Therefore, it is no wonder that there is a confusion of roles between the curator and the sales manager. |
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The curator of the museum, has suggested that perhaps Frederick Linder, a painter and paperhanger, papered the walls in exchange for free rent. |
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Goode, who spent 17 years as the curator of the Smithsonian Castle, has not assembled a picture book for nostalgics. |
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The curator, Anthony Gross, has staggered the screenings in order to show as many films as possible in two weeks. |
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The book contains a foreword by R. G. Doty, the curator of numismatics, Smithsonian Institution, that is followed by an informative introduction. |
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Croce, curator of the Smithsonian centre for folklife and cultural heritage, and a team of colleagues, visited Scotland for 10 days. |
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The former curator is working on the ecology and systematics of leaf miner flies and frit flies which develop in plant tissue. |
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It is a group of presentations hosted by an artist curator or, as in one case, architect. |
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With the permission of the curator of the National Museum, we were allowed to see the work in progress. |
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A curator from the local museum was there in the U.K. as part of this scheme. |
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Joel was chosen in recognition of his work as an author, educator, curator, and promoter of mineral collecting. |
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Agricultural Research Service agronomist Melanie Newman is the curator for finger millet and other warm-season cereals, forages, and turfgrasses. |
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The university rector was appointed for four years by the minister of education and was subordinate to the curator of his educational district. |
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Terry is a professor of geosciences at the University of Arizona and also curator of the Department of Geosciences Mineral Museum. |
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Serra referred him to a friend, the Spanish curator Carmen Gimenez, who was working at the time for the Ministry of Culture in Madrid. |
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Having chosen to ride on his considerable reputation, the curator has assembled a show that feels alternately meandering and hasty. |
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They went off amicably with the suspicious curator following stealthily behind. |
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After studying archaeology at Cambridge University, he became curator of prehistory at the Museum of London. |
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He eventually left to become curator of the herbarium at the California Academy in San Francisco and has become a renowned ethnobotanist. |
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France Morin is an independent contemporary art curator and art historian based in New York. |
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She studied art history, and she's contemplating being a curator in a museum. |
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Nevertheless, it demonstrates the pull a curator can exert on an exhibition. |
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According to the curator of the gallery, paintings are gaining in importance day by day. |
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Tiktaalik would have breathed like a lungfish, says Clack, senior assistant curator at Cambridge's University Museum of Zoology. |
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The greatest wonder was a Freemason's apron, which, as the curator sagely declared, proved the existence of such an order. |
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The curator insisted it was of placid temper, but obviously it took against me, and only a dangling camera bag saved my legs from a mauling. |
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He is a London-based independent curator of experimental, avant-garde, and artists' film and video. |
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Pilgrim is curator of the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University in Big Rapids, Mich. |
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John Gould made his name as a taxidermist and was a curator and preserver to the Zoological Society, in London. |
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The Melburnian art historian, curator, and author is keen to expand the contemporary art event across Sydney and Australia. |
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Choreographer, curator and video artist, he likes to combine disciplines to subvert our preconceptions. |
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The museum curator says the tivaevae were chosen by the Atiu Fibre Arts director. |
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Every museum director and curator embarking on a new building project should be required to tour these rooms. |
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Simply stated, it is through a highly trained and discerning eye that a curator develops this skill. |
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While the prizes on offer to artists seem to multiply by the year, the achievement of the humble curator still goes largely uncelebrated. |
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Next month, as curator of the Meltdown festival, she will play it in its entirety on stage for the first time. |
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Kindly the curator of the museum had made a display of a few of about 20 of the items you might see on your visit in the front window. |
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She worked casually at the museum from 1967, was honorary curator for 11 years, and continues to be an adviser on the museum's textiles. |
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A wrinkled old hill woman was the sole curator and keeper of the gallery then. |
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But then these rooms are stuffed with things of beauty, as the deputy curator of the collection, Martin Clayton, enthusiastically points out. |
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According to the curator of the project, combining these images with Latino rhythms makes for a hot-blooded mix. |
