NORTHAMPTON, MASS.- Emma Imbrie Chubb has been named the inaugural Charlotte Feng Ford 83 Curator of Contemporary Art at the
Smith College Museum of Art. Her appointment is effective July 10, 2017.
Chubb is a Ph.D. candidate and Presidential Fellow in the Department of Art History at Northwestern University. Her dissertation, Migration Forms, reflects her expertise in Moroccan video art, photography and site-specific sculpture, as well as her broader interest in migration, minority communities and cross-cultural exchange in contemporary art and visual culture.
Jessica Nicoll, director and Louise Ines Doyle 34 Chief Curator at the SCMA, said Chubb emerged as the search committees unanimous choice after a wide-ranging national search. Contemporary art is an exciting and dynamic field, she noted, one thats generating a great deal of attention today. The Charlotte Feng Ford 83 Curators position attracted strong interest from across the nationand indeed, from all over the world. The search committee was particularly pleased to offer the position to Emma Chubb, whose scholarship, curatorial experience and expansive curiosity indicate the power of contemporary art to respond to current issues and to shape individual and public opinion around the issues of the day.
Charlotte Feng Ford 83, whose 2016 gift established the curators position, said meeting Chubb reminded her of why she is so passionate about collecting contemporary art. Emmas intelligence, curiosity and engagement with world issues are invigorating, and these wonderful traits are in a way aligned with how I started collecting emerging artists, Ford said. Emmas enthusiasm is exciting, and her ideas for the new curators position are inspiring. She will develop understanding amongst students and the community that will lead to many fantastic opportunities at the museum, Ford said.
Ford added that she was thrilled that the first Charlotte Feng Ford Curator of Contemporary Art begins work at the same time Maya Lin, one of the nations most influential contemporary artists, is designing the new library for Smith. Its a gift for me and part of the lasting impact that I hoped my gift to Smith would provide, she said.
Chubb said she was delighted about the opportunity to integrate research, exhibition and teaching interests in support of the kind of womens education in the liberal arts that Smith defines. As a Haverford College alumna and the daughter of a Smith alumna [Charity Imbrie 76], I am eager to collaborate with Smith students and faculty from across disciplines on projects that take the museums collections as the bases for exhibitions, courses and programs that create space for tough conversations about topics like race, gender and sexuality, she said. At the same time, I look forward to bringing the contemporary art of the so-called global south into dialogue with U.S. and Western European canons.
As the inaugural Charlotte Feng Ford 83 Curator of Contemporary Art at Smith, Chubb will play a key role in managing the museums collections and exhibitions in art from the late 20th century to the presentorganizing exhibitions, public events, special projects, residencies and publications.
She also will work closely with faculty and students to foster significant, sustained curricular and scholarly engagement with the museums program and collections in contemporary art.
Frazer Ward, professor of art at Smith and a member of the search committee, said, The committee was delighted to have someone with Chubbs credentialsand her promiseamong the applicants for the new curators position. With this position, Smith has an opportunity to shape critical thinking about contemporary art locally, regionally, nationally and internationally. Emma Chubbs scholarshipand her ability to connect her academic work with critical global issueswill help engage Smiths students and community members more broadly in important discussions about art and its role in the world today.
Chubb has international expertise and professional networks that will support her work at SCMA. From 2013 to 2016, she was a consultant for Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art in Doha, Qatar. While there, she led the editorial team for a Madrid exhibition of 160 artworks from Mathafs permanent collection. In 2014, Chubb curated an exhibition on Mohssin Harraki at Lappartement 22, Moroccos first independent art space, commissioning the artist to create an innovative body of new work. She also was founding co-director of Doukan 7002, a year-long project space in Chicago, and has served as a research assistant and translator for exhibitions in Rabat and Marrakech, Morocco, and in South Korea.
Wendy Cromwell 86, an art consultant and collector who served on the search committee, noted that Chubbs appointment supports and expands existing strong interest in contemporary art among Smith students, many of whom go on to work in the art world. Some 10 percent of Smiths alumnae are involved in the arts as professionals, patrons and volunteers, Cromwell noted, and Smith alumnae include Thelma Golden 87, director and chief curator at the Studio Museum in Harlem, and Rebecca Rabinow 88, newly appointed director of the Menil Collection in Houston. By bringing Smith students into dialogue with contemporary art and by promoting discussion around the issues and viewpoints that contemporary art raises, Cromwell said, this new appointment will expand interdisciplinary dialogue and strengthen even further the important role of art in a Smith education.
In addition to her multiyear Presidential Fellowship at Northwestern, Chubb is a recipient of a 2016 Camargo Foundation Residential Fellowship to Cassis, France, and an American Institute for Maghrib Studies Long-Term Research Grant in 2013-14.
Chubb has published articles in Art Journal, The Journal of Arabic Literature and Nafas Art Magazine, among others. She also has been an invited lecturer at conferences and universities in the U.S., France and Morocco.
Chubb holds a B.A. degree, magna cum laude, in the history of art and French from Haverford College. She expects to receive her Ph.D. in art history from Northwestern University in June.