Month: November 2018

Where in the World is Salvator Mundi?

Where in the World is Salvator Mundi?

A year ago this month, Christie’s Auctions sold Salvator Mundi, one of about twenty known paintings by Leonardo da Vinci, for over $450 million, shattering all previous auction records and becoming the most expensive painting to ever be sold. The identity of the mysterious over-the-phone buyer 

Internship at the Tsongas Industrial History Center

Internship at the Tsongas Industrial History Center

  I had the pleasure of undertaking my practicum at The Tsongas Industrial History Center this fall. Now the Center is looking for new interns to join the team. I had a fantastic time at TIHC this fall and would recommend interning here for all 

Weekly Jobs Roundup!

Weekly Jobs Roundup!

Your Jobs Postings for the Week of November 19th! Have a Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Northeast

Program Assistant [Vermont Historical Society- Barre, VT]

Collections Project Manager (temp) [Cuttyhunk Historical Society- Cuttyhunk, MA]

Collections handling and Database Internship [Concord Museum- Concord, MA]

Director [Patton Homestead- Hamilton, MA]

Chief Development Officer [USS Constitution- Boston, MA]

Maida and George Abrams Curator of Drawing [Harvard Art Museums- Boston, MA]

Museum Assistant [South Hampton History Museum- South Hampton, NY]

 

Mid- Atlantic

Arts Non-Profit Management Internship [James Renwick Alliance- Bethesda, MD] 

Educator of Community Engagement [National Building Museum- Washington, DC]

Director of Interpretation and Education [National Trust for Historic Preservation- Washington, DC]

Southeast

Assistant Collections Manager [University Museum and Historic Houses- Oxford, MS]

 

Midwest

Education Programs Coordinator [Edsel and Eleanor Ford House- Grosse Pointe Shores, MI]

 

West

Museum Curator of Earth Sciences [San Bernardino County Museum- San Bernardino, CA]

Curatorial Practices Specialist [Anchorage Museum Association- Anchorage, AK]

Director of Education and Interpretation [Fowler Museum at UCLA- Los Angeles, CA]

 

Missing Picasso Possibly Found 6 Years After Heist

Missing Picasso Possibly Found 6 Years After Heist

Six years after the art heist of the Kunsthal Museum in Rotterdam, one painting has possibly reappeared in Romania under strange circumstances. The painting, Picasso’s Tête d’Arlequin, was one of seven works by masters including Matisse, Monet, and Gauguin valued at over $23 million. Until the 

Weekly Jobs Roundup!

Weekly Jobs Roundup!

Greetings readers! Here is the national jobs roundup for the week of November 12th: Northeast Public Programs Assistant Manager [Museum on Blue Mountain Lake- Blue Mountain Lake, NY] Curator of Education [Seal Cove Auto Museum- Mount Desert Island, ME] Associate Educator for Interpretation [Portland Museum 

The Centennial NEMA Conference and the Stamford Hilton Boycott

The Centennial NEMA Conference and the Stamford Hilton Boycott

This past week many museum professionals and emerging professionals attended the New England Museum Association’s annual conference Museums on the Move. This year was a big year for NEMA celebrating its 100th annual conference. The theme of the conference was meant to investigate how museums have evolved over the past century and how they are “positioning themselves for success in the century ahead.” However, this years conference was marred by situations beyond the conference planners control that brought up many insightful discussions both at the conference and across the field.

According to NEMA’s Statement Regarding the Labor Situation at the Stamford Hilton Hotel and Executive Meeting Center, NEMA went into contract with the hotel for the centennial conference in August of 2016. In December 2017, workers at the hotel voted to join Unite Here local 217 with a vote of 110 to 5. These workers entered into this vote after months of intimidation strategies from the hotel owners including the presence of armed guards and the hiring of anti-union consultants.

UNITE HERE is a labor union representing 270,000 workers across Canada and the United States. They boast a diverse membership, predominately women and people of color, from across many industries. Their goal is “to enable people of all backgrounds to achieve greater equality and opportunity.” The hotel workers at the Stamford Hilton are currently in contract negotiations with the Stamford Hilton for three main demands: better wages, free quality healthcare, and pensions.

NEMA chose not to change locations for the conference as progress had been made in talks between the two sides over the summer. However, in recent weeks the headway made deteriorated and demonstrations and picketing at the hotel has continued. While NEMA choose to continue with the centennial conference they opened lines of communication with the hotel workers and invited union leaders to speak at the crowd at the keynote meeting.  Pampi of Decolonize our Museums conference panel facilitator, furthered lines of communications and disseminated information on requests from the hotel workers including the cancellation of hotel rooms and moving workshops off site. The purpose was to show both the union workers and the hotel management our solidarity to the workers strife. So why is it important for museum professionals to show solidarity to unionized hotel workers?

As museum professionals, workers, and emerging professionals we must first and foremost have empathy. As human, we must have empathy for the struggles of others. However, beyond that, museum workers have much in common with hotel and other service industry workers. Not just in the long hours and low wages we share, but in the structures of the industries that often relegate women and people of color to the lower levels. In recent years many non-profits have been turning to unions to organize workers and collaborate on common causes and increasingly museum security and custodial staff have unionized. Museums such as MoMA and Plimoth Plantation have unionized workers and have successfully fought for better working conditions, wages, and healthcare. Other organizations such as #Museum WorkersSpeak have attempted to look “at the relationship between museums’ stated commitments to social value and their internal labor practices.” We stand in solidarity because these labor issues effect this profession as well. We enter the museum field drawn in by a love of museums, but research shows many emerging professionals leave do to low wages, insufficient benefits, and lack of job prospects among other reasons. What more can we and should we do to create better labor environments for both ourselves and others?