Interested in
a museum career? Join us Thursday, February 10, at 5:30 pm, for an evening
exploring a variety of museum careers with a special group of museum
professionals, including Skidmore alumni. Geared toward Skidmore College
students and recent graduates, this Zoom event will offer students the
opportunity to hear first-hand about various types of museums and the variety
of jobs within them. The event will also be an opportunity for attendees to ask
questions and to network with the panelists and each other.
Panelists for
this event include:
·
Camille Brown, Curatorial Assistant at The
Phillips Collection
·
Darius Epps, Fellowship and Intern Program
Coordinator at Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and
Culture
·
Hilary Katz ‘13, Manager of Teacher
Initiatives, The Phillips Collection
·
S. Ryan Schmidt, Senior Exhibition Lighting
and A/V Designer at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
·
Leah Schwaikert '17, Development Writer at
the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
·
Angelik Vizcarrondo-Laboy, Independent
Curator
·
Neil Wu-Gibbs, Chief of Staff & Director
of Special Events and Board Relations at the Museum of Chinese in America
The moderators
for the event are Evan Little '22, the 2020-21 Charina Endowment Fund Endowed
Intern at the Tang, and Maria Staack '22, 2020-21 Meg Reitman Jacobs Endowed
Intern. Both are also members of the Tang Student Advisory Council.
This online
event is free and open to Skidmore students and recent graduates. The format
will be a one-hour moderated panel discussion via Zoom Webinar, followed by two
breakout sessions. Links provided upon registration. Closed Captioning will be
provided. Register via Zoom.
Exploring
Museum Careers is co-sponsored by the Skidmore College Arts Administration
Department.
About the Participants
Camille
Brown is the Curatorial Assistant at the
Phillips Collection. Prior to joining the Phillips, Camille assisted on the
exhibitions Programmed: Rules, Codes, and Choreographies in Art, 1965 - 2018 at
the Whitney Museum, Tony Oursler: Tear of the Cloud at the Public Art Fund, and
Unseen Picasso and Alternate Realities: Altoon, Diebenkorn, Lobdell, Woelffer
at the Norton Simon Museum of Art. Camille received her Bachelor’s degree in
History from Loyola University New Orleans, and graduated with her Master’s
degree in Museum Studies from New York University where she completed her
Master’s thesis titled Illuminating Difficult Histories: Art, Exhibitions, and
Curatorial Strategies.
Darius Epps serves as the Fellowship and Intern Program Coordinator at the
National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC). In this role,
he manages and oversees all aspects of the museum’s fellowship and internship
program which offers educational and professional experiences for undergraduate
and graduate students, and recent alumni to work closely with professionals and
scholars in the museum field. In 2021, collaborating organization, Urban
Alliance awarded him Mentor of the Year for Greater DC Region for crafting a
memorable internship experience for the entire cohort that year at NMAAHC.
Prior to joining the NMAAHC, Darius worked just shy of a decade at Wolf Trap
Foundation for the Performing Arts as the Manager for Internships and Community
Programs. This position allowed him to empower artists of all ages by creating
dynamic classes, and programming internships and apprenticeships to prepare the
next generation of performing arts professionals for their careers. Darius is a
former actor having performed in regional and touring theatre productions and
received his BFA in Professional Theatre from North Carolina A&T State
University.
Hilary Katz
‘13 embraces culturally responsive pedagogy
in her life and work as a museum educator. As Manager of Teacher Initiatives at
The Phillips Collection (Washington, DC), she designs digital resources,
curriculum, and lesson plans. She teaches professional development
opportunities for educators—notably, a 12-week arts integration course in
collaboration with University of Maryland and a week-long Summer Teacher
Institute. Katz previously worked in the Education Department at Massachusetts
Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA). She oversaw public
programs, including training tour guides, directing Art Ninjas Camp, and
organizing a 4,000-attendee annual Free Day. During graduate school, Katz
developed and implemented tours, artmaking, and in-gallery interpretation at
Dublin Arts Council (Dublin, OH). To foster students’ multicultural
competencies and writing skills, Katz taught the undergraduate course Visual
Culture: Investigating Diversity & Social Justice at The Ohio State
University (Columbus, OH). Katz holds her MA in Art Education, specializing in
Museum Education, from Ohio State; she received a BA in Art History, with Arts
Administration and Italian minors, from Skidmore College in 2013.
