Founded in 2007, CCL has organized seventeen classes of Fellows to date, training almost 200 curators who serve museums across the world. Each year CCL selects twelve applicants representing a wide range of geographic, institutional, and art historical backgrounds.
Fellows become a unique cohort who undergo professional and personal growth together throughout the CCL experience and beyond. Our graduates add critical value to the vision and strategy of museums worldwide and form a network that fosters growth and collaboration.
If you are a CCL alum and would like to update your personal or professional information for CCL's internal records and/or as they appear on CCL's website, please complete the form linked here.
CCL Class of 2023
Daskalopoulos Curator of Contemporary Art
Katherine Brinson is the Daskalopoulos Curator of Contemporary Art at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, where she has worked since 2005. She curated the survey exhibitions Alex Katz: Gathering (2022-23), Etel Adnan: Light’s New Measure (2021), Danh Vo: Take My Breath Away (2018), Doris Salcedo (organized by the MCA Chicago, 2015), and Christopher Wool(2013–14), and co-curated the group exhibitions Storylines: Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim (2015) and The Luminous Interval: The D. Daskalopoulos Collection(Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 2011). Between 2009 and 2021, Brinson oversaw the Hugo Boss Prize for significant achievement in contemporary art, for which she organized solo presentations by Deana Lawson (2021), Simone Leigh (2019), Anicka Yi (2017), Paul Chan (2015), Danh Vo (2013), and Hans-Peter Feldmann (2011). She is closely involved in building the Guggenheim’s contemporary collection, and has contributed to numerous publications, including catalogue essays on the work of Rashid Johnson, Chris Ofili, and Ryan Gander. She holds a BA in English literature from the University of Oxford and an MA in art history from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.
CCL Class of 2023
Chair and Curator, Arts of the Ancient Mediterranean and Byzantium
Kaywin Feldman, Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Lisa Ayla Çakmak is the Chair and Curator of the Arts of the Ancient Mediterranean and Byzantium at the Art Institute of Chicago. Since coming to Chicago in 2020, Çakmak has overseen the department’s first major acquisitions in five years, and she has initiated a major long-term reinstallation of the Art Institute’s Mary and Michael Jaharis Galleries of Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Art, in addition to serving as a mentor of the museum’s recently-formed Curatorial Mentoring Program. Prior to Chicago, Çakmak spent nearly a decade at the Saint Louis Art Museum, most recently as the Andrew W. Mellon Associate Curator of Ancient Art where she was responsible for the collections of Ancient Near Eastern, Greek, Roman, and Egyptian art. During her tenure in St. Louis, she initiated and realized the highly successful 2018 exhibition Sunken Cities: Egypt’s Lost Worlds, as well as managing the reinstallations of the museum’s galleries of Greek, and Roman art, and the Egyptian and Numismatic collections. Since 2014, she has served as the Chair of the Museums and Exhibitions Committee of the Archaeological Institute of America. Çakmak earned her PhD from the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology at the University of Michigan and attended Princeton University. In 2017 she completed an MBA at Washington University in St. Louis.
CCL Class of 2023
Curator of South Asian Art, Islamic Art, and Antiquities
Martha Tedeschi, Harvard Art Museums
Ainsley M. Cameron is Curator of South Asian Art, Islamic Art and Antiquities at the Cincinnati Art Museum, where she recently directed the renovation and reinstallation of the museum’s Ancient Middle East galleries (funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, opened 2021), as well as the galleries of Islamic and South Asian art (opened 2022). Cameron is Chair of the museum’s Digital Committee, and has published, delivered lectures, and organized numerous exhibitions highlighting the historic and contemporary arts of India and the Islamic world. In 2019 Cameron organized Women Breaking Boundaries, a two-part, cross-collection exhibition that examined the museum’s engagement with female-identified artists. Current projects include Beyond Bollywood: 2000 Years of Dance in Art (opened Nov. 2022) and Shahzia Sikander: Collective Behavior (scheduled 2025).
