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Katie Hood Morgan is one of a handful of curators recently laid off at Bay Area arts institutions, causing concern for audiences and artists alike. Gabe Meline/KQED
Katie Hood Morgan is one of a handful of curators recently laid off at Bay Area arts institutions, causing concern for audiences and artists alike. (Gabe Meline/KQED)

What Happens When All the Curators Are Gone?

What Happens When All the Curators Are Gone?

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Two months before she lost her job, Katie Hood Morgan sat in a board meeting, watching her department’s budget get cut in half.

“It was a little weird to be sitting there,” she remembers of her final months as San Francisco Art Institute’s curator of exhibitions and public programs, “looking at the budget like, ‘There’s my line. And there’s last year, and there’s me somewhere floating away.’”

With that board vote, the 147-year-old art school fundamentally altered its exhibition program, removing the in-house curatorial staff responsible for filling not only its Walter & McBean Galleries, but the new Fort Mason campus’ gallery space, which opened in August 2017. Morgan was also responsible for overseeing student exhibitions in the Diego Rivera Gallery and organizing SFAI’s well-respected visiting artist lecture series.

An exhibition opening on SFAI's Fort Mason campus.
An exhibition opening on SFAI’s Fort Mason campus. (Marco David)

In the relatively small Bay Area arts scene, Morgan’s layoff followed the April 24 dismissal of Joel Shepard, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts’ curator of film and video (and the beginning of the film program’s “hiatus”), and preceded the Aug. 1 elimination of Kara Q. Smith’s assistant curator position at the di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art.

These three positions, the people who held them and the institutions that eliminated them are vastly different. Yet all three are curatorial positions; local job openings in the field are already few and far between. And each year, newly minted graduates from California College of the Arts’ curatorial practice program, and SFAI’s exhibitions and museum studies program enter the market, while the full-time long-term positions they might once have aspired to disappear one by one.

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The quiet elimination of curatorial jobs is a troubling manifestation of a Bay Area arts ecosystem that struggles to find stability despite a booming local economy. Institutions “restructure,” “return to their core missions” and “redefine their priorities” in attempts to both clarify their role within a competitive field of development dollars and audience attention and pare down budgets.

Katie Hood Morgan.
Katie Hood Morgan. (Gabe Meline/KQED)

But with each dismissal, years of institutional knowledge, community relationships and public goodwill are lost. Most importantly, the cutting of curatorial positions is a loss for the audience.

“A curator lobbies on the behalf [of artists] and makes cases not only to the institution, but to the public on why something matters,” says CCA’s curatorial practice program chair, James Voorhies. “They’re a mediator. They might take very complex ideas that an artist or a filmmaker is working with and they bring those ideas into the public realm responsibly so that audiences understand why a work is relevant in a contemporary context.”

Curatorial practice students with artist Shahryar Nashat on Sept. 11, 2018 in CCA's new Curatorial Research Bureau at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
Curatorial practice students with artist Shahryar Nashat on Sept. 11, 2018 in CCA’s new Curatorial Research Bureau at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. (Courtesy of Curatorial Research Bureau)

‘Constantly Refreshed’ Curatorial Thinking at SFAI

Gordon Knox, president of SFAI, explains changes to the exhibition program as a return to the school’s core mission: teaching and learning. “We are absolutely a school,” he says. “We are embracing our exhibitions program in a way that’s deeply integrated into our curriculum and pedagogy.”

Knox envisions a future in which SFAI will rely on visiting artists and curators to teach classes that result in exhibitions, public programs and publications. Students will get hands-on experience mounting an exhibition from start to finish, he says, including possibly working on research and grant applications.

Of the Bay Area’s many art schools, SFAI has perhaps the scrappiest legacy, having weathered multiple instances of financial instability over its long history. But this is the first time, to Morgan’s knowledge, that those financial straits have resulted in such severe cuts to the exhibition program.

Lights in the Walter and McBean Galleries fluctuate in response to trade data from Will Brown's Ethereum investment during the 'Ether' opening, Sept. 13, 2018.
Lights in the Walter and McBean Galleries fluctuate in response to trade data from Will Brown’s Ethereum investment during the ‘Ether’ opening, Sept. 13, 2018. (Lucas Terranova)

Coincidentally, the last show Morgan worked on for SFAI is both an indictment of the school’s cuts to the exhibition program and a cynical look to technology for arts funding answers. Ether, which opened Sept. 13, is a conceptual cryptocurrency investment scheme by the collaborative trio known as Will Brown (David Kasprzak, Jordan Stein and Lindsey White).

The exhibition draws comparisons between SFAI’s current financial challenges (Knox named enrollment as a factor) with a moment in history when the school sold its collection of Eadweard Muybridge photographs to finance the creation of what is now the school’s New Genres department.

“In a similarly speculative action,” the collaborative’s press announcement reads, “Will Brown has invested our exhibition budget in Ether, the underlying token powering the Ethereum blockchain.” At irregular intervals, any profits from this investment will be available to fund SFAI student, staff or faculty projects, supplementing the school’s official budget via an application process open to all.

