutive year

MASSIMODECARLO opens Lenz Geerk's first personal exhibition at Casa Corbellini-Wassermann in Milan

Overlooked no more: Audrey Munson, forgotten but, living on in sculptures, not gone

The Armory Show announces curators for the September 2023 edition

'Merrily We Roll Along' was Sondheim's big flop. Can she save it?

Yo-Yo Ma is finding his way Back to nature through music

Alice Teirstein, who introduced youths to dance, dies at 93

The Fotostiftung Schweiz and the Kunstmuseum Bern secure Balthasar Burkhard's significant estate

Melbourne businessman David Bardas AO and family gift important bronze by Auguste Rodin

Rachel Dickson appointed Deputy Director, Academic at The Glasgow School of Art

Arts organizations in New York City will receive $58 million in grants

Adelaide Festival welcomes Associate Director for 2024-2026

CARBON 12 opens an exhibition of works by Anahita Razmi

Anthony Meier's namesake gallery celebrates history of Mill Valley, California with relocation to historic landmark

Aay Preston-Myint appointed Executive Director of SF Camerawork

How do you get retweets on Twitter fast?

Know The Essential Tips To Learn Maths Effectively

Stylish Furniture at Affordable Prices: Our Guide to the Best Online Stores

Why Is Yacht the Best Venue for Corporate Events in Dubai?

Top Sustainable Innovations in Beauty Product & Cosmetics Technology




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful