Modern Art Oxford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Modern Art Oxford is an art gallery established in 1969 at the University of Oxford. From 1969 to 2002, the gallery was known as The Museum of Modern Art, Oxford. The gallery's original founders — a small group of Oxford dons — aspired to build it into a museum with a permanent collection by way of an endowment from the University; Oxford declined, leaving the gallery with a misnomer. With funding from the Arts Council of Great Britain, the gallery survived as a venue for temporary exhibitions. Andrew Nairne renamed the gallery to its current monicker in 2002.

Several transitory directors oversaw the gallery until Nicholas Serota assumed the role in 1974, with Sandy Nairne serving as assistant director. David Elliott replaced Serota in 1976.

Elliott's programme introduced up-and-coming artists from Africa, Asia and the Soviet Union, and at various times also featured major video art exhibitions; his contributions also included numerous gallery renovations. He resigned his position in 1996 to become the director of the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, having served the longest term of any director in the history of the gallery.

Elliott's replacement, an American named Kerry Brougher, preferred larger shows of American and European art, and, like Elliott, exhibitions focusing on film and media. In 2000, Brougher left to join the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. He was replaced by Andrew Nairne, whose curatorship garners the work of art world darlings such as Tracey Emin. Nairne renamed the gallery, coordinated additional enhancements to the building, and shifted the focus to smaller, more contemporary exhibitions.

The gallery is located at 30 Pembroke Street in central Oxford.

[edit] External links