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The magician, illusionist and singer kept the name and is now the only curator who celebrates the star signs as they happen throughout the year. |
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But I only learned the full story when I spoke to a curator at the local museum. |
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Obviously, the curator of an owning museum will have intimate knowledge of their collection and would not lightly make such a decision. |
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Rosenthal, for all his camp flamboyance at the Alternative Miss World, is married to a curator at the Prado museum in Madrid and has two daughters. |
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A juvenile green turtle was found with a plastic bag wound tightly around its right flipper, cutting off blood flow, aquarium curator Willie Maritz said yesterday. |
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Roland Kays, curator of mammals at New York State Museum in Albany, studied two nocturnal raccoon relatives, kinkajous and olingos, at STRI in Panama. |
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Starting with a simple, traditional Kashmiri shawl, the curator moved to the increasingly ornate ones turned out by Jacquard looms in the 18th and 19th Centuries. |
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The intellectual biography of the curator has to be on shaky ground. |
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Now, as an associate curator at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, he has an entire three-story building full of herpetological specimens at his disposal. |
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Perhaps your article will provoke more reminiscences from those who remember him still, and perhaps this will prompt an enlightened curator or two to try to do more for him. |
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The wet weather prevented the curator from producing proper practice nets and batting practice has been limited to a few minutes on the eve of the match. |
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The following year Jonathan Betts, the curator of horology at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, was contracted to survey and produce a catalogue of the collection. |
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In case you are wondering what else it takes to be a research curator at one of the world's top historical attractions, Sarah kindly tells it like it is. |
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The curator of the museum has suggested that perhaps Frederick Linder, a painter and paperhanger who lived at 97 Orchard Street, papered the walls in exchange for free rent. |
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Architecture comes naturally to him as a family profession, inherited from his paternal grandfather who was the curator of Taj Mahal and an architect. |
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It's interesting, I can see a distinction between how a curator like John Szarkowski might draw on news reportage and introduce his own juxtapositions of imagery. |
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Sarah Maultby, York Museums' Trust assistant curator of social history, said the harpsichord has been restrung using brass and iron music wires that are historically accurate. |
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The museum has appointed him its consultative curator of American art. |
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Like any good curator, of course, he digresses, pausing to impart a bit of gossip or whimsy, spicing the historically significant with the genuinely weird. |
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From my start in 1935 as assistant curator, I had made it a point to develop friendly relations with significant members of the wholesale gem trade. |
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The curator is especially qualified to talk about African-American history, as she took part in the freedom marches and was clubbed and arrested on the Selma bridge. |
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A Call To Action is, with Carter acting as curator and commentator, the public record and statement of that conference. |
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The guest curator, John Ayers, has written an essay for the catalogue that emends flaws in dating and attribution erroneously accepted as the last word for decades. |
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The ranger took her to the curator, who searched the archives for anything regarding the jitterbug contest. |
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The Shonibare photographs were on loan on the recommendation of Okwui Enwezor, who is, among many other things, an adjunct curator of contemporary art at the Institute. |
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Chris Barclay, keeper of archaeology and curator of the museum, joined Hull Council only a few weeks ago but has already been awed by the scale of the development. |
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I thought about paying to ride one of the horses, and slowly trotting down the road, until I was out of the sight of the zoo's curator, and then galloping away. |
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With Walker's permission their curator, Susan Cahan, engaged a sign painter to create stencils that would allow the figures to be painted directly on the wall. |
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The curator had wanted the artists to produce work while they were in Europe in order to prove their talent to any skeptics. |
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Xu Jiang, a widely exhibited painter who is president of the China Academy of Art and vice chairman of the Chinese Artists Association, serves as head curator. |
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Bringing pieces from the two collections together gives a fresh perspective to them, says Janet Bishop, an SFMOMA curator. |
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A Whitney curator, chrissie Iles, invited him to bring Caligula to the 2006 Whitney Biennial. |
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She is currently adjunct curator at Presentation House Gallery. |
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The curator appears to intend a chance to re-engage with genuine reality. |
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Science historian Daniel Lewis set out to write a biography of Robert Ridgway, the Smithsonian's first curator of birds. |
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A maximalist, Mr. Baldwin is at once a collector and curator of 20th-century visual culture. |