SFAI's North Beach campus courtyard.
SFAI’s North Beach campus courtyard. (Courtesy of SFAI)

As the opening date drew near, Morgan remained involved as a contract employee, even though her last day on staff after five years at SFAI was July 5. Up to then, she’d been attending cabinet meetings for nearly a year, where she represented the exhibition program and advocated for it as best she could without any actual executive power. It was in these meetings that she was first confronted with pressure to justify her department’s existence.

“I gave them examples of exhibitions that got a lot of great press for the school, and I gave them examples on the other side, of students who had worked in the galleries and told us it was the biggest educational experience they had at the school, alongside their practice,” Morgan says. “But of course that’s anecdotal. How do you quantify that kind of story, and that kind of experience and that impact?”

“It made me feel really uncomfortable, honestly,” she says of being the lone advocate for the exhibition department. “I don’t see it as my role to fight that fight within my own institution. It’s hard enough considering the political moment and attitude towards the arts and intellectualism in general, but to have to do that within the institution just felt terrible.”

During Morgan’s time at SFAI, the exhibition program organized numerous projects that seemed to directly fit the description of Knox’s plans for the future: world class artists doing high-end serious projects and multiplying their capacity through student participation.

Knox admits this is true: “The elimination of a steady curatorial stand-alone department is really a reflection of something that that department was already doing, which was trying very much to involve itself with the school.” In other words, the exhibition department’s good work proved there was no need for an exhibition department.

To hear Knox tell it, these cuts actually mean opportunities for more curators to work at the school. “I think that what I’d really like to do is have SFAI be a location where curatorial thinking is constantly refreshed, constantly coming in, constantly being applied in the actual social world of education,” Knox says. He’s thinking in terms of one- or two-year-long positions, “a wonderful springboard for young curators” to “work with this dynamic terrain.”

What won’t return to SFAI, Knox says, is the role of a long-term senior curator position.

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts viewed from Mission Street.
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts viewed from Mission Street. (Courtesy Yerba Buena Center for the Arts; photo by Tommy Lau)

‘Reimagining’ a Film Program at YBCA

Unlike Morgan, Joel Shepard didn’t see it coming.

YBCA hired Shepard in 1997 to start the then-four-year-old institution’s film and video program. “It was a big thing,” he remembers. “You’re really lucky to be able to start something from scratch and not have much of a legacy to deal with.”

Over the next two decades, Shepard organized a regular schedule of about 150 film screenings a year, created partnerships with former and existing Bay Area organizations (Film Arts Foundation, Cine Accion, CAAM before it was CAAM), launched the New Filipino Cinema film festival, received the Marlon Riggs Award from the San Francisco Film Critics Circle and was named one of SFFILM’s “Essential SF.”

Though YBCA announced there would be restructuring several months prior, hinting at some level of staff reduction, Shepard never expected both he and his part-time curatorial assistant David Robson to be laid off. Or for the film program to fundamentally change.

Former YBCA film/video curator Joel Shepard.
Former YBCA film/video curator Joel Shepard.

On April 26, YBCA sent an email to film patrons and select members of the press stating, “We have made the decision to reimagine YBCA’s film program, so that it is more fully integrated into our public engagement efforts and working in service of YBCA’s mission. As a result we will be putting our film program on hiatus while we work to achieve these goals.”

For Deborah Cullinan, YBCA’s CEO, the hiatus and reimagining process is an opportunity to better support the local arts ecosystem, break down silos within the 25-year-old organization, bring film and video out of the center’s 92-seat theater and “make it bigger.”

YBCA CEO Deborah Cullinan during the opening of 'Bay Area Now 9,' Sept. 7, 2018.
YBCA CEO Deborah Cullinan during the opening of ‘Bay Area Now 9,’ Sept. 7, 2018. (Courtesy Yerba Buena Center for the Arts; photo by Brittney Valdez)

“We are really trying to pioneer a new model for a contemporary arts center, and it requires that we have to question all of it,” she says. But YBCA only appears to be questioning some of it; since Shepard and Robson’s departure on April 24, other curatorial staff members have not been laid off and other programs, like visual arts and performance, remain intact. The film and video curatorial position might return, Cullinan says, but she’s also open to ideas that could support local filmmakers or integrate film and video into institution-wide programs.

It’s hard to know what the future will look like for film and video at YBCA, or even when this hiatus will conclude. (Cullinan wishes the “reimagining” was moving faster.) The last film program on YBCA’s calendar was the June 9–July 1 Architecture & Design Films Showcase, co-presented by AIGA and SF Design Week.

Of the various possible futures that Cullinan describes, some seem to involve leaving film and video programming up to the remaining curatorial staff. (Cullinan claims it’s increasingly difficult to recruit full-time staff, “In part because of the affordability issues we have in the Bay, but it’s also because people want to live their lives differently, and they are actually interested in having multiple gigs.”) Some sound like partnerships with local film organizations and festivals. And others are too nebulous to speculate upon.