S. Ryan
Schmidt is the Senior Exhibition Lighting and
A/V Designer at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Ryan is an award-winning
lighting designer with a career that has spanned museum exhibitions, live
events, theater, opera, and architecture. Before joining the VMFA she worked at
the Metropolitan Museum of Art and managed an extensive freelance career that
included designing lighting, projections and scenery across the globe.
Leah
Schwaikert ‘17 is an experienced development
professional in the nonprofit arts and culture sector. Since spring of 2021,
she has served as the Development Writer for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum’s Campaign and Restricted Giving team. Leah previously worked for
Roundabout Theatre Company as the Foundation and Government Giving Officer and
Board and Government Relations Assistant. Prior to her four-year tenure with
Roundabout, Leah held seasonal positions with the Boston Symphony Orchestra
(Tanglewood Music Festival), Saratoga Performing Arts Center, and Barrington
Stage Company. Leah received a Bachelor of Science in Management and Business
from Skidmore College, with minors in Arts Administration and Music. She is
currently enrolled in Columbia University’s Master of Science in Nonprofit
Management program.
Angelik
Vizcarrondo-Laboy is a Los Angeles-based independent
curator, writer, and arts administrator of contemporary art and craft, focusing
on ceramics. She has curated exhibitions at the Center for Craft, NC, Collar
Works, NY, The Jane Hartsook Gallery, NY, and has upcoming projects at Mindy
Solomon Gallery, FL, Crocker Art Museum, CA, and Grounds for Sculpture, NJ.
Vizcarrondo-Laboy has written for publications such as The Journal of Modern
Craft, American Craft magazine, Cultured, and multiple exhibition catalogs. She
is the co-creator and co-host of the podcast Clay in Color. She most recently
served as Assistant Curator at the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD), NY. She
helped organize over twenty exhibitions over six years and oversaw the Burke
Prize, a prestigious contemporary craft award. She holds a BA in Art History
from the University of Florida and an MA from the Bard Graduate Center, NY, in
Decorative Arts, Design History, & Material Culture.
Neil
Wu-Gibbs serves as a thought partner and trusted
advisor to the president, who leads major special events, facilitates
president-initiated projects, and manages human resources. Neil proactively
identifies opportunities and supports efficient communication across the museum
as the principal liaison to the board of directors and the associate board. He
advocates for expanding the museum’s outreach to new immigrants of Asian
descent and the Asian LGBTQ community through two initiatives, “Fashioning
MOCA” and “MOCA PRIDE.”
Neil started
his MOCA journey as a collections intern in 2015 and rejoined the museum in
2018. In the interim, he became a burgeoning museum professional and historian
with specialties in 20th- and 21st-century fashion and a specific focus on
contemporary Asian art. He was the curator of costume for the touring
exhibition Marvel: Universe of Super Heroes, produced by Semmel Concerts
Entertainment GmbH and Marvel Entertainment, and a curatorial researcher at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute’s spring 2017 exhibition Rei Kawakubo/Comme
des Garçons: Art of the In-Between and the spring 2016 exhibition Manus x
Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology.
Neil
is quadrilingual, speaking English, Cantonese, Mandarin, and basic Japanese. He
holds an MA in fashion studies from Parsons School of Design, The New School; a
BA with honors in fashion and textile management from Nottingham Trent
University in the UK; a certificate in fashion curation from the Victoria and
Albert Museum, London; and a certificate of human resource management from
SHRM. Neil is an at-large steering committee member of the LGBTQ Alliance of
the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) and a contributor to the LGBTQ Welcoming
Guidelines for Museums. He was the awardee of the AAM’s 2017 Annual Fellowship
of Diversity, Equity, Accessibility, and Inclusion