21st Century Museum Issues Lecture Series: Capitalizing Collections
Dom
Vetri,
Professor,
Law School;
Doug Park, Associate
General Counsel;
Phaedra Livingstone,
Assistant Professor, Arts &
Administration;
Kris Anderson,
Director,
Jacob Lawrence Gallery,
University of Washington, and
Vice President,
Association of
Academic Museums and
Galleries (AAMG);
Bill Eiland (Director,
Georgia Musem of
Art, Univeristy of Georgia); and Jill Hartz, JSMA
Executive Director and
President, AAMG, discuss the recent challenges facing academic museums and their collections.
Made possible in part with a JSMA Academic
Support Grant.
Doug Park obtained his
Bachelor of Arts degree in
English literature from the University of Washington in
1988, and earned his
Juris Doctor from the
University of Oregon in
1993. Since graduating from law school, Doug has worked for a private law firm, the
ACLU of
Washington, a
Washington State Public Defender firm in
Seattle, and the
Oregon Department of Justice. While at the
Department of Justice, Doug developed the winning argument in two
U.S. Supreme Court cases, and received both the
Outstanding Achievement
Award and
Double Merit Award. From 2003--2008, Doug also taught at the UO law school. Since becoming in-house counsel at the UO in
2007, Doug has served on the planning committee for the
National Association of
College and
University Attorneys (NACUA), and been a panelist or moderator for multiple law school and NACUA presentations. Throughout his career, Doug has litigated cases before the
State Circuit Courts,
Federal District Courts, the
Oregon Court of Appeals, the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the U.S. Supreme Court, and various state and federal agencies. He has also co-authored articles published in the
Willamette Law Review, and the
Oregon State Bar Criminal Law Manual. Park is a member of the JSMA's
Leadership Council.
Dominick Vetri is a Professor at the
University of Oregon Law School. He has been admitted to the bar in
New Jersey and
Oregon. He earned a
J.D. from the
University of Pennsylvania Law School and a
Bachelor of Science in
Mechanical Engineering from the
New Jersey Institute of Technology. His teaching areas include art law, copyrights, and gay & lesbian legal issues. Vetri is a member of the
American Law Institute, the Oregon
Law Commission, and the JSMA's Leadership Council.
Phaedra Livingstone is an Assistant Professor of Arts and Administration and currently runs the
Museum Studies program. She came to the UO at the start of the 2008-2009 academic year. Livingstone has served on the JSMA's Long-Range
Planning Committee for two years and helped to guide the strategic planning process.
Bill Eiland is Director of the
Georgia Museum of Art,
University of Georgia. Eiland serves on the boards of the
American Association of Museums, the
Southeastern Museums
Conference and the Georgia Association of Museums and Galleries; is a trustee of the
Association of Art Museum Directors; and is chairman of the Arts and
Artifacts Indemnity Advisory Panel for the
National Endowment for the Arts. Eiland holds a
Ph.D. in
European History from the
University of Virginia.
Kris Anderson is the Director of the University of Washington
School of Art's Jacob Lawrence Gallery; Vice President, Association of Academic Museums and Galleries; and a
Ph.D. candidate in
Art History at the University of Washington. He holds a
M.S. in Museum Studies from the
University of Colorado at Boulder and a
B.A. in
Classical,
Ancient Mediterranean and
Near Eastern Studies and Archeology from the
University of Minnesota -
Twin Cities.
Jill Hartz has worked in university museums for twenty-five years, fifteen as a director. She is currently the executive director of the
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. From 1997-2008, she served as director of the University of Virginia
Art Museum in
Charlottesville and for ten years previously worked in various positions at the
Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at
Cornell University. She is president of the Association of Academic Museums and Galleries and is an
AAM and
IMLS accreditation reviewer. Ms. Hartz has curated numerous exhibitions and is the editor of four books, including a monograph on
Agnes Denes. Her special interests include
20th --
21st century environmental and installation art, photography and new media, and contemporary Cuban art. She has lectured extensively on museum accreditation and strategic planning, exhibition organization, marketing and publishing. She has also served on city, county, state, and federal organizations and panels on the arts and tourism. Ms Hartz received her MA with Honors in
English Language and Literature from the
University of St. Andrews in
Scotland in
1973 and previously pursued undergraduate studies at
Oberlin College in
Ohio.