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Sunday, December 7, 2025 |
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| The Rubin appoints three new trustees: Carole Corcoran, Chris Jones, and Aditya Salgame |
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Left to right: Carole Corcoran, Chris Jones, and Aditya Salgame.
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NEW YORK, NY.- The Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art announced the appointment to the Board of Trustees of Carole Corcoran, former general counsel, director of special projects, and corporate secretary of the International Crisis Group; Chris Jones, entrepreneur, writer, and CFO; and Aditya Salgame, a research advisor for economic and public policy.
Their appointments will strengthen the boards support of the Museums mission and global program of traveling exhibitions, collaborations, long-term object loans, educational resources, and digital initiatives for international audiences. They join the Rubin as the Museum expands its reach with more art in more places for more people.
As we embark on our second year as a global museum, with an exciting slate of international projects on the horizon, we are delighted to welcome new trustees who share our vision of what the Rubin can achieve. Their belief in our global model and mission of ensuring that Himalayan art is researched, preserved, shared, and celebrated will strengthen the foundation on which we continue to grow, says Executive Director Jorrit Britschgi. I look forward to working closely with Carole Corcoran, Chris Jones, and Aditya Salgame, whose leadership, insight, and philanthropy will help propel the Rubin into its next chapter.
Among the initiatives that Corcoran, Jones, and Salgame will champion are the nationally touring exhibition Gateway to Himalayan Art, which is on view at the Flaten Art Museum at St. Olaf College through December 7 and later opens at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art in 2026, followed by more venues through 2030; resources for artists and scholars, including the annual Rubin Museum Himalayan Art Prize, grant program, and the Rubin Museum Distinguished Lecture of Himalayan Art at The Met; multimedia educational initiatives like Project Himalayan Art; Mandala Lab curriculum lessons taught in New York City classrooms; and long-term loans and collaborations such as the Rubin Museum Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room at the Brooklyn Museum, which opened this summer and is on view for six years.
Carole Corcoran is an attorney with over four decades of experience dealing with legal and governance matters for corporate and not-for-profit clients. Most recently she spent 19 years as general counsel, corporate secretary, and director of special projects for the International Crisis Group, an international NGO focused on conflict prevention. Prior to that she was general counsel for Sanwa Banks US financial subsidiaries. In 1990, while in Tibet as a trekker on the 1990 International Peace Climb led by Jim Whittaker to summit Mount Everest, she developed a life-changing interest in Tibet and Asia. She currently is a member of the Human Rights Watch Miami Committee and the boards of Jewel Heart International and The Gelek Rimpoche Foundation, where as cofounder and president, she directs the development, preservation, and distribution of the extensive digital archive of the late Gelek Rimpoche. She is a member of The Council of Foreign Relations and the New York Bar.
Chris K. Jones brings 35 years of Buddhist practice and meditation to his work as an entrepreneur, CFO, award-winning writer, and philanthropist. Formally trained in both Zen and Tibetan Buddhism (Nyingma), he has taught meditation classes and practiced Judo internationallydisciplines that shape his approach to mindful leadership and creative storytelling. As cofounder and CFO of Durante Rentals, Jones led the company from startup to a $100+ million sale to Clairvest Group, earning recognition as a three-time CFO of the Year. His nonprofit expertise includes managing audits and investment analysis for the 92nd Street Y, where his fund accounting specialty helped guide one of New York's premier cultural institutions. Through Think Strong Ventures, Jones advises founders and nonprofit leaders while pursuing his artistic practice.
Aditya Salgame is a policy advisor at the London School of Economics, focusing on sustainability, AI safety, and US-Mexico relations. Born and raised in the New York area, he has lived in New York, Bangalore, Princeton, and London. After graduating from Georgetown Universitys School of Foreign Service, he began his career at Bain & Company in New York. While in New York he also worked at the Magnum Foundation, a grantmaking foundation affiliated with the Magnum Photos cooperative, and at the Brooklyn Museum. He is a lover of musiche is a former jazz guitarist and played the tabla from a young ageand a dedicated amateur photographer. He is a regular volunteer at the Arnold Circus garden, a historic green space on the UKs oldest social housing estate, and at Namayasai, an off-grid farm in Sussex.
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Today's News
December 7, 2025
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Arter unveils Phantom Quartet, tracing rupture, cyclicality, and the hidden layers of Istanbul's history
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Paper reinvented: Messums West unveils sculptural installations by Kaori Kato
New exhibition explores shifting artistic languages from the 1960s to today
The Rubin appoints three new trustees: Carole Corcoran, Chris Jones, and Aditya Salgame
Bluerider ART launches white trilogy of love across three Taipei venues
Driss Ouadahi merges architecture, ancestral motifs, and modernism in powerful new paintings
NYPL appoints Julie Golia and Bella Desai to lead research libraries into a new era of access and public engagement
Nairy Baghramian awarded Gold Medal by Art Basel Awards
David Klein's TWA designs break records at Swann
Museum presents Shine a Light: The Art and Life of Deb Koffman
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