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Excerpt:
...On October 13, 1999, New York's Museum of American
Folk Art celebrated a long-awaited move to 53rd Street
(right next to the Museum of Modern Art) with the 'ground
breaking' for the institution's new headquarters, which
will open officially in 2001. The new space will house
MAFA's Contemporary Center, which will focus exclusively
on contemporary folk art -- headed by Brooke Anderson.
Well known and respected for her directorial and curatorial
work at Winston-Salem State University's Diggs Gallery,
in North Carolina, Anderson has been on the job since
the early summer of 1999, developing current and future
projects. I met with her in a busy coffee shop near
Lincoln Center to discuss her past experience, her current
challenges, and her hopes for the Contemporary Center's
future role in the development of the field of folk/outsider/self-taught
art.
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Jenifer
Borum: How did your career in museums unfold?
Brooke Anderson: Well, I interned and worked briefly
as an assistant at the Cavin Morris Gallery, and I interned
at NYU's Grey Art Gallery. At the Grey I did a little
of everything -- educational and curatorial work, as
well as sitting at the front desk. After I graduated
from NYU, I traveled to Poland to research Polish folk
art, and came back to begin a job search. I saw a job
listing for the position of inaugural director for a
new museum -- the Diggs Gallery at Winston-Salem State
University in North Carolina -- that focused on African-American
art and included teaching responsibilities, and I applied.
Of all the positions I applied for, the Diggs was the
most appealing. I was able to be a director, but also
a curator and professor.
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