Dr. Marcelle Polednik named director of Milwaukee Art Museum, replacing retiring Dan Keegan

MILWAUKEE -- $8 million has been gifted to the Milwaukee Art Museum to support the future director of the museum, Dr. Marcelle Polednik.

Dr. Marcelle Polednik



The donation came from long-time supporters Donald and Donna Baumgartner, from Milwaukee's Paper Machinery Corporation.

The museum's current director, Dan Keegan, will be retiring this week after eight years on the job.

Museum officials announced Tuesday, May 17th that Dr. Polednik was selected as the first "Donna and Donald Baumgartner" director.

According to a news release, Polednik, currently the director and chief curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, joins the Milwaukee Art Museum at a significant time in its history after an extensive $34 million renovation, reinstallation and expansion project, and the historic acquisition of the O’Donnell Property.

Polednik was selected after a robust national search from a field of dozens of candidates. She is expected to start working at the Museum in mid-August.

The following was shared by museum officials regarding Polednik's background in the news release:

Polednik brings extensive experience to the Museum. At MOCA Jacksonville, she redefined the Museum’s artistic vision and mission, shifting the emphasis from traveling exhibitions to self-curated projects, which now comprise nearly all of the Museum’s artistic initiatives. Under her leadership, the Museum’s exhibition program grew in both number and stature. The founding of the Museum’s Project Atrium series—a suite of site-specific commissions by emerging and mid-career artists—invigorated the Museum’s monumental Atrium gallery and bolstered MOCA’s experimental approach to artistic collaboration and audience participation, as recognized by a two-year grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. In addition to the founding of this significant series, Polednik charted the vision for MOCA’s featured exhibition program, refining MOCA’s artistic philosophy. While adding variety to the exhibition program and growing the permanent collection, Polednik focused on cultivating a distinct MOCA-branded interpretative approach that connected the projects across the varied media and subject matter they may individually explore.

The emphasis on self-curated projects as well as Polednik’s innovative approach to the artistic vision as a whole have raised the profile of the organization, bringing a new level of local, regional and national attention to the Museum. They have also spurred key partnerships with collectors and cultural organizations nationwide, as evidenced by MOCA’s growing traveling exhibition program. While at the helm of the Museum, Polednik curated several significant curatorial initiatives—SLOW: Marking Time in Photography and Film (2012); Abstraction over Time: The Paintings of Michael Goldberg (2013), WHITE (2015) and Hans Hofmann: Works on Paper (2017).

As she redefined the Museum’s curatorial program, Polednik also brought a renewed emphasis on MOCA’s award-winning signature educational outreach initiatives, focusing on growing both their breadth and depth. Under her leadership, MOCA’s attendance grew by more than 70 percent and general admission revenue increased by 147 percent. Through these activities, Polednik ushered in the Museum’s philanthropic revival, raising annual contributed income by 75 percent ahead of the 40 percent budgetary growth. The focus on artistic integrity, excellence and innovation also paved the way for growing interest from national funding sources and precipitated last year’s announcement of the largest gift ever given to a cultural organization in Jacksonville’s history. This announcement was followed by the January 2016 launch of MOCA’s rebrand, which emphasized a bold new approach to the Museum’s digital sphere, online presence and virtual audience engagement.

Prior to her position at MOCA Jacksonville, Polednik was the chief curator at the Monterey Museum of Art. She was also previously an assistant curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Polednik earned her doctorate in art history from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University and has curated numerous exhibitions and authored articles for various catalogs and institutions including The Museum of Modern Art in New York. Originally from Poland, Polednik grew up in Deerfield, Ill. She is a native speaker of Polish and Czech and is fluent in Slovak, Spanish, French and German. Polednik will be moving to Milwaukee with her husband and son.


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