LONDON: Britain’s prestigious Tate institution that houses four of the country’s best known art galleries announced on Tuesday it would have its first female director with the appointment of Maria Balshaw.

The 46-year-old will succeed Nicholas Serota in one of the most influential jobs in the country’s arts industry after transforming Manchester’s cultural landscape.

“I am honoured to be asked by the trustees of Tate to become the new director,” said Balshaw, who takes over on June 1.

“Under Nicholas Serota’s leadership, Tate has changed forever how we all think about art and artists and has made visual art a central part of a vibrant cultural life in the UK.”

The incoming director, Tate’s ninth, vowed to develop the institution’s “reputation as the most artistically adventurous and culturally inclusive gallery in the world.”

Serota has run Tate for almost 30 years, transforming it into a global brand, and is leaving to become chairman of Arts Council England. He masterminded the creation of London’s Tate Modern, the world’s most popular modern art museum, and oversaw the institution’s other three galleries: Tate Britain in London, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives.

Balshaw will quit as director of the Whitworth Art Gallery in the run down Manchester neighbourhood of Moss Side.

She oversaw its $20.6 million renovation and helped it win Museum of the Year in 2015. She has been credited with significantly expanding the collections of the galleries she leads.

Published in Dawn January 18th, 2017

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