Salvador Salort-Pons: Difference between revisions
→DIA directorship: added links |
m As in target article(s) |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
In 1998 Salort-Pons was a recipient of the [[Rome Prize]] and lived and studied at the Royal Spanish Academy in [[Rome]] for two years |
In 1998 Salort-Pons was a recipient of the [[Rome Prize]] and lived and studied at the Royal Spanish Academy in [[Rome]] for two years |
||
where he researched the presence of Spanish artists in Rome during the 17th century. In 2000, he became a member of the [[Collegio di Spagna|Royal College of Spain in Bologna]] where he completed his thesis about the trips [[Diego |
where he researched the presence of Spanish artists in Rome during the 17th century. In 2000, he became a member of the [[Collegio di Spagna|Royal College of Spain in Bologna]] where he completed his thesis about the trips [[Diego Velázquez]] made to [[Italy]]. His dissertation was published in 2002 and included over 50 new documents relating to the life and work of Velázquez during his two trips to Italy (in 1629-30 and 1649-1651). Among Salort-Pons's discoveries was the correct dating of the Velázquez [[Portrait of Innocent X]].<ref name="arsmagazine.com">https://arsmagazine.com/producto/entrevista-salvador-salort-pons/</ref> |
||
In 2006, while working at the [[Meadows Museum]] at [[Southern Methodist University]], Salort-Pons received a [[Master of Business Administration]] from the [[Cox School of Business]] at Southern Methodist University.<ref name="arsmagazine.com"/> |
In 2006, while working at the [[Meadows Museum]] at [[Southern Methodist University]], Salort-Pons received a [[Master of Business Administration]] from the [[Cox School of Business]] at Southern Methodist University.<ref name="arsmagazine.com"/> |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
Salort-Pons's first curatorial job was as the exhibition curator at the Memmo Foundation/Palazzo Ruspoli in [[Rome]]. While at the Memmo Foundation, he co-curated "Il trionfo del colore: Collezione Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza" (Rome, 2002) as well as "Velázquez" (Rome, 2001), which was the first monographic exhibition on the painter ever organized in Italy.<ref name="Bio">[http://www.dia.org/about/bios.aspx "Biographies" ''The Detroit Institute of Arts.'' ] Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref> |
Salort-Pons's first curatorial job was as the exhibition curator at the Memmo Foundation/Palazzo Ruspoli in [[Rome]]. While at the Memmo Foundation, he co-curated "Il trionfo del colore: Collezione Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza" (Rome, 2002) as well as "Velázquez" (Rome, 2001), which was the first monographic exhibition on the painter ever organized in Italy.<ref name="Bio">[http://www.dia.org/about/bios.aspx "Biographies" ''The Detroit Institute of Arts.'' ] Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref> |
||
Until 2006, Salort-Pons served as the senior curator at the [[Meadows Museum]] of art on the campus of [[Southern Methodist University]] in [[University Park, Texas]].<ref name="Bio"/> During that time, Salort-Pons helped Yale professors identify an early [[Diego |
Until 2006, Salort-Pons served as the senior curator at the [[Meadows Museum]] of art on the campus of [[Southern Methodist University]] in [[University Park, Texas]].<ref name="Bio"/> During that time, Salort-Pons helped Yale professors identify an early [[Diego Velázquez|Velazquez]] work depicting the education of the [[Virgin Mary]].<ref>[https://news.artnet.com/art-world/early-velazquez-masterpiece-rescued-from-yale-basement-122002 Muñoz-Alonso, Lorena "Early Velázquez Masterpiece Rescued from Yale Basement" ''artnet news.'' October 3, 2014.] Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref><ref name="A Velázquez in the Cellar?">{{cite web|last1=Katz|first1=Jamie|title=A Velázquez in the Cellar?|url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/ist/?next=/arts-culture/a-velazquez-in-the-cellar-970349/?page=1|website=Smithsonian magazine|accessdate=9 March 2016}}</ref> |
||
==DIA early years (2008-2015)== |
==DIA early years (2008-2015)== |
||
