| Art gallery director well qualified for role
							
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								| Jenny Harper |  The Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu’s new  director is Victoria   University’s Assistant  Vice-Chancellor (Academic) Jenny Harper. Ms Harper will take up the position on  9 October. Ms Harper brings a wealth of expertise to the role, having  worked in art galleries in New Zealand  and Australia  as a curator and director, as well as 11 years academic experience at Victoria  University of Wellington. Christchurch City Council Community Services General Manager  Stephen McArthur said with hands-on gallery curatorial experience, industry  knowledge, leadership skills and gallery management, Ms Harper was  well-qualified for the role of director. Ms Harper was part of the Institutional Planning Team for  the Museum of New   Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, becoming Director of the National Art Gallery  in 1990 and then Director of Art and History at the combined museum and gallery  (now Te Papa) in 1992. For five months she was acting chief executive. She worked a year as the Director (Museum Projects) before  leaving to take up the position as Associate Professor and inaugural head of  Art History Department at Victoria   University. She was  pivotal in the development of the Adam   Art Gallery  which opened at the university in 1999. In 2001, Ms Harper was appointed Head  of Victoria’s School   of Art History, Classics  and Religious Studies, and in 2004 became Assistant Vice-Chancellor (Academic).  Mr McArthur said as the new director Ms Harper would be  instrumental in implementing the Paradigm Shift or Five-year Strategic Plan,  which was released last week, and would ensure the Gallery fulfilled its key  leadership role in the development of Worcester    Boulevard and the Cultural Precinct as the most  visited cultural tourism site in New Zealand. “Ms Harper will also play a pivotal role in helping the  Gallery celebrate the city’s creative spirit and expand the public’s perception  of art, inviting them to expand their cultural horizons and enrich their  senses.” Ms Harper said she was looking forward to returning to Christchurch, where she had studied in the 1970s,  completing a BA and an MA in Religious Studies with 1st Class Honours at the University of Canterbury. “The launch of the Paradigm Shift makes this an exciting  time to be involved in the development of the Christchurch Art   Gallery,” she said. “The Christchurch Art Gallery  is a fantastic building and there is strong stakeholder and community support  for the institution, but in some ways it is a gallery still waiting to happen. “The Plan is an important framework for the Gallery. It  provides for strategic development but offers the flexibility to grow and  expand people’s perceptions of art through a challenging exhibition programme.  It is a very good forward-looking plan that I am happy to implement.” After 11 years in the academic sector, Ms Harper said she  welcomed the return to the art gallery environment. “I look forward to engaging  the broader community and making the Christchurch   Art Gallery  a leading arts institution,” Ms Harper said. |