Phillipe de Montebello has been director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art for thirty years, but announced on Tuesday that he will step down by the end of the year. “After three decades, to stay much further would be to skirt decency,” he told the NY Times.
While he claims that he is “not the Met,” de Montebello’s career has truly been synonymous with the institution as any long standing director would be. Under his leadership, the Met has grown in all key areas. De Montebello has been instrumental in increasing attendance (which peaked at 5.1M visitors before 9/11) with world class exhibitions of work by da Vinci, Velazquez and Vermeer and was the driving force behind major acquisitions such as the purchase of important paintings by Duccio, van Gogh and Vermeer. The long time director also oversaw impressive gallery renovations that show the permanent collection to it’s best potential.
But de Montebello’s tenure was not without controversy. He has come under fire for not paying enough attention to contemporary art. De Montebello seemed to be addressing these concerns in recent years dwith the Museum’s purchase of Jasper Johns’ White Flag, survey of Chuck Close the three year loan of Damien Hirst’s “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living” installation of a shark preserved in formaldehyde.
The question now turns to who the Met will choose as his successor. Obviously the search is important as the new director will be charged with preserving and continuing to grow one of the world’s most prominent art institutions. Yet, the pool of candidates is dwindling. Efforts such as the Center for Curatorial Leadership are underway to increase the numer of qualified museum directors, but those are long term solutions in their nascent years. And the Met will need to compete for candidates with other well known institutions such as the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington and the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas. The search committee definitely has a challenging job ahead of them and has big shoes to fill.