In February 2008, the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]] (DIA) hired Salort-Pons as assistant curator of European Paintings.<ref name="Press">[http://artdaily.com/news/32395/DIA-Names-Kenneth-Myers-Chief-Curator-Alan-Darr-and-Salvador-Salort-Pons-Receive-Promotions. '' DIA Names Kenneth Myers Chief Curator-Alan Darr and Salvador Salort-Pons Receive Promotions'' ''artdaily.org'' ]</ref> Later promoted to be the associate curator in 2011, Salort Pons embarked on a number of exhibition projects including "Fakes, Forgeries and Mysteries" (2011).<ref>[http://www.dia.org/calendar/event.aspx?id=2277 "Fakes, Forgeries and Mysteries" ''Detroit Institute of Arts.'' ] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309141621/http://www.dia.org/calendar/event.aspx?id=2277 |date=2016-03-09 }} Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref> As the head of the European Art department at the DIA, Salort-Pons was the in-house curator for the traveling [[Rembrandt]] and the Face of Jesus exhibition. In 2013, Salort-Pons was appointed Executive Director of Collections Strategies and Information, overseeing a number of key departments at the DIA, including Collections Management, Conservation, and Publications.<ref>[http://www.dia.org/news/1781/Salvador-Salort-Pons-named-director-of-Detroit-Institute-of-Arts---Will-take-office-as-the-museum%E2%80%99s-11th-director-on-October-15,-2015.aspx Marcil, Pamela "Salvador Salort-Pons named director of Detroit Institute of Arts - Will take office as the museum’s 11th director on October 15, 2015 " ''Detroit Institute of Arts'' September 16, 2015.] Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref> |
In February 2008, the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]] (DIA) hired Salort-Pons as assistant curator of European Paintings.<ref name="Press">[http://artdaily.com/news/32395/DIA-Names-Kenneth-Myers-Chief-Curator-Alan-Darr-and-Salvador-Salort-Pons-Receive-Promotions. '' DIA Names Kenneth Myers Chief Curator-Alan Darr and Salvador Salort-Pons Receive Promotions'' ''artdaily.org'' ]</ref> Later promoted to be the associate curator in 2011, Salort Pons embarked on a number of exhibition projects including "Fakes, Forgeries and Mysteries" (2011).<ref>[http://www.dia.org/calendar/event.aspx?id=2277 "Fakes, Forgeries and Mysteries" ''Detroit Institute of Arts.'' ] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309141621/http://www.dia.org/calendar/event.aspx?id=2277 |date=2016-03-09 }} Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref> As the head of the European Art department at the DIA, Salort-Pons was the in-house curator for the traveling [[Rembrandt]] and the Face of Jesus exhibition. In 2013, Salort-Pons was appointed Executive Director of Collections Strategies and Information, overseeing a number of key departments at the DIA, including Collections Management, Conservation, and Publications.<ref>[http://www.dia.org/news/1781/Salvador-Salort-Pons-named-director-of-Detroit-Institute-of-Arts---Will-take-office-as-the-museum%E2%80%99s-11th-director-on-October-15,-2015.aspx Marcil, Pamela "Salvador Salort-Pons named director of Detroit Institute of Arts - Will take office as the museum’s 11th director on October 15, 2015 " ''Detroit Institute of Arts'' September 16, 2015.] Accessed 2016-03-08.</ref> |
||
As a curator, Salort-Pons did extensive research on the Italian and Spanish collections of the DIA. Under his guidance, the museum acquired a number of Spanish masterpieces by artists such as [[Francisco |
As a curator, Salort-Pons did extensive research on the Italian and Spanish collections of the DIA. Under his guidance, the museum acquired a number of Spanish masterpieces by artists such as [[Francisco de Zurbarán]], [[Alonso Cano]], [[Juan Valdes Leal]], and [[Juan de Espinosa]]. In addition, he rediscovered a work by [[Bartolomé Esteban Murillo]] at [[Oakland University]] whose location had been lost to scholars for many years.<ref>https://www.artsjournal.com/realcleararts/2013/11/murillo-discovered-in-a-dark-corner.html</ref> |
||
==DIA directorship== |
==DIA directorship== |
||
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
==Selected publications== |
==Selected publications== |
||
Salort-Pons has published extensively about the life and work of the [[Spain|Spanish]] master [[Diego |
Salort-Pons has published extensively about the life and work of the [[Spain|Spanish]] master [[Diego Velázquez]]. |
||
===Books=== |
===Books=== |
Revision as of 20:29, 11 February 2021
Salvador Salort-Pons | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Museum director |
Spouse | Alexandra Salort-Pons [1] |
Children | 2 |
Salvador Salort-Pons (born April 18, 1970) is a Spanish-American art historian and museum director. Since 2015, Salort-Pons has served as the Director of the Detroit Institute of Arts.
