ATLANTA, GA.- Michael E. Shapiro, Nancy and Holcombe T. Green, Jr. Director of the
High Museum of Art, announced today that the High has appointed Michael Rooks as the new Wieland Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art. Rooks will officially join the High in January 2010. Rooks has held curator positions at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, The Contemporary Museum Honolulu, and at the Honolulu Academy of Arts. Most recently, Rooks served as Chief Curator and Director of Exhibitions and Artist Relations at Haunch of Venison, a contemporary art gallery in New York.
Michael has worked in the contemporary art field for more than a decade, and brings to the High extensive knowledge from his experiences as both a scholar and curator, said Michael E. Shapiro. He joins the High as we embark on a new multi-year collaboration with MoMA, bringing some of the worlds most recognized modern and contemporary art to Atlanta. These exhibitions, combined with the Highs new acquisitions in the department, will allow Michael to oversee a number of new initiatives that will offer a fresh perspective on modern and contemporary art to our community and the Southeast.
As curator at The Contemporary Museum, Rooks initiated Hawaiis first international artist project series with major outdoor works by Taiwanese artist Michael Lin and British artist Paul Morrison, and he served on the advisory board of the University of Hawaiis international artists residency program. While at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), Rooks was responsible for a dozen exhibitions, including the retrospective H. C. Westermann. As co-author of the Westermann catalogue raisonné and other publications on Westermann, Rooks is the leading authority on this highly influential but still under-recognized American artist. Also at MCA, Rooks organized Roy Lichtenstein: Interiors, a posthumous survey focusing on Lichtensteins late work; War: What is it Good For, the first museum response to the Iraq war; and AA Bronson: Negative Thoughts, Bronsons first solo show in a museum.
As Wieland Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Rooks will be responsible for the Highs growing collection of modern and contemporary art, now totaling more than 2,300 works. Significant holdings include works by Michaël Borremans, Chuck Close, Ellsworth Kelly, Agnes Martin, Gerhard Richter, Sean Scully and Fred Wilson. The collection was recently enhanced by a gift from Herbert and Dorothy Vogel, New York-based collectors who are donating artworks to museums across the United States as part of a philanthropic program called 50 Works for 50 States. The Vogels gift to the High included works by Richard Tuttle, William Anastasi and Stephen Antonakos, among others.
I am eager to join my new colleagues at the High Museum and to become a member of the arts community in Atlanta, said Rooks. Upon a solid foundation established by my predecessors, I look forward to helping build a focused collection and presenting exhibitions that not only make important contributions to the field but also create opportunities for learning and discovery.
Rooks received both a Master of Arts degree in modern art history, theory and criticism (1995) and Bachelor of Fine Arts degree (1988) from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has lectured on postwar and contemporary art at museums and university campuses in the United States , most recently at the University of Chicago s Smart Museum. In addition, Rooks has conducted public interviews with contemporary artists including Gilbert & George, Yoshitomo Nara and Art Spiegelman for audiences in Chicago and Honolulu. Besides authoring and contributing to four monographs on H. C. Westermann, Rooks has written about the work of Roy Lichtenstein, most recently in a major monograph published by Kunsthaus Bergentz, and is co-author of the exhibition catalogue Situation Comedy: Humor in Recent Art, a group show that Rooks co-curated for Independent Curators International (iCI).