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About the Museum / MIA Hires New AONA Curator
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MIA Hires New AONA Curator
“We are thrilled that Dr. Grootaers has accepted the important position of curator of the department of African, Oceanic, and Native American Art,” said Feldman. “Under the previous leadership of Dr. Evan Maurer, Director Emeritus of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, this area of the museum’s permanent collection grew from its beginnings to one of international renown. In his position at the MIA, Dr. Grootaers will further expand this important part of the collection and enhance the museum’s exhibition program.” Dr. Grootaers received his Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Chicago. He taught school in Gabon and Zimbabwe for three years prior to his graduate work, and has conducted extensive fieldwork among the Zande people in the Central African Republic. Currently working as an independent scholar in Belgium, Dr. Grootaers is a senior consultant for the Museum für Völkerkunde in Hamburg and the Afrika Museum in Berg-en-Dal, Netherlands, where he organizes exhibitions and publishes catalogues. He has worked for the last three years on a large and ambitious survey exhibition about the art and culture from the African heartland, titled Ubangi. This extensive exhibition of more than two hundred objects from fifty-plus European museums and private collections worldwide premiered last October at the Afrika Museum. Dr. Grootaers edited the accompanying 327-page catalogue and contributed several essays. Dr. Grootaers taught at the Catholic University of Louvain and the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Antwerp, and lectured at museums throughout Europe, including the Quai Branly in Paris. He is currently working on several publications for European museums, including a book for the Musée Jacques Chirac in Sarran, France. “I am very excited about moving to the Twin Cities and being a part of the great team at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts,” Dr. Grootaers said. “It is an internationally renowned museum, and I am looking forward to expanding its African art holdings. And I lived for about five years in Chicago, where I learned to enjoy the winter!” The MIA began acquiring art from Africa, Oceania, and the Americas as early as 1928, and formed a curatorial department in 1971 to focus on objects from these regions. Many important pieces and groups of objects number among the department’s holding of more than three thousand works of art. |
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