COMPTON.- Watts Gallery Trust announced that Alistair Burtenshaw has been appointed as the new Director of Watts Gallery Artists Village and will take up his appointment on 4th September 2017.
Alistair Burtenshaw is the current Director of Charleston in East Sussex, the former home of Bloomsbury Group artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, and Chair of Arvon, the UKs creative writing charity.
Formerly Director of The London Book Fair and Chair of Booktrust, Alistair has, since becoming Director in March 2013, led the Charleston Trusts £9.3 million Centenary Project to renovate the Grade II listed barns at Charleston and construct new galleries designed by architect Jamie Fobert. During this time Alistair has overseen the Heritage Lottery Fund-backed scheme which includes a project to catalogue, conserve, digitise and interpret the 8,000 works on paper that make up the Angelica Garnett Gift; developed the reach of its artistic programmes and strengthened and increased its learning and community engagement work.
Alistair has also led a significant development in the Trusts renowned Charleston Festival and Small Wonder short story festival, as well as being instrumental in the foundation of the new Charleston-to-Charleston Literary Festival in Charleston, South Carolina, its Charleston-EFG John Maynard Keynes Prize, most recently awarded to Professor Stephen Hawking, and Charleston Lifetimes Excellence Award in Short Fiction.
Richard Ormond, Chairman of the Trustees of Watts Gallery Trust, commented: We are delighted to welcome Alistair Burtenshaw as the new Director of Watts Gallery Artists Village. He has been a highly successful leader and innovator in the arts, and we look forward to working with him on the next chapter of the Watts story.
Alistair Burtenshaw commented: As we celebrate the 200th anniversary of G F Wattss birth, his allegorical works and vision for a just society speak as powerfully to the challenges faced by todays world as they did in his time. The Artists Village that he and Mary Watts created in Compton was, like Charleston, a fertile hub of creativity. Today, Watts Gallery Artists Village is an empowering testimony to the transformative power of the arts and G F and Mary Watts vision for a thriving creative community.
I have long admired the Watts Gallery and its transformation under Perdita Hunts leadership and I look forward to leading this unique national asset as it welcomes new and existing visitors to its galleries, exhibitions, Great Studios, Artists House and Chapel.
Alistair Burtenshaw will succeed Perdita Hunt who will be stepping down as Director on 1 July 2017 after twelve momentous years to pursue roles in the arts and heritage, including working with the Heritage Lottery Fund and the National Trust, and developing her consultancy with The Recess College and Leadership Insight. Achievements during her time include: the £11 million restoration of the main Gallery buildings; the acquisition of Limnerslease, the Watts Arts and Crafts home and the £5 million restoration of the Watts Studios; the long-term lease of the Watts Cemetery Chapel, Mary Watts masterpiece; the introduction of a programme of major exhibitions; the expansion of learning and art courses for all, and a dramatic rise in visitor numbers.