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March 26, 2007

Smithsonian's Secretary Takes the Hint

SmithsonianThe Smithsonian Institution's woes have been front and center in the news lately, and now it has sent its first victim to the chopping block. In the wake of last week's fairly crushing – though not entirely surprising – report on the state of the museums, Secretary Lawrence M. Small has submitted his resignation, announced today by the Board of Regents Executive Committee. Some have noted that Small may only be the first of the Institution's management to get pushed out.

Small has been under scrutiny for some time now, accused of Ladner-esque use of Smithsonian funds for personal expenses, which the Post outlines well, including $31,000 for Berkeley stripe upholstery and $2,535 to clean a chandelier, among other housing, travel and luxury costs. The former banker's "Capitalism Yay!" view of museum management has often been sharply critisized, as he courted and signed deals with corporations to sponsor exhibits, which we discussed last July or, as the Post also notes, made deals with companies like Showtime for semi-exclusive access rights to archives.

Add that to the Smithsonian's report and its emphasis not just on current problems, but ongoing mismanagement that has clearly been ignored, and Small's ouster, either forced or voluntary, seemed inevitable. And if this leads to some severe restructuring of the Institution as a whole, you won't see us complaining. Much of the information in the report is old news – leaks endangering the collections? Color us surprised appalled that still hasn't been addressed. Though the lack of proper Congressional funding continues to be a tightening noose around the neck of the Smithsonian's attempt at upkeep, the report makes clear that they need to clean house first, before they beg for funds that seem to be going nowhere (or at least, going into the 60% raise Small got over the past few years).

Among one of the more obvious suggestions is to consolidate management of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery, housed together at the Renwick Gallery Reynolds Center. (The folks at SAAM published their reaction to the report at their blog, EyeLevel.) A more coherant vision and integrated use of collections, including joint programming, is asked of nearly all the museums, particularly at the Renwick Reynolds, between the Freer and Sackler Galleries, and between the Hirshhorn and all the other museums. Take a look over at The Art Newspaper, who broke the news of the report last week, for a decent breakdown of the recommendations.

While the Institution looks for Small's replacement, Cristián Samper, head of the National Museum of Natural History, will be acting secretary.

Photo by Flickr user FishFeathers.


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Comments (8)

They also need to save the Arts and Industries building, which is being allowed to rot. Under Small, the Smithsonian abandoned the building and quit doing maintenance. The roof is just one big snowstorm away from completely collapsing.

 

Hasn't the Smithsonian been scandalously underfunded for years? The place has so much deferred maintenance that the mis-spending of even hundreds of thousands of dollars comes to small potatoes by comparison.

Sure, tighten the fiscal belt, but don't lose sight of the big picture, which is that a premier (free!) public learning institution is being starved and allowed to decay. I hate this present news story because it masks just that appropriate focus.

 

Heather- a small correction: The Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery are housed together at the Reynolds Center not at the Renwick Gallery. The Renwick Gallery is part of SAAM but located on Pennsylvania Avenue by the White House.

Also, the recommendations do not include the Renwick, except as part of the consolidation between SAAM and NPG.

 

Agree with Mark. Yes, the salary was a bit out of control, but that's a complete side-issue from the real lack of funding that is sorely needed for routine operations, building modernization, and exhibit updates. Surprising lack of advocacy considering the recent news that DC has 435 Congressmen looking out for its interests, right?

 

Thanks, CDTrave.

I can't help but think the story is convenient. I can hear the budget arguments already: "Hey, keep funding of XYZ at unadjusted FY2000 levels, they just waste what we give them anyway."

 

I don't think your characterization of Ben Ladner has ever been fair, especially invoking him in this post. I was an AU grad student when that all went down, and while I do think he took some liberties with what his contract allowed him to do, he was for the most part living by the letter of that contract. The ire of the students (and media)should have been directed at the board of trustees for being absent in their fiduciary duties in giving him such a lavish contract. It also isn't helpful when media members try and score cheap points off of the man's name.

 

To Whom it May Concern-

I will gladly run the Smithsonian for 100k a year, and I promise that any salary over that amount will be used for facilities maintainence. Which I will do over the weekend on my own time. I'll even buy my own painters smock.

I look forward to speaking with you regarding this position.

BrodyV

 

Hear that Smithsonian? Hire BrodyV! And jail that jerk you just fired! Better still, stuff him and put him on display just inside the door of the Museum of Natural History.

 
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