What’s missing, in the interim, is a venue that long showcased a rare mix of global and local cinema. “There’s already fewer and fewer foreign language films showing in San Francisco,” Shepard says. “The number drops every year.” Films that don’t have a readymade audience or pre-existing buzz don’t show in San Francisco anymore, he says. YBCA was the city’s only arts institution with a regular film program. He points to the Pacific Film Archive’s schedule at the Berkeley Art Museum as a rare example of a visual arts institution and film program existing, seemingly successfully, side-by-side.

And it’s not a vacuum that can be filled by the options of streaming movies, either. Curatorial guidance, by a trained and informed film historian, enriches the viewing experience and exposes audiences to material they wouldn’t necessarily choose for themselves. “My whole career is based on not doing that,” Shepard says. “It’s going to the unfamiliar, going to places you don’t know about that might be uncomfortable at first. It’s kind of the opposite of Netflix.”

“There’s a million things on there and everything has exactly the same weight. It’s just pages after pages of little rectangles.”

di Rosa curator Amy Owen and former assistant curator Kara Q. Smith.
di Rosa curator Amy Owen and former assistant curator Kara Q. Smith. (Courtesy Kara Q. Smith)

‘Shifting Institutional Priorities’ at di Rosa

While the changes at YBCA were at least nominally announced, the elimination of Kara Q. Smith’s assistant curator position at Napa’s di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art took place quietly, without public remark. An email did go out to artists Smith had been working with for a 2019 show letting them know that due to her “unfortunate departure,” the di Rosa would “not be moving forward with the show as originally planned.”

Smith was the second full-time curator hired at di Rosa (Amy Owen, the organization’s lead curator, was the first). Smith says her role was unique; she worked interdepartmentally across the organization on multiple collaborative initiatives. Some of the many projects she took on included co-organizing and launching di Rosa’s yearlong artist-centered initiative Be Not Still: Living in Uncertain Times and appearing on behalf of the organization at city council meetings and local community events.

“I left San Francisco. I made Napa my home,” she says. It was a major commitment for someone whose life and community previously centered on San Francisco. During her nearly four-year tenure at di Rosa, Smith says she worked hard to build a relationship between the arts center and an often ambivalent local population.

When asked about the reasoning behind the position’s elimination, di Rosa offered up a statement so short it’s easily reproduced in full: “As di Rosa completes its transition from a private collection to a public facing institution, shifting institutional priorities have prompted strategic restructuring to better serve the organization’s evolving needs.”

A di Rosa spokesperson confirmed no other positions have been eliminated since; they have actually grown the staff “in other critical areas.”

For Smith, the post-di Rosa job search has been as depressing as di Rosa’s official statement is ambiguous. She’ll likely have to leave the Bay Area to find a similar curatorial position; she’s casting a wide net with limited expectations.

“I’m not even looking for a 20-year position per se, but where do I find the stability?” she asks.

Kara Q. Smith leading a tour on the di Rosa grounds.
Kara Q. Smith leading a tour on the di Rosa grounds. (Courtesy of Kara Q. Smith)

What Gets Lost

In Renny Pritikin’s oft-cited “Prescription for a Healthy Art Scene,” committed curators are one of nearly two dozen factors that must be present to create a thriving arts ecosystem. The institutions discussed here occupy other, equally important roles (point 3: “active art schools”; point 12: “accessible museums”).

Pritikin’s healthy art scene also requires an engaged viewership (point 13)—interested audiences who will attend exhibitions, performances and screenings, and read the writing that’s produced about those events. When YBCA announced Shepard’s dismissal and the film and video program’s hiatus, they listed an email address for the public to respond with feedback.

“There was not an overwhelming response,” Cullinan says. “The questions and concerns either had to do specifically with Joel and his undeniable value, or just with YBCA’s commitment to film.”

But Shepard heard from hundreds of people—on Facebook and via private messages—expressing their goodwill and anger, demonstrating to him he’d reached an audience (and accomplished what he’d been trying to do in his programming).

And there’s the rub. Internal decisions at arts organizations will never be completely transparent, but participating—voicing enjoyment or displeasure in response to an organization’s public programming—is a right that should be employed constantly, not just in reaction to a major change. And to be effective, those messages should be relayed not within closed networks, like a personal Facebook thread, but to the organizations themselves.

Fundamentally, the arts ecosystem is a litmus test for the health of the region as a whole, and if audiences aren’t more vocal in their support for the arts and their desire for ambitious curatorial programming, the elimination of these positions could be a harbinger of things to come.

“You need a really thriving arts scene for a good city,” Shepard points out. “It’s not just about me or these individuals who have also lost their jobs, there’s a bigger problem here. I don’t think we want to turn into Dallas.”

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Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that the 2018 Architecture & Design Films Showcase at YBCA was not curated in-house. Joel Shepard selected the films prior to his departure.

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