Early life and education
Salort-Pons was born and raised in Madrid, Spain. In 1993, Salort-Pons graduated from the Complutense University of Madrid with a master's degree in Geography and History with a specialization in the History of Art. While studying at the Complutense University of Madrid he was taught by the former director of the Museo del Prado, Alfonso Pérez Sánchez.
In 1998 Salort-Pons was a recipient of the Rome Prize and lived and studied at the Royal Spanish Academy in Rome for two years where he researched the presence of Spanish artists in Rome during the 17th century. In 2000, he became a member of the Royal College of Spain in Bologna where he completed his thesis about the trips Diego Velázquez made to Italy. His dissertation was published in 2002 and included over 50 new documents relating to the life and work of Velázquez during his two trips to Italy (in 1629-30 and 1649-1651). Among Salort-Pons's discoveries was the correct dating of the Velázquez Portrait of Innocent X.[2]
In 2006, while working at the Meadows Museum at Southern Methodist University, Salort-Pons received a Master of Business Administration from the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University.[2]
Early career
Salort-Pons's first curatorial job was as the exhibition curator at the Memmo Foundation/Palazzo Ruspoli in Rome. While at the Memmo Foundation, he co-curated "Il trionfo del colore: Collezione Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza" (Rome, 2002) as well as "Velázquez" (Rome, 2001), which was the first monographic exhibition on the painter ever organized in Italy.[3]
Until 2006, Salort-Pons served as the senior curator at the Meadows Museum of art on the campus of Southern Methodist University in University Park, Texas.[3] During that time, Salort-Pons helped Yale professors identify an early Velazquez work depicting the education of the Virgin Mary.[4][5]
DIA early years (2008-2015)
In February 2008, the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) hired Salort-Pons as assistant curator of European Paintings.[6] Later promoted to be the associate curator in 2011, Salort Pons embarked on a number of exhibition projects including "Fakes, Forgeries and Mysteries" (2011).[7] As the head of the European Art department at the DIA, Salort-Pons was the in-house curator for the traveling Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus exhibition. In 2013, Salort-Pons was appointed Executive Director of Collections Strategies and Information, overseeing a number of key departments at the DIA, including Collections Management, Conservation, and Publications.[8]
As a curator, Salort-Pons did extensive research on the Italian and Spanish collections of the DIA. Under his guidance, the museum acquired a number of Spanish masterpieces by artists such as Francisco de Zurbarán, Alonso Cano, Juan Valdes Leal, and Juan de Espinosa. In addition, he rediscovered a work by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo at Oakland University whose location had been lost to scholars for many years.[9]
DIA directorship
Since becoming Director in the fall of 2015, Salort-Pons embarked on a number of projects to try to make the DIA more like a town square. He described the future of the DIA as a place where people can gather feel welcome, represented and included. Asserting that a museum is a place for the enjoyment of the arts but also a location where people can "drink coffee and chat."[10] Salort-Pons has repeatedly stated that his priorities directly involve increasing community interest and accessibility.[11][12][13]
Salort-Pons also started the "Directors Cut" programming at the DIA in early 2016. That series of talks was designed "for people to get to know him and for him to hear from metro Detroiters."[14]
Another major initiative Salort-Pons has focused on is diversifying DIA’s audiences, staff and board of directors. During Salort-Pons time as director, a number of non-traditional exhibitions and programs have been scheduled at the DIA and there has been an increased focus on collecting art by African American artists.[15]
In June 2016, Salort-Pons was conferred the Order of the Star of Italy at the rank of Officer by the Italian government for being a foreign national who aided the promotion and preservation of Italian national prestige abroad.[16]
