In the How I Get It Done column, we talk to successful women about managing their careers and their lives. Here, Lauren Haynes discusses her first year as director of Curatorial Affairs and Programs at the Queens Museum.
as director of Curatorial Affairs and Programs, guiding the overall vision for exhibitions and public programs. Prior to arriving at Queens, her storied art career included posts at the Studio Museum in Harlem , the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas. This past April, President Bidento the Committee for the Preservation of the White House.
As a specialist in contemporary art by artists of African descent, she has ambitious goals for QM, particularly in regards to being intentional and inclusive when interacting with the Queens community specifically, while also being in service to the art community at large. She has plans to develop robust programming , while being nimble with the endeavors of her team and also not overtaxing herself and her support system.
“I’m interested in this idea of where the Queens Museum is in Flushing Meadows, Corona Park, in the middle of two extremely vibrant neighborhoods, but also in the most diverse borough in the city and probably one of the most diverse places in the word,” says Haynes. “Having that as a primary audience, but also being in a city where you still are thinking about your traditional museumgoers who will come to Queens and want to see the show that we’re doing.
That’s success. Walking into the galleries and seeing a school group and seeing kids engaging with the artworks and them being very excited or having questions or having conversations, that’s also what success looks like. My mom was very supportive, but she always asked, “What does that look like? What are you gonna do with that?” When you say you’re going to be a lawyer, it’s clear that you’ll go to law school.
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