#museums

dezeen@xn--y9azesw6bu.xn--y9a3aq

Maria Nicanor appointed director of New York City's Cooper Hewitt museum

image

Maria Nicanor

Curator and historian Maria Nicanor has been announced as the new director of the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum after a lengthy interim period following the resignation of former director Caroline Baumann in 2020.

Nicanor, who will officially start the role on 21 March, joins the museum as it celebrates its 125th anniversary and will be responsible for a collection of approximately 215,000 objects, as well as 86 employees and a $15 million annual budget.

Her role will involve leading the Cooper Hewitt museum's programme of exhibitions, which includes a newly launched digital exhibition platform.

Nicanor will also oversee various educational projects such as Cooper Hewitt's annual National Design Awards, a renowned initiative that aims to highlight the power and importance of design.

Maria NicanorNicanor has been named director of the Cooper Hewitt museum. Image is courtesy of PhotoShelter

"Joining the Smithsonian family and building upon Cooper Hewitt’s past successes provides the opportunity to bring together the three most important pillars of my career: design and architecture, public service and museum work," Nicanor said.

"We can’t ignore that it’s a particularly complicated time for museums in general right now. Not just what we do, but how we do it, for whom and with whom, are essential questions for design museums to consider."

Nicanor will "help Cooper Hewitt reach audiences around the world"

Nicanor is an architecture and design curator, historian and the executive director of the Rice Design Alliance (RDA), a public outreach programme run by Houston's Rice School of Architecture since 1972.

Born in Barcelona, she has an extensive history of work in art and design museums including the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York and London's V&A. She also led the opening of the Norman Foster Foundation in Madrid.

[ Carnegie Mansion by Cooper Hewitt

Read:

"I hope the Smithsonian uses this whole debacle to rethink the Cooper Hewitt"

](https://www.dezeen.com/2020/02/27/cooper-hewitt-smithsonian-design-museum-opinion-aaron-betsky/)

"Maria has an impressive passion for design and a thorough understanding of the impact it has on our shared future," said Lonnie Bunch, secretary of the Smithsonian.

"Her vision and leadership will help Cooper Hewitt reach even more audiences across the nation and around the world."

Appointment follows 2020 resignation of previous director Caroline Baumann

Located on Museum Mile in New York City's Upper East Side, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum is one of 19 museums attached to the Smithsonian Institution, the world's largest museum, education and research complex.

Nicanor's appointment to the museum follows the resignation of Caroline Baumann, who served as director from 2013 to 2020 but resigned after an investigation into her conduct in acquiring a wedding dress and venue.

Ruki Neuhold-Ravikumar and John Davis have acted as interim directors since 2020.

The post Maria Nicanor appointed director of New York City's Cooper Hewitt museum appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #design #news #museums #cooperhewitt #smithsonianinstitution #newyorkcity

danie10@squeet.me

Obscenely detailed 717 gigapixel scan lets you peer at Rembrandt’s Night Watch masterpiece online from the Rijksmuseum website

Bild/Foto
The Rijksmuseum has released what it claims is the “largest and most detailed photograph of any artwork,” and it’s viewable for free on its website. The scan is of Rembrandt van Rijn’s 1642 masterpiece The Night Watch, a roughly 12 by 14 foot painting which is currently the focus of a massive research and restoration project called “Operation Night Watch.”

The technical details of the scan are staggering. In a press release, the Rijksmuseum explains that it’s made up of 8,439 individual photographs taken with a 100 megapixel Hasselblad H6D 400 MS camera. Neural networks were reportedly used to check each image for colour and sharpness, and an AI system helped stitch these photos together into a single image.

Arguably, it’s an even better experience than seeing the painting in the flesh, since this software allows you to really press your nose up against it in a way that would get you thrown out of most museums.

See https://www.theverge.com/tldr/2022/1/11/22877951/rembrandt-night-watch-digital-gigapixel-scan

#technology #artwork #museums
#Blog, ##artwork, ##museums, ##technology