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The museum curator went to the shelf and pulled down an ancient metering device. |
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Every three years the gallery stages a Triennial exhibition in which a guest curator provides an overview of contemporary British Art. |
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In that year he was appointed curator of archaeology in the National Museum of Wales, and in 1926 became its Director. |
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In smaller organizations, a curator may have sole responsibility for acquisitions and even collections care. |
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However, in recent years, the role of a curator has evolved alongside the changing role of museums. |
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More recently, advances in new technologies have led to a further widening of the role of curator. |
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In contemporary art, the title curator is given to a person who selects and often interprets works of art. |
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In addition to selecting works, the curator often is responsible for writing labels, catalog essays, and other content supporting the exhibition. |
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In some US organizations, the term curator is also used to designate the head of any given division of a cultural organization. |
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Other explanations include fraud, though curator Alfred Grimm of the Egyptian Museum in Munich disputes this. |
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Martin Tvengsberg, a descendant the Forest Finns, studied them in his capacity as curator of the Hedmark Museum in Norway. |
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Once again curator Noel Ratch has brought a distinctive and highly effective approach to the project. |
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To find out more, The Daily Beast spoke to curator Donald Albrecht. |
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I regard myself as a curator of advance fee seam and scambaiting correspondences. |
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It is co-authored with Charles Hinman, curator of the USS Bowfin Submarine Museum in Hawaii. |
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And few were more excited about the annual goat brush cut at the Getty Center than Elizabeth Morrison, its curator of medieval manuscripts. |
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But now I have to go find a haptic curator to do battle with. |
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This work was started by William Gillis, who was the first plant taxonomist and curator of the herbarium of Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden. |
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She teamed up with Barbara Train, the curator of the Abbe Museum of Stoneage Antiquities, and the Maine State Archaeologist, Arthur Speiss. |
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Why would the curator, who was surely aware of the fraught multivalence of this view, choose to give it such prominence? |
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Tour the Fern Valley Native Plant Collection with the curator in March and learn about eastern woodland spring ephemerals. |
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Her work, which she said is part of the Stuckist movement, has been shown internationally after being highlighted by curator Edward Lucie-Smith. |
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According to exhibition curator Jan Graffius, Edward Oldcorne was unluckier than you might imagine. |
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Leopold associate professor in biology and curator of paleobotany at the Burke Museum. |
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Fatting, an entomologist and head curator of the Emery University Museum of Natural History, who published the Scarabaeidae of Georgia. |
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Susan Foister, curator of the new exhibition, even places him alongside Leonard da Vinci and Michelangelo because of his commitment to science along with art. |
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German expressionism would be unthinkable without Freud,'' Barron, senior curator of 20th-century art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, said in an interview. |
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Veteran entomologists, curator Chris Darling and technician Brad Hubley primarily focus their efforts on geometrid moths and the cicadas of Mulu's forests. |
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He plays straitlaced museum curator Ian Bennet, who falls for a local woman while negotiating the return of a Maori carving to a remote part of New Zealand. |
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Kennet Lundin, senior curator of marine and limnic invertebrates. |
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An independent curator and expert in contemporary art, Ormond has achieved that goal, vetting a variety of works to reflect disparate tastes but unanimous zeal. |
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The team in Dublin is being taught how to use the Kissing Bug technique by Andre Stadler, the curator of Wuppertal Zoo in Germany, where the idea was first conceived. |
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As curator of experiments for the Royal Society, he poured out a stream of brilliant concepts on universal gravity, evolution of the species and atomic theory. |
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The album, Rework Philip Glass Remixed, was released on October 23, 2012, to critical acclaim, and featured Beck as both a curator and a performer. |
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The jury included musician Neil Tennant, author Marina Warner, curator Fumio Nanjo and British Council officer Ann Gallagher, chaired by Nicholas Serota. |
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The name The Forme of Cury was given to the manuscript by Samuel Pegge, who published an edition of it in 1780 for the curator of the British Museum, Gustavus Brander. |
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He also made the office of curator of each of the great public roads a perpetual magistracy, instead of a special and temporary commission, as had been the case hitherto. |
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Borel, curator of the Marin museum, began to excavate as well. |
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