Cameron completed her doctorate at the University of Oxford in 2010. She holds an MA from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London, and a BA in Archaeology and History from the University of Toronto. Cameron has previously held curatorial positions at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Victoria & Albert Museum, the British Museum, the British Library, and the Bata Shoe Museum.
CCL Class of 2023
Curator/Head, Arts of Global Africa and the Diaspora
Courtney J Martin, Yale Center for British Art
Julie is Curator, Arts of Global Africa and the Diaspora at the Art Gallery of Ontario. She holds a PhD from the Department of History of Art and Archaeology at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, UK. The title of her dissertation is Alphonso Lisk-Carew and Early Photography in Sierra Leone. Since joining the AGO in 2017, she has curated a number of significant exhibitions, including Free Black North (2017), Mickalene Thomas: Femmes Noires (2018), and presentations from the permanent collection such as Photography, 1920s–1940s: Women in Focus (2019–2020) and Fragments of Epic Memory (2021-22). She has actively participated in bringing works by Black artists into the collection and most notably the Montgomery Collection of Caribbean Photographs, acquired in 2019. Julie has also maintained an active presence outside the AGO. She co-curated Here We Are Here: Black Canadian Contemporary Art at the Royal Ontario Museum in 2018. She is also a founding Board member of Black Artists Network in Dialogue (BAND), where she also curated many exhibitions including, Ears, Eyes, Voices: Black Canadian Photojournalists, 1970s–1990s (2017), and she is a founding member of the Black Curators Forum which launched in 2019 to advocate for and support Black curators working in Canada.
CCL Class of 2023
University of Michigan Museum of Art
Chief Curator
University of Michigan Museum of Art
Trevor Schoonmaker
Laura De Becker is the Chief Curator and the Helmut and Candis Stern Curator of African Art at the University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA). A specialist in Central African art, she joined UMMA after a Andrew W. Mellon fellowship at Wits Art Museum in Johannesburg, South Africa. Her most recent projects include We Write To You About Africa, a reinstallation of UMMA’s permanent African collection that has doubled the footprint of the African gallery, and that prompted a separate project grappling with issues of ownership and ethics, titled Wish You Were Here: African Art and Restitution.
De Becker earned her PhD from the University of East Anglia in Norwich, United Kingdom, and has worked at museums in Rwanda, South Africa, the United Kingdom, Belgium and the United States. She is currently working on a project titled Ghana 1957: African Art After Independence, scheduled to commemorate Ghana’s 70th anniversary of its Independence in 2027.
CCL Class of 2023
Steven and Lisa Munster Tananbaum Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art
Sally Tallant
Janet Dees is the Steven and Lisa Munster Tananbaum Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, where she is also affiliated faculty in the Department of Art History and an affiliate of the Center for Native American and Indigenous Research. Trained as a historian of American art, her curatorial work focuses on the ways in which contemporary artists engage with history and archives; artists’ interest in transformational practices; and inclusive museum methodologies. Her work includes commitments to African American, African diasporan, and Indigenous artists. Prior to her appointment at the Block, Dees was curator at SITE Santa Fe, where she worked since 2008. In addition, her experience includes positions at the New York African Burial Ground Project, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Paul R. Jones Collection at the University of Delaware. She earned a B.A. from Fordham University in Art History & African American Studies, and an M.A. in Art History from the University of Delaware. Dees is the recipient of a 2018 Curatorial Fellowship from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts for the development of A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence (2022).
CCL Class of 2023
The Gund Gallery, Kenyon College
Director & Chief Curator
The Gund Gallery, Kenyon College
Glenn Lowry, The Museum of Modern Art - MoMA
Daisy Desrosiers is the Director and Chief Curator of Gund Gallery at Kenyon College. She was previously the inaugural Director of Artist Programs at the Lunder Institute for American Art at the Colby College Museum of Art. In 2021, she was one of the co-curators of the first MOCA Toronto Triennale, GTA21 as well as being a contributor to the NEW MUSEUM Triennale (2021) catalog as well as As we Rise (Aperture, 2021). She is currently working on a monographic publication with the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa) on the work of the artist, Tau Lewis to be published in 2022.
