Amy Sadao
Amy Sadao is a contemporary art curator and nonprofit consultant who was director of the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia from September 2012 to September 2019.[1][2][3][4] Sadao was executive director of Visual AIDS in New York City prior to her appointment to the ICA directorship.[5] She has been known to engage diverse communities and to center art around the contemporary social and political issues across the globe.[6] BiographyBorn in California in 1971,[7] Sadao grew up in Huntington Beach, California.[8] She received her BFA from the Cooper Union School of Art in 1995 and an MA in comparative ethnic studies from the University of California, Berkeley in 2000.[2] CareerSadao began her career in museums as a curatorial intern at the Whitney Museum of American Art.[2] At the Whitney museum, she worked with curator, Thelma Golden.[8] Sadao was the executive director of Visual AIDS in New York City for ten years, from 2002 through 2012.[9] During her time at Visual AIDS, she increased outreach and expanded available resources surrounding HIV/AIDS to encourage discussion and support of HIV+ artists. In June 2012, she became the Director of the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA).[10] University of Pennsylvania President Amy Gutmann and Provost Vincent Price announced her appointment to a directorship named for Daniel W. Dietrich II, honoring his substantial financial gift in 2005. In 2015, he also gave a US$10 million endowment to the university[11] in support of its curatorial program and to help bring artists to Philadelphia.[12] Describing her as "a leader of unparalleled energy and vision", Gutmann commented, "She has an especially strong commitment to forging collaborations across a wide range of diverse communities and placing art at the center of dialogue about the most significant intellectual, political, and social issues of the contemporary world."[13] Price said, "I have been particularly impressed by her understanding of the role of art in a research university – and in catalyzing intellectual and interdisciplinary inquiry in general – as well as by the knowledge she brings of Penn and Philadelphia."[13] She was elected to the board of the Pennsylvania Humanities Council in 2015.[14] Awards
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