CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- Harvard University Provost Alan Garber today announced the appointment of Martha Tedeschi as the Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of the
Harvard Art Museums, beginning in July. Tedeschi, currently the deputy director for art and research at the Art Institute of Chicago, succeeds Thomas W. Lentz, who departed in July 2015.
Martha Tedeschi stood out among a pool of exceptional candidates. We are pleased that she will lead the Harvard Art Museums into the future, while building on the superb work of Tom Lentz and the museums dedicated staff, Garber said. The Harvard Art Museums are among the nations largest and most important art collections and are also a critical resource for research, teaching, and learning at Harvard. Marthas passion for teaching students across all disciplines and experience in training the next generation of scholars, curators, and conservators will enable her to advance the museums academic and cultural missions.
In her current role, Tedeschi is responsible for the management of the departments most closely related to the Art Institute of Chicagos commitment to research and scholarship. Tedeschi directs a staff of nearly 225, including the museums libraries and archives, publishing and imaging, academic programs, and conservation and conservation science departments. She oversees the activities of 11 curatorial departments and also serves as the Institutes academic liaison to local universities and foundations.
We are so pleased to welcome Martha Tedeschi at a moment of remarkable opportunity for the Harvard Art Museums, said Harvard President Drew Faust. Her expertise and leadership will elevate our extraordinary collections and integrate them more fully into Harvards intellectual life, challenging our community to grow as we seek to interpret and change the world. The arts are essential to the Universitys highest purposes, and I look forward to the ways in which they will continue to flourish under her direction.
Tedeschi will take charge of a recently reinvented Harvard Art Museums at 32 Quincy St. in Cambridge. Stunningly redesigned and expanded by Renzo Piano Building Workshop and reopened in 2014, the Fogg, Busch-Reisinger, and Arthur M. Sackler museums invite students, faculty, scholars, and the public into one of the worlds great institutions for arts scholarship and research. In the Harvard Art Museums new home, the collections are more accessible than ever before. Visitors are able to explore new research connected to the objects on display and the ideas they generate in the galleries; gain a glimpse of leading conservators at work; and in the unique Art Study Center, have hands-on experiences with a wide range of objects from the collections.
The Harvard Art Museums have been brilliantly reimagined by the recent renovation and I am exhilarated at the prospect of leading them at this moment to realize their enormous potential, said Tedeschi. I look forward to working with the full range of the art collections, the talented staff of the museum, and collaborators across the University and in the community to fully activate the building, nurturing a dynamic and inclusive laboratory for considerations of the visual in our lives.
Tedeschi earned her B.A. from Brown University and her Ph.D. from Northwestern University, both in art history. She is a specialist in British and American art, with a strong interest in the history of printmaking in early modern Europe. She was president of the Print Council of America from 2009 to 2013, currently serves on the board of the Association of Art Museum Curators, and was awarded a fellowship to the Center for Curatorial Leadership in 2012.
Tedeschi has written, edited, or contributed to scores of books and scholarly journals in her field. She is the general editor and co-author of The Lithographs of James McNeill Whistler (1998), winner of the George Wittenborn Award for excellence in art publishing in that year. She has also organized numerous exhibitions, including Watercolors by Winslow Homer: A Medium for Modernism (2008) as well as its sequel, John Marins Watercolors: A Medium for Modernism (2011), and more recently, Undressed: The Fashion of Privacy (2013).
Over her distinguished tenure at the Art Institute of Chicago, as a curator and more recently as deputy director of art and research, Martha Tedeschi has evolved an ever more rich and compelling vision for the expanded potential of the museum as a teaching institution capable of engaging diverse audiences by providing access to the museums encyclopedic collections in new and creative ways, said Douglas Druick, who recently retired as the Art Institutes president and Eloise W. Martin Director.
Tedeschi began her career at the Art Institute of Chicago as a National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) intern in 1982, and became a full curator in 1999. Prior to assuming her current role, she served as longtime curator in the museums Department of Prints, where she had previously contributed in numerous other roles since 1982.
As a visionary museum leader, she implemented an ambitious Andrew W. Mellon Foundation partnership with the University of Chicago and Northwestern University around teaching graduate students from objects; and oversaw a major pilot projectMellons Undergraduate Curatorial Fellowship Programdesigned to offer training and mentoring to students who support the important goal of fostering inclusive, pluralistic museums and increasing the engagement of historically underrepresented groups in the curatorial field. She also spearheaded the Art Institutes comprehensive assessment and digitization of its permanent collection and led the museums pioneering program for producing online scholarly publications.