Ann Sumner | |
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Alma mater | |
Occupation | Museum / Gallery Director |
Employer | University of Leeds |
Known for | Art curation |
Ann Sumner is an art historian, exhibition curator and museum director and is currently Head of Cultural Engagement at the University of Leeds. She was the executive director of the Brontë Society, a former director of the Barber Institute of Fine Arts at Birmingham University, England (2007–2012), and the first director of the Birmingham Museums Trust, comprising the merged Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and Thinktank, from 2012 until 2013.
Sumner studied History of Art at the Courtauld Institute, University of London, and obtained a PhD in History from Newnham College, University of Cambridge.
She started her career at the National Portrait Gallery, London and has held curatorial positions at the Whitworth Art Gallery, Dulwich Picture Gallery, Harewood House, and the Holburne Museum, Bath. Before her directorship at the Barber Institute, University of Birmingham, she was Head of Fine Art at National Museum Wales, for seven years (2000–2007). In 2007 she became Barber Professor of Fine Art and Curatorial Practice and remains Visiting Professor.
Her specialist areas of interest are 17th-century British portraiture and miniature painting, 18th-century British portraiture and landscape painting, French 19th-century painting, the art of Wales and has long had an interest in art inspired by the game of lawn tennis. Her research interests include public art by the American sculptor Mitzi Cunliffe in the 1950s.