May
17

American Art makes timely announcement of new curator

Saisha Grayson has joined the staff at the Smithsonian American Art Museum as the curator of time-based media. She began work March 19.

 

headshot of Grayson in black leather jacket

Saisha Grayson (Photo by Cayla Ann Photography)

Grayson joins 11 curators currently on staff for contemporary art, photography, sculpture, contemporary craft, folk and self-taught art, Latino art, 19th-century painting and a chief curator who specializes in 20th-century art. The museum’s time-based media holdings emphasize the breadth of the field to include 16mm black-and-white films, computer-driven cinema, artistic video games, closed-circuit installations, digital animations and more. The department was established with consulting senior media curator John Hanhardt and significantly expanded by film and media arts curator Michael Mansfield, whom Grayson replaces.

Grayson’s responsibilities include research, exhibitions and acquisitions related to the museum’s distinguished collection of time-based media arts. Her research interests include contemporary American art as well as medieval art, film studies, feminist theory and political science. She comes to the museum from the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum, where she was assistant curator from 2011 to 2016. While there, Grayson served as organizing curator of “Wangechi Mutu: A Fantastic Journey” (2013), the site-specific exhibition “Chitra Ganesh: Eyes of Time” (2014) and co-curated the experimental group exhibition “Agitprop!” (2015). For her first program at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, she has invited immersive installation and media artist Saya Woolfalk to present July 22 at the popular annual event SAAM Arcade.

Grayson earned a master’s degree from Columbia University (2008) and recently completed her doctorate at the Graduate Center, CUNY; her dissertation is titled “Cellist, Catalyst, Collaborator: The Work of Charlotte Moorman.” Her writing on contemporary media and performance art has appeared in numerous journals and catalogs. She taught art history at Queens College, CUNY and Ithaca College, and has guest lectured at Sarah Lawrence College, The New School and the Maryland Institute College of Arts. She was awarded a predoctoral fellowship at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in 2016 and a Luce/ACLS Dissertation Fellowship in American Art in 2017.

 


Posted: 17 May 2018
About the Author:

The Torch relies on contributions from the entire Smithsonian community.