Lloyd E. Herman

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Lloyd Eldred Herman
Born1936 (age 85–86)
United States
EducationOregon State University,
American University
OccupationArts administrator, curator, museum planner, writer
OrganizationRenwick Gallery
Movementcontemporary craft movement

Lloyd Eldred Herman (born 1936) is an American arts administrator, curator, writer, and museum planner who is an acknowledged expert on contemporary craft.[1] He is known for being the founding Director of the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington D.C., from 1971 to 1986.[2][3]

He was elected as an honorary fellow by the American Craft Council in 1988.[4] Additionally he is a Honorary Lifetime Member of Northwest Designer Craftsmen, a member of the American Alliance of Museums, a honorary member of the American Society of Interior Designers, a trustee of the Highline Historical Society.[5] He has been decorated in Belgium and Denmark, for exhibitions that he organized in their countries.[5]

Early life and education[]

Lloyd Eldred Herman is an Oregon native.[1] He attended elementary and high school near Corvallis.

After high school graduation in 1954, he enrolled at Oregon State College (now Oregon State University) in Corvallis, with the hopes of becoming an actor, or a teacher. His education was interrupted by two years active duty in the United States Navy. On his return to Oregon, he enrolled as a junior at the University of Oregon in Eugene, majoring in speech and drama. He went to Washington D.C. to enroll in the acting program at Catholic University of America for his senior year. He was not accepted, instead enrolling at the American University, where he graduated with a BS degree in 1960.

Career[]

Smithsonian Institution[]

Lloyd Herman joined the staff of the Smithsonian Institution in 1966 as Administrative Officer to the Director of the National Museum, and began to develop a changing exhibition program for the galleries of the Arts and Industries Building. As the Director of what was intended to become the , he began booking traveling exhibitions from museums and traveling exhibition services. That experience led him to propose a similar temporary exhibition program for the former building, designed in 1859 by architect James Renwick as the Corcoran Gallery of Art that had been transferred to the Smithsonian. In 1968, Lloyd Herman developed a proposal for the as a changing exhibition program for such exhibitions from various sources, to be administered as a component of the Exposition Hall programs. In 1970, he was hired to implement it as Administrator, Renwick Gallery. He developed temporary exhibitions that would reflect the range that the Renwick Gallery planned to embrace: architecture and design, contemporary and traditional craft, traditional decorative arts, plus ethnic and folk art from various countries. He subsequently became the first Director of the Renwick Gallery, and from 1972 to 1986 presented over 100 exhibitions. Lloyd Herman retired from the Smithsonian Institution in 1986.

Museum planning[]

In 1988, Lloyd Herman began the directorship of the , a non-profit craft gallery in Vancouver, B.C., and planned its future as the . Working there for three years, he developed a space-use plan and an exhibition program.

At the same time, he curated traveling shows for the Whatcom Museum of History and Art in Bellingham, WA. They included Into the Woods: Washington Wood Artists, Clearly Art: Pilchuck's Glass Legacy, and Trashformations: Recycled Materials in Contemporary American Art and Design, among others.

In 1993 he was hired by Oregon State University to plan a new museum on the Oregon Coast as part of the , a craft school component of the university's art department. Though advanced architectural planning and land acquisition at Agate Beach in Newport, OR, proceeded, the facility was never built.

He joined the planning staff for the Museum of Glass in Tacoma, Washington in 1998 as Acting Senior Curator, writing collection and exhibition policies, and advising on space planning for the facility prior to its construction.[6]

Independent curator, and lecturer[]

Lloyd Herman continued to curate exhibitions on craft and design topics for the United States Information Agency, the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, and various other museums and traveling exhibition services. He has lectured on American crafts throughout the United States,[7] and numerous locations abroad. He has led craft tours to Bhutan, India, Iran, Jordan, Morocco, and Vietnam. He has lectured regularly on contemporary glass art for programs in Seattle.

Publications[]

He co-authored the book, Thomas Mann, Metal Artist. Recent writing projects include books on glass artists Narcissus Quagliata and Josh Simpson.

  • Herman, Lloyd E. (1998). Trashformations: Recycled Materials in Contemporary American Art and Design (art exhibition). Whatcom Museum of History and Art. Whatcom Museum of History and Art. ISBN 9780295977201.
  • Herman, Lloyd E. (1998). American Glass: Masters of the Art. Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. ISBN 9780295977560.
  • Herman, Lloyd E. (1992). Clearly Art, Pilchuck's Glass Legacy (art exhibition). Whatcom Museum of History and Art. Whatcom Museum of History and Art. ISBN 9780938506003.
  • Herman, Lloyd E. (1990). Art That Works: The Decorative Arts of the Eighties, Crafted in America. Mint Museum. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295970073.

References[]

  1. ^ a b Updike, Robin (May 27, 1997). "Lloyd Herman: A Leading Voice Who Sees The Art In The Craft". archive.seattletimes.com. The Seattle Times.
  2. ^ "Lloyd Herman Project". Northwest Designer Craftsmen.
  3. ^ "Here, There & Everywhere". American Craft Council. American Craft Magazine. September 3, 2008. Retrieved 2022-01-26.
  4. ^ "College of Fellows". American Craft Council. Retrieved 2022-01-26.
  5. ^ a b "Lloyd Herman Documentary". James Renwick Alliance (JRA). Retrieved 2022-01-26.
  6. ^ "Celebrating Craft Visionary Lloyd Herman; Showcase Magazine".
  7. ^ "Gallery Director to Lecture at Academy". Newspapers.com. The Star-Democrat. 5 February 1987. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-01-26.

External links[]

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