In a public ceremony at the DIA on August 11, 2017, Salort-Pons was naturalized as an American citizen after 13 years of living in the United States. The ceremony occurred in front of over 100 patrons of the museum and was presided over by Federal Judge Avern Cohn.[17]
Since the end of 2017, Salort-Pons has led a project to redesign the public spaces around the DIA. Working with institutions neighboring the DIA institutions like the Detroit Historical Museum and Wayne State University, the project aims to make their shared area on Woodward Avenue into the main town square for Detroit. In announcing the Woodward plaza planning, Salort-Pons said feedback from the public and the museum's neighbors would play a vital role as the DIA looked at the best ways to connect the museum grounds to the surrounding community. The project has already received a number of grants from local institutions. The final goal of this project is to create a cohesive look and programming for the cultural district in midtown Detroit, with the DIA at the center of it.[18]
In March of 2020, Salort-Pons led the DIA during their successful bid for an early millage renewal in Oakland, Wayne, and Macomb counties. The 2020 vote saw support for the DIA millage rise to 76% in Oakland and Wayne county and to 62% in Macomb county, where the millage only narrowly passed in 2012 with 50.5% of the vote. When asked why the DIA planned on renewing the millage early, as opposed to in 2022 when it expired, Salort-Pons stated: "I think we earned the right to go back to the voters. I think we have touched the lives of so many in the tri-county area the last eight years." Salort-Pons credited the DIA’s increased community engagement work since 2012 as the driving cause for the improved millage result. In reacting to the victory, Salort-Pons stated: "The DIA millage renewal will ensure the museum can continue offering free field trips and free transportation to tens of thousands of students from local schools each year and free programming for local seniors".[19]
In a radio interview prior to the millage vote, Salort-Pons suggested that he believes with the support of the millage the DIA can reach an endowment of $600 million by the time the millage expires in 2032. This amount, in his view, would be enough for the continued financial stability of the organization.[20]
Selected publications
Salort-Pons has published extensively about the life and work of the Spanish master Diego Velázquez.
Books
- Velázquez: his third journey to Rome, exh cat. (2001; edited with Vicente Garín Llombart; Rome, Fondazione Memmo, Palazzo Ruspoli)
- Velázquez en Italia (2002)
- Diego Velázquez 1599 – 1660 (2008)
Articles
- “Fray Juan Rizi en Italia”, Archivo Español de Arte (1999)
- “La misión de Velázquez y sus agentes en Roma y Venecia 1649 -1653”, Archivo Español de Arte (1999)
- “Velázquez a Roma”, in Velázquez a Roma. Velázquez in Roma, exh. cat. in Anna Coliva, ed (2000; Roma, Galleria Borghese)
- “Velázquez and Giulio Sacchetti: Two unpublished portraits of the King and Queen of Spain”, The Burlington Magazine (2001)
- “Hipótesis de reconstrucción de la biblioteca de Alonso Cano` in María del Mar Villafranca”, in Alonso Cano: espirtualidad y modernidad artística, exh.cat. María del Mar Villafranca, ed (2001)
- “El saber de un artista: fuentes normales y literarias en la obra de Alonso Cano”, in Alonso Cano: espirtualidad y modernidad artística, exh.cat. María del Mar Villafranca, ed (2001)
- “Vicente Salvador Gómez, Alonso Cano y la pintura valenciana de la segunda mitad del siglo XVII”, Archivo Español de Arte (2001)
- “Fortuna e collezionismo della pittura di Velázquez in Italia”, in Proceedings of the Symposium: Economy and Art, 13th – 18th centuries, Istituto Internazionale di Storia Economica "F. Datini”, (2002)
- “La colección artística de don Pedro Antonio de Aragón, virrey de Nápoles (1666 - 1672)”, Ricerche sul Seicento Napoletano (2003)
- “La legación de Francesco Barberini en España: unos retratos para el cardenal y un breve pontificio para Diego Velázquez, "clerico coniugato”`, Archivo Español de Arte (2004)
- “La llegada de Niccolò Tornioli a Roma y el malogrado mecenazgo del abad Borromeo”, Antologia di Belle Arti (2004)
- “Relaciones artísticas entre las cortes de Madrid y Florencia en tiempos de Cosme III” in El viaje a Compostela de Cosme III de Medicis, exh. cat. A. Neira Cruz, ed (2004)
