Maria Balshaw

Maria Jane Balshaw CBE (born 24 January 1970[1]) is director of the Tate art museums and galleries. The appointment was confirmed by the UK Prime Minister on 16 January 2017, making her the first female director of the Tate.

Maria Balshaw

Born (1970-01-24) 24 January 1970
Birmingham, England
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Sussex
OccupationDirector of Tate
Notes

Balshaw has been director of the Whitworth, University of Manchester and also of Manchester City Galleries, which includes Manchester Art Gallery and Gallery of Costume. Until May 2017 she was Director of Culture for Manchester City Council.[2] Balshaw also serves on the National Council of the Arts Council England.[3]

On 12 June 2015 Balshaw was appointed a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, in the Queen's birthday honours list, for Services to the Arts.[4]

Early life and education

Born in Birmingham, Balshaw grew up in Leicester and Northampton.[5] After gaining a BA (Hons) in English Literature and Cultural Studies at the University of Liverpool (1991),[6] she attended the University of Sussex, where she gained an MA in Critical Theory (1992), followed by a DPhil in African American Visual and Literary Culture (1996).[7]

Career

Early career

Balshaw was appointed Lecturer in Cultural Studies at University College Northampton in 1993. In 1997, Balshaw joined the University of Birmingham as Research Fellow and Lecturer in Visual Culture.[6]

In 2002, Balshaw left academia to become Director of Creative Partnerships in Birmingham.[6] She worked for Peter Jenkinson OBE, National Director of Creative Partnerships and former West Midlands colleague where he had been founder director of the New Art Gallery, Walsall.[8]

As part of the newly formed Creative Partnerships, Balshaw was tasked with bringing arts organisations and artists into partnerships with schools. A role which taught Balshaw "a tremendous amount about how to inspire, persuade and cajole unlike partners into common goals".[6]

In 2004, Balshaw was selected as one of the inaugural fellows for the Clore Leadership programme. Initiated by the Clore Duffield Foundation, the Programme is the UK's first cross-disciplinary leadership programme for the cultural and creative sector.[9] Balshaw was successful in her application to join the scheme from over 400 other applicants.[10] Since completing the year long course Balshaw has been appointed a member of the Strategic Advisory Board for the Clore Programme.[6]

Upon completion of the Clore Leadership Programme, Balshaw acted as Regional Director of the West Midlands Creative Partnerships programme and then worked for nine months as Director of External Relations and Development for ACE: West Midlands.[11]

The Whitworth

The Whitworth

In 2006, Balshaw was headhunted to become the Director of the Whitworth. Throughout her work at the Whitworth, Balshaw has featured a broad range of disciplines championing art from around the world in particular West and South African art and the work of female artists. She has been quoted as saying "We do have a lot of women artists on show at the Whitworth, but only because they’re really good. That’s fair."[12]

Balshaw's appointment at the Whitworth made her the second female director in the history of the gallery. Margaret Pilkington being the only other female director from 1925 to 1945.[13] In June 2017, Balshaw stepped down as Director of the Whitworth to become the first female Director of Tate.

Key exhibitions

During her time as director at the Whitworth, Balshaw has been responsible for commissioning a wide range of exhibitions. Some of the most notable include:

  • Lynn Hershman Leeson – Autonomous Agents (2007) – a wide range of the artist's work – from the Roberta Breitmore series (1974–78) to videos from the 1980s and interactive installations that use the Internet and artificial intelligence software.[14]
  • Marina Abramović – Presents (2009) – As part of the Manchester International Festival – Abramovich stripped the Whitworth of its artworks and replaced it with fourteen performance artists including Kira O’Reilly’s and Ivan Civic.[15]
  • Subversive spaces (2009) – looking at the relationship between surrealism and contemporary art, this exhibition included work from Sarah Lucas, Douglas Gordon, Gregor Schneider, Paul Delvaux, Brassaï, Dalí and Magritte.[16] Nearly 50,000 visitors came to the Whitworth during the exhibition, a huge increase on the same period in previous years.[17] Gregor Schneider's installation, Kinderzimmer transformed the usually sunlit galleries at the Whitworth into a pitch black space with just a doorway to aim for. Visitors brushed against various walls and curtains before stumbling towards an eerily lit nursery.[18] Commissioned by the Whitworth for the exhibition Subversive Spaces, Kinderzimmer is the most significant UK installation by Schneider since his Die Familie Schneider in 2004.[19]
  • Walls Are Talking (2010) – the UK's first exhibition of wallpapers.[20]
  • Mary Kelly – Projects 1973–2010 (2011) – four decades of projects by American artist Mary Kelly were brought together in the most comprehensive exhibition of her work presented.[21]
  • The Land Between Us (2011) – historic and contemporary landscape art exploring its imagery, and the places and power associated with it.[22]
  • Anri Sala and Šejla Kamerić – 1395 Days without Red & Projections (2011) – as part of the Manchester International Festival, two films about the siege of Sarajevo were premiered at the Whitworth alongside a number of previous Artangel film projects, including films and installations made by Francis Alÿs, Atom Egoyan and Catherine Yass.[23] Also as part of MIF Tony Oursler's Influence Machine filled the trees of Whitworth Park with glimmering ghostly faces from the past.[23]
  • Jane and Louise Wilson – Post-atrocity exhibition (2012–2013) – An exhibition which included a world premiere where the Wilsons filmed the workers of Chernobyl in a new town. Atomgrad (Nature Abhors a Vacuum) documented how the bright future promised by nuclear power turned out to be dangerous and unpredictable.[24]
  • Nancy Holt – Land Art (2013) – an exhibition of Holt's fascination with time and space [25]
  • Nikhil Chopra – Coal On Cotton (2013) – Chopra lived and worked in the half completed wing of a new gallery space at the Whitworth for 65 hours during Manchester International Festival. His work explored Manchester's textile history and the people involved in both India and Britain.[26]
  • Cornelia Parker (2015) – an extensive exhibition that included a wide range of work. The exhibition included The War Room (one of two new commissions) and Parker's most famous work Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View (1991). Parker also worked with scientists at the University of Manchester including Kostya Novoselov and Andre Geim. Novoselov created samples of graphene from works in the Whitworth's collection including drawings by William Blake, Turner, Constable and Picasso. He also used a pencil-written letter by the man who split the atom, Sir Ernest Rutherford. The new sample of graphene was turned into a work of art by Parker to be used on the opening night of the new gallery. A firework display was triggered by Novoselov breathing on a graphene sensor created with a Blake painting.[27]

Capital transformation

Balshaw started the process of reviving the Whitworth in 2007 with the launch of a new capital build project. Funding for the ambitious project totalling £15m came from the University Of Manchester, Heritage Lottery Fund, Arts Council England, trusts and foundations including Clore Duffield, Wolfson Foundation, Headley Trust, The Granada Foundation as well as Friends of the Whitworth and private donors.[28][29][30]

In 2009, with the support of the Royal Institute of British Architects, Balshaw ran an international competition, that attracted 139 submissions from architects from all over the world.[28] The competition was chaired by Tom Bloxham and included Peter Saville as a judge.[31] McInnes Usher McKnight Architects (MUMA) were appointed architects for the project and building work began in 2013.[32]

On completion, the gallery has doubled its exhibition space and opened up the gallery to Whitworth park. As The Guardian reported: "At the front, they have softened the forbidding entrance with a sculpture forecourt and an inviting sequence of steps, ramps and benches; but the real meat of the project is saved for the back, where MUMA have extended the symmetrical composition with a pair of wings that project out into Whitworth Park, framing a new sculpture garden. "It’s about having open arms and saying: ‘This place belongs to you.’" says Balshaw. "Before, we turned our back with a blank brick wall – now you can see what’s going on inside."[33]

Balshaw commissioned landscape architect Sarah Price to design two new areas of landscaping named the Art and Orchard garden[29] with other new facilities including a study centre, learning studio and a collections centre.[34]

Reopening The Whitworth reopened on 14 February 2015, with over 18,000 people attending the new gallery in the first two days [35] to explore new exhibitions from Cornelia Parker and Cai Guo-Qiang. In just six weeks over 100,000 visitors had explored the new gallery in the park.[36] The new Whitworth was named RIBA NW building of the year in May 2015.[37]

Manchester Art Gallery

In 2011, Balshaw took on the role of Director of Manchester City Galleries alongside her duties at the Whitworth. This dual directorship brought the two institutions' collections of historic and modern art into alliance for the first time in their history. Upon the appointment, Richard Leese leader of Manchester City Council, said creating a joint director role for the two galleries would “not only safeguard, but significantly enhance the city’s cultural reputation”.[38]

Key exhibitions

During her time as director, Manchester Art Gallery hosted a wide range of contemporary and historical exhibitions including:

  • Ford Madox Brown – Pre-Raphaelite Pioneer (2012) – Bringing together 140 works from the Pre-Raphaelite painter, this was the first exhibition from Brown since 1964.[39]
  • We Face Forward[40] (2012) – a city wide exhibition of contemporary west African art that attracted more than a quarter of a million visitors across Manchester and included 33 exhibitors from nine countries including Georges Adéagbo, El Anatsui, Romuald Hazoumè and George Osodi.[41] The event, led by Balshaw, received funding from the Paul Hamlyn Foundation[42] and included work in the Manchester Art Gallery, the Whitworth, The Manchester Museum, Band on the Wall, The Bridgewater Hall, The Printworks, Gallery Of Costume, National Football Museum and Royal Northern College of Music. Balshaw commented ahead of We Face Forward: "Manchester's connections to West Africa are part of its industrial and trading history. This exhibition brings the dynamism of West African art today to Manchester, as the world comes to the UK for the Olympics."[41]
  • Jeremy Deller – All That Is Solid Melts Into Air (2013/2014) – Deller created a personal view of the cultural, sociological and technological impact of the Industrial Revolution using a combination of artworks, objects and historical accounts.[43]
  • Joana Vasconcelos – Time Machine (2014) – the UK’s largest exhibition of works by the Portuguese contemporary artist. This show included over twenty of Vasconcelos’ most significant sculptures including the world premiere of a new textile work.[44]
  • Ryan Gander – Make Every Show Like It's Your Last (2014) – Gander's largest UK show to date.[45]

The Manchester Partnership

In 2012, Balshaw led the partnership of Manchester City Galleries, Whitworth Art Gallery and The Manchester Museum in their application for £5.3m of funding from the Arts Council England.[46][47]

Manchester City Council

During 2014, as part of her role as Director of Culture, Balshaw worked to persuade George Osborne to commit significant funding to building a new artistic and cultural centre in Manchester. In 2014, the government announced funding of £78m for The Factory,[48] a brand new artistic hub on the old Granada Studios site in the city’s Castlefield district.[49]

Tate

Balshaw has been Director of Tate art museums and galleries since 2017,[50] succeeding Sir Nicholas Serota (1988 to 2017). Her appointment was confirmed by the UK Prime Minister on 16 January 2017, making her the first female director of the Tate.

Personal life

Balshaw married Professor Liam Kennedy in 1997; they have a son and a daughter. The couple separated in 2006. Balshaw married Nick Merriman, who was then director of the Manchester Museum, in 2010. They live in Manchester with Balshaw's children.[51] In 2014, Balshaw’s Vivienne Westwood wedding dress was included in the Something Blue exhibition at the Gallery of Costumes.[52]

Balshaw is a director of the Rothesay Pavilion Charity. The charity was set up in 2014 with the aim of raising funds to transform the category A listed Pavilion into a new cultural centre for Bute. In 2015, the charity reached its funding target of £8m. The new development will upgrade the main auditorium and add a second performance space for young people. There will also be new gallery space, a bistro, shops and bars along with a new multi-purpose rooftop space. [53]

In August 2020 Balshaw was the guest for BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs. Her book choice was Vickery’s Folk Flora: an A-Z of the Folklore and Uses of British and Irish Plants by Roy Vickery, her luxury item was a full set of flower and vegetable seeds an her favourite track was "Waiting for the Great Leap Forward" by Billy Bragg. In the programme she revealed that, prior to the birth of her son, she had suffered three miscarriages.[54]