She was the inaugural Nicholas Fox Weber Curatorial Fellow with the Glucksman Museum in Cork, Ireland in 2018 while also a curatorial fellow at Art in General in Brooklyn later that same year. Interdisciplinary art historian and curator, her recent research is concerned with the politics of translation as a productive site of connections and language making. Her thesis investigated the cultural and post-colonial role of commodities in contemporary practices such as the usage of sugar.
CCL Class of 2023
Public Art of the University of Houston System
Executive Director and Chief Curator
Public Art of the University of Houston System
Jessica Morgan, Dia Art Foundation
Maria C. Gaztambide, is the Executive Director and Chief Curator of Public Art of the University of Houston System (Public Art UHS). She oversees exhibitions, commissions, acquisitions, education, and public programs. Since joining the organization in 2018, she has also led exhibitions and projects on artists including Marta Chilindrón, Dorothy Hood, Rick Lowe, Jorge Pardo, Margo Sawyer, Shahzia Sikander, Leo Villareal, and Andy Warhol. Formerly, Gaztambide was the Associate Director of the ICAA at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. At the MFAH, her work straddled administration, research, publications, and long-term exhibition projects such as Contesting Modernity: Informalism in Venezuela, 1955–1975; Adiós Utopía: Dreams and Deception in Cuban Art since 1950; Contingent Beauty: Contemporary Art from Latin America; Carlos Cruz-Diez: Color in Space and Time; and Hélio Oiticica: The Body of Color. Gaztambide publishes regularly on modern and contemporary art and recent book publications include El Techo de la Ballena: Retro-Modernity in Venezuela (UF Press) and On Site: 50 Years of Public Art at the University of Houston System (SCALA), both from 2019. Originally from San Juan, she holds MA degrees in Art History and Arts Administration, as well as an interdisciplinary PhD in Latin American Studies from Tulane University.
CCL Class of 2023
Curator of Contemporary Art
Michael Govan, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)
Emily Liebert is the Curator of Contemporary Art at The Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA). Since joining the museum in 2017, she has curated and co-curated exhibitions by Nicole Eisenman, Kerry James Marshall, Julie Mehretu, Raúl de Nieves, and Laura Owens, as well as the group exhibition Picturing Motherhood Now. Liebert also co-curated the CMA’s first site-specific commission in its atrium, Ámà: The Gathering Place (2019) by Emeka Ogboh. While building the CMA’s contemporary collection, she led the reinstallation of its contemporary galleries in 2021. Before the CMA, Liebert worked at the Museum of Modern Art as Curatorial Assistant on Robert Rauschenberg: Among Friends (2017). Liebert curated Multiple Occupancy: Eleanor Antin’s “Selves” (2013), which opened at Columbia University’s Wallach Art Gallery and traveled to the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston; it was an International Association of Art Critics Award finalist for “Best Monographic Museum Show in New York.” Previously, at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas, Liebert was Coordinator for Education and Public Affairs. From 2008-2011, she was a Joan Tisch Teaching Fellow at the Whitney Museum, where she also participated in its Independent Study Program. Liebert’s art criticism has appeared in Artforum and Frieze. She holds a B.A. from Yale University and a Ph.D. from Columbia University.
CCL Class of 2023
Chair, Global Contemporary Art and Curator, Photography & New Media
Sasha Suda, Philadelphia Museum of Art
Casey Riley oversees Mia’s department of Global Contemporary Art and the research, exhibition, and publication of the museum’s collection of art after 1970. Her curatorial practices are rooted in collaboration and informed by the principles of inclusion and equity. Recent projects at Mia include “Objectivity: Metaphorical and Material Lives of Photographs,” “Dayanita Singh: Pothi Khana,” “Hindsight: American Documentary Photography 1930-1950,” “Vision 2020: Jess Dugan,” “Just Kids,” and “Strong Women, Full of Love: The Photography of Meadow Muska.” In partnership with Mia colleagues and a curatorial council of fourteen artists, scholars, and knowledge sharers, she is co-organizing a survey of works by First Nations, Metis, Inuit, and Native American photographic artists, opening at Mia in October 2023.
