After nearly nine years at the San José Museum of Art, Executive Director Sayre Batton has announced she will step down at the end of May. The museum will conduct a national search for her replacement.
Batton joined the SJMA in 2015 as the deputy director for curatorial affairs. Two years later, after serving as interim executive director, Batton assumed the top role permanently.
“I was really brought in as a change agent to help build the curatorial team,” Batton says, noting that her very first hire was Lauren Schell Dickens, now the museum’s senior curator. Under her leadership, the SJMA has presented over 50 exhibitions, including the 2017 show Diana Al-Hadid: Liquid City, featuring one of the artist’s delicate yet monumental sculptures, which Batton says set the stage for the type of ambitious programming she wanted to bring to the museum.
“I was told that a lot of people won’t come down to San José to see exhibitions,” Batton says. “And when we brought Diana, we got fantastic attendance from people locally, but also people in the art world, in the wider Bay Area, and California and beyond.”

While the museum established itself as a venue for world-class exhibitions, it never neglected its closer-to-home audiences and community members. The SJMA maintains partnerships with South Bay institutions like San Jose Jazz, MACLA and Mosaic America, as well as with the city of San José itself.