References

  1. Staff writer (17 June 2011). "The tales of one city". Arts Industry. Archived from the original on 8 January 2016.
  2. "Maria Balshaw". art.mmu.ac.uk. Manchester School of Art.
  3. "Maria Balshaw appointed to the Board of Arts Council England". gov.uk. GOV.UK.
  4. Press Association (12 June 2015). "Queen's birthday honours list 2015: GCB, DBE and CBE". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  5. Mark Brown (17 January 2017). "Maria Balshaw's Tate appointment confirmed by prime minister". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  6. Staff writer (11 February 2015). "Jobs Ladder". Arts Professional.
  7. Balshaw, Maria (1998). 'City of refuge': Harlem and urban aesthetic twentieth-century African American literature (PhD thesis). University of Sussex. OCLC 59429343.
  8. "People: Peter Jenkinson OBE". creativeconomy.britishcouncil.org. Creative Economy, British Council.
  9. "About us". cloreleadership.org. The Clore Leadership Programme.
  10. Staff writer (8 June 2004). "So are these the faces of the future in British arts?". The Independent. Independent Print Ltd.
  11. "Profiles". manchester.ac.uk. University of Manchester.
  12. Swirsky, Rebecca (15 March 2015). "Remaking the Whitworth". rebeccaswirsky.wordpress.com. Rebecca Swirsky via WordPress.
  13. "The new gallery: history". whitworth.manchester.ac.uk. The Whitworth.
  14. Jones, Amelia (September 2008). "This Life". frieze (117). Archived from the original on 7 September 2015.
  15. Stubbs, Susie (2009). "From the archives: A conversation between Marina Abramović and Maria Balshaw". Creative Tourist.
  16. Staff writer (25 March 2009). "The art of surrealism: Subversive Spaces at Manchester's Whitworth gallery". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  17. "Animating galleries – fresh perspectives on Surrealism and contemporary art". alc.manchester.ac.uk. School of Arts, Languages and Cultures, The University of Manchester.
  18. MEN (4 March 2009). Domestic terror. Manchester Evening News. Trinity Mirror.
  19. Moss, Richard (2 March 2009). "Gregor Schneider: Die Kinderzimmer at The Whitworth Art Gallery". culture24.org.uk. Culture24.
  20. Higgins, Charlotte (6 February 2010). "No flowers please: wallpaper exhibition exposes the dark side of the home". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  21. Kelly, Mary. "Announcement". marykellyartist.com. Mary Kelly.
  22. Griffiths, Mary (2011). "About". The Land Between Us via WordPress.
  23. Searle, Adrian (4 July 2011). "A return to Sarajevo". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  24. Taber, Alexander (4 January 2013). "Review: Jane and Louise Wilson, Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester". Corridor 8.
  25. Stansfield, John (7 June 2013). "Last chance: Nancy Holt's Land Art at Whitworth Art Gallery". Manchester Wire.
  26. Sooke, Alastair (8 July 2013). "Nikhil Chopra: Coal on Cotton, Whitworth Art Gallery, review". The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group.
  27. "Current exhibitions: Cornelia Parker". whitworth.manchester.ac.uk. The Whitworth. Archived from the original on 11 May 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  28. Smith, Roland; Addelman, Mike (18 February 2011). "Award set to transform Whitworth Art Gallery". hlf.org.uk. Heritage Lottery Fund.
  29. Mairs, Jessica (3 February 2015). "MUMA unveils glass and brick extensions to Manchester's Whitworth gallery". dezeen.com. Dezeen.
  30. Keighren, Jon (27 January 2012). "£390,000 boost for Whitworth Art Gallery and Manchester Museum". manchester.ac.uk. The University of Manchester.
  31. McGregor, Shelia (20 February 2015). "The new-look Whitworth Art Gallery". culture24.org.uk. Culture24.
  32. Hopkirk, Elizabeth. "MUMA's £15m Whitworth Art Gallery tops out". BD Online. UBM.
  33. Wainwright, Oliver (11 February 2015). "Hello world: the new Whitworth Art Gallery". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  34. Staff writer (18 February 2015). "Refurbished Whitworth Gallery attracts 18,000 visitors on opening weekend". artscouncil.org.uk. Arts Council England. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015.
  35. Pidd, Helen (16 February 2015). "18,000 visit Manchester's revamped Whitworth in opening weekend". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  36. Stubbs, Susie (27 March 2015). "The Whitworth hits 100,000 visitors – just six weeks after it reopens". Creative Tourist.
  37. Schofield, Jonathan (17 April 2015). "The Whitworth Wins NW Building Of The Year". Manchester Confidential. Confidential Direct.
  38. Atkinson, Rebecca (25 February 2011). "Balshaw named joint director of Whitworth and Manchester Art Gallery". Museums Journal. Museums Association.
  39. Staff writer (January 2012). "Ford Madox Brown: Pre-Raphaelite Pioneer". Manchester Art Gallery.
  40. "Home page". wefaceforward.org. We Face Forward. 2012.
  41. Nugent, Helen (7 June 2012). "Verve and excitement of West African arts comes to Manchester". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  42. Staff writer (2015). "Maria Balshaw". phf.org.uk. Paul Hamlyn Foundation.
  43. Gunn, Ali (29 October 2013). "Jeremy Deller: All That Is Solid Melts Into Air @ Manchester Art Gallery, until 19 Jan: review". The Skinny. Radge Media.
  44. Crichton-Miller, Emma (25 February 2014). "Reviews: Joana Vasconcelos in Manchester". Apollo Magazine. Press Holdings.
  45. Staff writer (8 July 2014). "Artist Ryan Gander: Painting is 'an illogical act'". BBC News. BBC.
  46. "Networks and Support". manchesterculturalpartnership.org. Manchester Cultural Partnership. Archived from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  47. Staff writer (24 January 2012). "Major new grant funding for cultural institutions". manchester.ac.uk. University of Manchester.
  48. "Manchester to get new £78m theatre named The Factory" BBC News, 3 December 2014. Accessed 9 October 2017
  49. Pidd, Helen (9 February 2015). "Maria Balshaw: 'Galleries that have collections like ours don't usually reside in Moss Side'". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group.
  50. Brown, Mark; Pidd, Helen (11 January 2017). "Tate to name Maria Balshaw as new director to succeed Serota". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  51. Balshaw, Maria (6 June 2015). "Status". twitter.com. Twitter.
  52. Feld, Kate (9 May 2013). "Profile: Maria Balshaw on art, change – & the emperor's new clothes". Creative Tourist.
  53. Staff writer (3 February 2015). "Isle of Bute Art Deco pavilion set for £3m revamp". The Scotsman. Johnston Press.
  54. "BBC Radio 4 - Desert Island Discs, Maria Balshaw, Director of Tate". BBC. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.