Riley was the assistant curator at the Boston Athenaeum and consulting curator at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. She has published widely on American art and photographic history, and has most recently co-organized, with Frank Goodyear and Lisa Hostetler, “Marcia Resnick: As It Is, Or Could Be,” the catalogue for which received the Photography Network Book Prize. An experienced educator, Riley is a graduate of Yale University, holds master’s degrees from Brown University and Middlebury College, and earned her PhD from Boston University.
CCL Class of 2023
Executive Director and Chief Curator
Elvira Dyangani Ose, Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona
Legacy Russell is a curator and writer. Born and raised in New York City, she is the Executive Director & Chief Curator of The Kitchen.
Formerly she was the Associate Curator of Exhibitions at The Studio Museum in Harlem. Russell holds an MRes with Distinction in Art History from Goldsmiths, University of London with a focus in Visual Culture. Her academic, curatorial, and creative work focuses on gender, performance, digital selfdom, internet idolatry, and new media ritual. Russell’s written work, interviews, and essays have been published internationally.
Recent exhibitions include Samora Pinderhughes: GRIEF (2022, The Kitchen); The Condition of Being Addressable (2022, ICA LA); Sadie Barnette: The New Eagle Creek Saloon(2022, The Kitchen); Projects: Kahlil Robert Irving (2021), Projects: Garrett Bradley (2020), and Projects: Michael Armitage (2019), all with The Studio Museum in Harlem in partnership with The Museum of Modern Art; (Never) As I Was, This Longing Vessel, and MOOD with Studio Museum in partnership with MoMA PS1; Thomas J Price: Witness (2021); Dozie Kanu: Function (2019), and Chloë Bass: Wayfinding (2019) at The Studio Museum in Harlem; LEAN with Performa’s Radical Broadcast online (2020) and in physical space at Kunsthall Stavanger (2021).
She is the recipient of the Thoma Foundation 2019 Arts Writing Award in Digital Art, a 2020 Rauschenberg Residency Fellow, and a recipient of the 2021 Creative Capital Award. Her first book is Glitch Feminism: A Manifesto (2020). Her second book, BLACK MEME, is forthcoming via Verso Books.
CCL Class of 2023
Chief Curator
Anne Pasternak, Brooklyn Museum
Gabriela Urtiaga is an Argentinian art historian and curator. Since 2019, she is the Chief Curator at the Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA) in Long Beach, California.
She was curator of the XIV Biennial of Curitiba, Brazil (2019/2020), and the Chief Curator at the Kirchner Cultural Center (CCK) in Buenos Aires, Argentina, between 2016 and 2019.
She has carried out numerous curatorships and developed projects in collaboration with international institutions such as Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, Le Bibliothèque Nationale (France); the CentroCentro (Spain); MACRO Museum (Italy); the Centro Cultural Gabriela Mistral (Chile), Centro Cultural Recoleta (Argentina), Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions and ICA San Diego (USA), among others.
Throughout her career she has worked with prominent international artists such as Marta Minujín, Judy Baca, Julio Le Parc, Tomás Saraceno, Amalia Mesa Bains, Jean Paul Gaultier, Guillermo Kuitca, Alexandre Arrechea, among others.
She has been a consultant, speaker, and jury member for the leading art fairs such as Art Basel Cities Buenos Aires, Arteba in Argentina, Frieze Los Angeles and at the Biennale of Lyon and ArtParis in France, advisor committee and nominator for Smithsonian Annual Conference and Kyoto Prize for Art and Philosophy and has lectured at numerous museums and universities around the world.