- “Las relaciones artísticas entre Italia y Sevilla durante el primer tercio del siglo XVII”, in De Herrera a Velázquez, el primer naturalismo en Sevilla, exh. cat. Alfonso Pérez Sánchez and Benito Navarrete, eds (2005)
- “Gaspar Becerra in Florence”, Archivo Español de Arte (2005)
- “Gonzalo de Liaño, dwarf and artistic agent of Philip II. Part I”, The Burlington Magazine (2006)
- “Gonzalo de Liaño, dwarf and artistic agent of Philip II. Part II”, The Burlington Magazine (2007)
- “Coleccionismo y patronazgo de los marqueses de Castel Rodrigo, Livio Odescalchi y Savo Mellini: el mercado artístico madrileño hacia 1680”, in.; Sapienta libertas: escritos en homenaje al profesor Alfonso E. Pérez Sánchez, María Condor Orduña, ed. Madrid (2007)
- "Se bene è cosa ordinaria (...), sarà gratissimo";, un ciborio di alabastro in dono a Filippo II di Spagna”, Rassegna Volterrana (2008)
- “Travels of a court Jester: Gonzalo de Liaño, art agent at the court of king Philipp II of Spain”in Double Agents. Cultural and political brokerage in early modern Europe, Marika Keblusek, ed.(2011)
- “A letter of introduction for Velázquez in Bologna”, The Burlington Magazine (2012)
- “Las Descalzas Reales’ The Tribute Money, by “Titian” in Arte del dono. Scambio culturale tra Italia e Spagna 1550-1650”, Studi della Bibliotheca Hertziana ; 8. - Pubblicazioni della Bibliotheca Hertziana Istituto Max Planck per la Storia dell’Arte, Roma (2013)
- “Ein Hofnarr als Agent : zum diplomatischen Geschenkwesen am Hof Philipps II”, in Materielle Grundlagen der Diplomatie , Mark Häberlein ; Christof Jeggle (Hg.), Konstanz [u.a.] (2013)
- “Portrait of a Man by Velazquez at the Detroit Institute of Arts”, in El Joven Velazquez, edited by Benito Navarrete, Sevilla (2015)
References
- ^ Hodges, Michael C. "Salort-Pons named DIA's new director" The Detroit News. September 16, 2015. Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ a b https://arsmagazine.com/producto/entrevista-salvador-salort-pons/
- ^ a b "Biographies" The Detroit Institute of Arts. Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ Muñoz-Alonso, Lorena "Early Velázquez Masterpiece Rescued from Yale Basement" artnet news. October 3, 2014. Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ Katz, Jamie. "A Velázquez in the Cellar?". Smithsonian magazine. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ DIA Names Kenneth Myers Chief Curator-Alan Darr and Salvador Salort-Pons Receive Promotions artdaily.org
- ^ "Fakes, Forgeries and Mysteries" Detroit Institute of Arts. Archived 2016-03-09 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ Marcil, Pamela "Salvador Salort-Pons named director of Detroit Institute of Arts - Will take office as the museum’s 11th director on October 15, 2015 " Detroit Institute of Arts September 16, 2015. Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ https://www.artsjournal.com/realcleararts/2013/11/murillo-discovered-in-a-dark-corner.html
- ^ Hodges, Michael C. "New DIA chief: Museum could be ‘main square of Detroit’" The Detroit News. October 9, 2015. Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ Welch, Sherri "Down-to-earth DIA: New director wants museum to be accessible, connected" Crain's Detroit Business. March 6, 2016. Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ Stryker, Mark. "New DIA director Salvador Salort-Pons talks priorities". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ Hodges, Michael. "Meet the DIA's Salvador Salort-Pons". The Detroit News. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ "Get to know Detroit Institute of Arts Director Salvador SalortPons Series of “Director’s Cut” presentations scheduled in metro Detroit communities" Detroit Institute of Arts. January 21, 2016. Archived March 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2016-03-08.
- ^ https://www.freep.com/story/entertainment/arts/2016/07/20/dia-african-american-art-david- hammons/87291024
- ^ http://www.gazzettaufficiale.it/eli/gu/2016/07/05/155/sg/pdf
- ^ https://www.detroitnews.com/story/entertainment/2017/08/11/salort-pons-naturalization/104513024/
- ^ http://www.crainsdetroit.com/article/20180218/news/653236/planning-to-create-detroit-cultural-campus-quietly-underway
- ^ https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/03/10/dia-millage-metro-detroit-michigan-counties/5017608002/
- ^ https://wdet.org/posts/2020/03/09/89307-dia-director-talks-millage-renewal-on-detroit-today-this-is-not-a-new-tax/