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Oliver Switches Jobs - Stays in The Arts |
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Tuesday, 23 October 2012 |
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The Kodiak Arts Council is getting a new director in the coming months, and it’s someone many Kodiak residents already know. Katie Oliver is currently the executive director of the Baranov Museum and will say her goodbyes to the organization in late November when she’ll join the Kodiak Arts Council as executive director.
Oliver has worked at the Baranov Museum for about ten years and said the change is definitely bittersweet, but she is excited for new challenges
.
-- (Arts Director 1 :42 “Well I applied
for the position mostly because I believe very much in the Kodiak Arts
Council mission. And as a long standing nonprofit in Kodiak it’s an
organization that has had a profound and positive impact on me and my
life and I had the opportunity to work as a staff member for the arts
council in the past and serve as a board member on the board of
directors and I believe very much in the good work they’re doing. On a
personal level I felt the timing was right for a career change and I
felt very good about the work that is being done here at the Baranov
Museum and that it would b e a good time to take on new leadership here
at the museum as well.”)
Wes Hanna was chair of the search
committee for the arts council. He said the vacant position with the
arts council generated many well-qualified applicants, both locally and
from afar.
-- (Arts Director 2 :34 “We began
the search for a new executive director somewhere around the end of
August and we put advertisements both in the local newspaper here in
Kodiak and also on the statewide job service website. And we got a lot
of response. It was really great to see the response. We got resumes
from people as far away as Illinois. But the nicest thing for our search
committee was the fact that we were able to get so many great local
candidates that wanted to be part of the Kodiak Arts Council and leading
and directing it.”)
He said Oliver’s extensive background in
grant writing and leading other non profits definitely helped in
choosing her for the position. Oliver said she is excited to interact
with the arts community on a different level than she has in the past.
--
(Arts Director 3 :46 “Well I’ve had the good fortune
through my position at the museum to work closely with individual
artists and with arts groups over the years and I’m continually
impressed by the diversity and sophistication of artistic works and
innovation that’s happening here in Kodiak. I have some ideas about
funding programs to pursue, because I inhabit the world of grant writing
for arts and culture organizations in Alaska. But I also think it’s
really important to spend some initial time in the first few months
having conversations with artists and arts council members and donors
and stakeholders about their ideas for the future of the arts council.
”)
Oliver said her last day with the museum will be on
November 30. She said she will start with the arts council shortly
thereafter. Her departure from the Baranov is more than a month away,
and Oliver said she plans to continue to work diligently for the
organization she feels grateful to have been a part of.
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