Clark Art Appoints Curator of Decorative Arts

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Clark Art Institute announced the appointment of Alexis Goodin as the Curator of Decorative Arts.
 
"Alexis is an integral part of the Clark's curatorial team, and she has brought extraordinary rigor, insight, and care to the study and presentation of our decorative arts collections," said Esther Bell, Deputy Director and Robert and Martha Berman Lipp Chief Curator of the Clark. "Her deep institutional knowledge and scholarly excellence make her uniquely suited to steward this area of our collection."
 
According to a press release:
 
Having served for over more than two decades at the Clark, Goodin has played a role in shaping the interpretation, presentation, and scholarship of the Clark's decorative arts collections. Her work in this field began in 2000, when she served as co-curator of A Fresh and Large Assortment: American Silver from the Burrows Collection. Since that time, she worked closely with Kathleen Morris, the Clark's former Sylvia and Leonard Marx Director of Collections and Exhibitions, Curator of Decorative Arts, on expansive reviews of the Clark's porcelain, glass, and silver holdings, contributing to both scholarly research and public-facing interpretation, including the 2017 openings of the Lauzon Glass Study Gallery and the Henry Morris and Elizabeth H. Burrows Gallery of American Decorative Arts. The Burrows Gallery houses the Clark's collection of early American paintings and furniture in addition to its exceptional Burrows collection of American silver.
 
Goodin was the co-curator of "Orchestrating Elegance: Alma-Tadema and Design" (2017), an exhibition that explored the intersections of fine and decorative arts in the late nineteenth century. She was also a member of the team that reinterpreted objects and developed new interpretive labels for the Burrows Gallery of American Decorative Arts, installed in the fall of 2022, intended to deepen visitor engagement with the collection.
 
In addition to her work with decorative arts, Goodin's curatorial practice reflects a sustained interest in women artists and social history. She curated the Clark's summer 2025 exhibition, "A Room of Her Own: Women Artist-Activists in Britain, 1875–1945,"" which examined the artistic production and cultural impact of women working across media during a period of profound social and political change.
 
Goodin holds a master's degree from the Williams College/Clark Graduate Program in the History of Art and a Ph.D. in art history from Brown University, writing her dissertation on the representation of ancient Egypt at the Sydenham Crystal Palace in South London.
 
"I am deeply honored to assume the role of safeguarding, displaying, and growing the Clark's spectacular collection of decorative arts," said Goodin. "I have worked closely with these collections for years, and I look forward to highlighting the richness of the Clark's holdings of silver, porcelain, glass, furniture, and other works in new and relevant ways, making them accessible to our publics." 
 
As Curator of Decorative Arts, Goodin will continue to advance research, steward the collections, and develop exhibitions centered on the Clark's collection of decorative arts.

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Williamstown Theatre Festival's 2026 Absence Said Not to Cause 'Panic'

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — News this week that the Williamstown Theatre Festival will go dark again this summer has not yet engendered widespread concern in the town's business community.
 
"None of the members have reached out in panic," Williamstown Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Sue Briggs said on Wednesday afternoon. "I'm really pleased.
 
"The rumor on the street has been this is what they need in order to come back and be a viable festival. … With that said, I have not had any real one-on-one conversations with business owners about it yet."
 
"It" was the announcement Tuesday, in the form of interviews reported in the Washington Post and Berkshire Eagle, that the WTF would not be staging any theatrical events in Williamstown in the summer of 2026 — just the second time since the Tony Award-winning festival has been absent from the summer scene since it was founded in 1955.
 
The first time was the summer of 2020, at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The festival returned for a scaled down 2021 season and staged four straight seasons that de-emphasized the kind of fully-staged productions of standards and new works that characterized the festival's first 65 years.
 
In 2021, the WTF's return from the COVID shutdown was marred by allegations of "dangerous working conditions."
 
Last summer, the festival hosted its most ambitious program since before the pandemic, including a Tennessee Williams play featuring Hollywood star Pamela Anderson, the world premiere of a drama written by a Tony-nominated playwright, and two events in North Adams, one of which was performed on the ice sheet at the Peter W. Foote Vietnam Veterans Memorial Rink.
 
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