Todoli awesome. (News).STEVEN HENRY MADOFF ON TATE Tate , (John Orley) Allen 1899-1979. American writer and editor. A leading exponent of New Criticism, he edited the Sewanee Review (1944-1946) and is known especially for his poetry, including "Ode to the Confederate Dead" (1926). MODERN'S NEW DIRECTOR LATE LAST MAY, a full eleven months after Lars Nittve Lars Nittve (born 17 September 1953) is a Swedish museologist and art critic. Between 1979 and 1985 he was an art critic on the Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet. , Tate Modern's first director, announced his resignation, the Spaniard Vicente Todoli was named as his replacement. The London press, having had ample time to prepare, welcomed him in typically raucous fashion. STOOGE stooge n. 1. The partner in a comedy team who feeds lines to the other comedian; a straight man. 2. One who allows oneself to be used for another's profit or advantage; a puppet. 3. Slang A stool pigeon. OR VISIONARY? TATE MODERN'S NEW BOSS, read the Times of London headline. In the Guardian, culture correspondent Maev Kennedy added her own acid commentary: "Everyone in the art world knew the job description should have read 'wanted, candidate to run Tate Modern The Tate Modern in London is Britain's national museum of international modern art and is, with Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool, Tate St Ives, and Tate Online[1], part of the group now known simply as Tate. and stand up to Sir Nicholas Serota.'" Serota, often called the most powerful man in British culture, oversees the quartet of Tate museums in London There are over 240 museums in London, England. A
Amid such cheering words, Todoli, 44, the founding director, in 1996, of the Museu Serralves in Porto, Portugal, takes up his new post this January--and he does so at a moment of extraordinary transition for the Tate as a whole. With the recent resignations of Jeremy Lewison and Sandy Nairne, the institution's directors of collections and programs, respectively; struggling attendance; and mounting financial pressures, including diminished government funding that may be frozen at its current level of about $43 million per annum Per annum Yearly. , Serota's museums are, in his decorous dec·o·rous adj. Characterized by or exhibiting decorum; proper: decorous behavior. [From Latin dec words, "evolving. These are not easy times, but they are exciting ones." Todoli was one of four finalists for the directorship. When asked to confirm the shortlist short·list also short-list n. A list of preferable items or candidates that have been selected for final consideration, as in making an award or filling a position. Noun 1. , Nadine Thompson, head of the Tate's press office, stated that she would only respond if the names were incorrect. There was no such reply. Two candidates repeatedly mentioned by independent sources are Richard Calvocoressi, director of the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh, holds the national collection of modern art. When opened in 1960, the collection was held in Inverleith House, at the Royal Botanic Gardens. in Edinburgh, and Paul Schimmel Schimmel is a German surname and may refer to:
In conversation, the winner from that shortlist is quick-witted and forceful. Asked about working with so hands-on a boss as Serota, Todoli replies in his rapid-fire, heavily accented English: "I have known Nick closely since the late '80s, and I have no doubt I can work with him and the team. The ego is not important, the action is. If I thought Nick would micromanage micromanage Administration A popular term for excess oversight of lower management by upper management , I would not have considered the job. This must be about trust, and I trust Nick." That is a remarkable leap of faith considering Serota's much documented record as a brilliant director challenged only by the notion of laissez-faire management. Todoli, a native Valencian, won a Fulbright Fellowship to study art history at Yale in the early '80s and then went on to the Graduate Center of the City University of New York The City University of New York (CUNY; acronym: IPA pronunciation: [kjuni]), is the public university system of New York City. and the Independent Study Program at the Whitney Museum. From 1986 to 1996, he served as artistic director of Spain's Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno (IVAM IVAM Institut Valencià d'Art Modern (Spain) ) and quickly established both himself and the institution as rising players on the European scene. Dan Cameron, chief curator at the New Museum of Contemporary Art This article is about New Museum of Contemporary Art. For other Museums named Museum of Contemporary Art, see Museum of Contemporary Art. The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of and an acquaintance of Todoli for a dozen years, notes, "Vicente put that museum on the map through sheer will, and the moment he left it sank back into semi-oblivion. He broke new ground by showing younger international artists in a country that was still inward looking and didn't grant major exhibitions to artists who weren't superstars." At IVAM, Todoli brought an ambitious range of (predominantly male) talent to Spain--Richard Prince, Allan McCollum, Tony Cragg, Eva Hesse, Lawrence Weiner, and Richard Hamilton among them--as well as surprises like August Strindberg, the nineteenth-century dramatist of Nordic angst hardly known as a painter. "My point of view is very contemporary," Todoli says, "but you can go as far back as you think it makes sense." That approach may prove to be fascinating at the Tate, whose collections date from 1500, though the new director won't yet speak about his plans for programming. As revealing as Todoli's curatorial choices at IVAM is the way in which he chose to leave. In the mid-'90s a new Spanish government came to power, and a new general manager, Juan Manuel Bonet, was brought in to IVAM. "Bonet, who is now director of the Reina Sofia in Madrid, was an art critic," Todoli recalls. "He told me that everything I wanted to do I would have to negotiate with him. I could not compromise myself that way. I resigned in March 1996." A notable reaction from a man who speaks of the triviality of ego. Todoli had been approached the previous January about leading the Museu Serralves, Portugal's first contemporary art museum. The untenable tensions at IVAM made his decision to leave all the more apparent. Located on forty-five acres in the coastal city of Porto, the museum tantalized the Spaniard with a new building and a grand park to fill with art. Joined by a staff of just two curators, he established a collection of Conceptual art from the 1960s and '70s, a narrow band of work that, in his opinion, captured a moment of seismic shift in culture. His acclaimed opening show, "Circa 1968," included everyone from Robert Rauschenberg to Michael Snow, Joan Jonas, Christian Boltanski, and Gordon Matta-Clark. Subsequent exhibitions, many guestcurated, have been critical and popular successes, drawing an annual audience of 300,000. When asked how he sees his role, Todoli replies, "I think of my job as being like that of a film editor and producer--the ones who tell the story from all the footage and then get it made. At heart I'm a curator, and being a director is always temporary." The comment is striking from the new director of Tate Modern, yet it may show particular foresight. The recent round of high-level staffing changes at the Tate are an opportunity but also a hazard for an outsider who must learn the idioms of a deeply bureaucratic culture under heavy financial constraints. How temporary or durable Todoli's tenure will be is a matter of speculation in London and beyond. Exciting times, indeed. Steven Henry Madoff is a frequent contributor to Artforum. |
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