The Minneapolis Institute of Art named an art expert with an entrepreneurial past Tuesday as its next director and president: Katherine Luber, of the San Antonio Museum of Art.
A fifth-generation Texan, Luber, 58, will become the 12th person — and second woman — to run Mia, one of the country's leading museums.
"For me it's an opportunity to fly, in a way, and stretch my wings as leader," Luber said in an interview. "The breadth of the collections, the importance of the museum to the community … This is an extraordinary opportunity."
Luber, who has led the San Antonio institution for eight years, possesses not only a Ph.D. in art history but also an MBA and experience launching an organic spice company.
"She brings both the business world and the art curatorial world together in one person, which when we looked at our pool of candidates is pretty unusual," said David Wilson, chairman of Mia's board of trustees, which unanimously approved the pick at its meeting Tuesday.
That business-world know-how will come in handy as Mia moves forward with a campus revamp — outlined in a master plan adopted late last year — to make more room for artworks and people. Wilson noted "daunting challenges," including "crumbling parking infrastructure and a huge lack of art storage."
"She will be able to not only look at this master plan from the perspective of how is this going to serve our art, our community, our patrons," he said, "but also, how can we make it work financially."
Luber, who starts in January, succeeds Kaywin Feldman, who left Minneapolis' encyclopedic museum in March for a high-profile post as the first female director of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.