
Minneapolis Institute of Arts Appoints Liu Yang as New Head of Asian Art Department
2011-06-09 08:50:58 未知
Dr. Liu comes to the museum from the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN.- The Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA), home to one of the most important Asian art collections in the nation, announced the appointment of Liu Yang, Ph.D., as the new curator of Chinese art and head of the museum’s Department of Asian Art. The MIA also announced the creation of two new, mid-level curatorships in Asian art, spurred by a challenge grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Dr. Liu comes to the museum from the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney, where he has worked as senior curator of Chinese art since 1997. Concurrently, he was an adjunct professor at the University of New South Wales, and the University of Sydney. He will assume his position with the MIA in June 2011. The appointment of Dr. Liu as head of the Asian Art department and the two soon-to-be announced Asian art curators will allow the MIA to continue to strengthen the scholarship and presentation of its Asian art collection, whose particular strengths lie in Chinese and Japanese art, but which also includes significant holdings in Himalayan, Indian, Southeast Asian, Islamic, and Korean art.
“Dr. Liu’s experience as a senior curator of Chinese art positions him well to manage our magnificent and world renowned collection of Chinese art and architecture,” said Kaywin Feldman, director and president of the MIA. “Yang has demonstrated excellence in building collections, curating exhibitions, and writing publications, all of which will add to and complement the strengths of our curatorial area. We also look forward to welcoming two other new Asian art curators as we expand and deepen the scholarship and exhibition of our collection. The two curators, one focusing on India and Southeast Asia, and the other focusing on Japan and Korea, will be selected by the MIA in the coming year.”
“We found Yang after a careful and extensive international search,” said Matthew Welch, deputy director of the MIA, and curator of Japanese and Korean art. “He brings international contacts and experience, an impressive list of exhibitions, and an expansive knowledge of Chinese art, and we look forward to him bringing his considerable expertise to bear on the MIA’s Asian collections and programming. We were also smitten by his open personality and quick sense of humor.”
Born in China, Liu Yang graduated from Southwest University in Sichuan with an M.A. degree, and has served as a lecturer at the Beijing International Studies University. In 1997 he completed his Ph.D. in Chinese art history and archaeology at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Exhibitions Dr. Liu curated during his tenure at the Art Gallery of New South Wales include: “Homage to the Ancestors: Ritual Art from the Chu Kingdom,” 2011; “The First Emperor: China’s Entombed Warriors,” 2010; “The Lost Buddhas: Chinese Buddhist Sculpture from Qingzhou;” 2008; “Translucent World: Chinese Jade from the Forbidden City,” 2007; “The Poetic Mandarin: Chinese Calligraphy from the James Hayes Collection,” 2005; “Fantastic Mountains: Chinese Landscape Painting from the Shanghai Museum,” 2004; “Masks of Mystery: Ancient Chinese Bronzes from Sanxingdui,” 2001; and “Fragrant Space: Chinese Flower and Bird Painting of the Ming and Qing Dynasties,” 2000. He was the principal author of the accompanying catalogues. Two of them, Fantastic Mountains and The Poetic Mandarin, have received book awards from the Art Association of Australia & New Zealand for best large and small catalogues 2004/2006.
“I am honored to have the opportunity to join this dynamic team at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and to make a contribution to an organization with such a great collection and scholarly tradition,” Dr. Liu said.
The MIA is also announces the establishment of two new associate curator positions in Asian art. The curatorships are being funded through a Mellon Challenge Grant, a National Endowment for the Humanities Challenge Grant, and $2.5 million in matching funding pledged by longtime museum patron Jane Emison and an anonymous private donor. Currently, searches are underway for these curators of Japanese and Korean art, and Indian and Southeast Asian art. “The MIA is honored to receive these generous investments,” said Feldman. “Now that Dr. Liu is on board, we look forward to moving ahead with these important searches and building the best possible team of Asian art curators,” she said.
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