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The director of
education for the Holland Historical Trust has been lured back to Calvin
College, his alma mater, to become the new director of exhibitions for
the school's art gallery.
Joel Zwart, who
has worked for the Trust for almost three years, is a 1997 graduate
of Calvin who majored in history and minored in art and French. The
chance to return to Calvin to head up the Center Art Gallery was too
good to pass up.
He is expected
to begin his new duties May 5.
"I had a
good experience when I attended Calvin in the 1990s," he says,
"and became intrigued by the position (of director of exhibitions).
The opportunity to take over the gallery and bring some fascinating
exhibits to Calvin is exciting."
Yet Zwart admits
he'll miss his work in Holland.
"I really
like being able to work on a variety of projects and exhibits that have
historical, social and artistic value to the Holland community,"
he says. "I will particularly miss what my role would have been
in the development of our historic houses, temporary exhibits and future
permanent galleries."
Those feelings
are tempered however by the potential he sees for the gallery at Calvin.
"I'm hopeful,"
he says, "that the gallery can become a more visible part of both
the campus community and the greater West Michigan community. Part of
what I hope to see happen with the gallery at Calvin directly applies
to my thoughts on the gallery's purpose within the college. As an element
of the art department and the college, the gallery has a commitment
to foster scholarship and understanding of art within the campus and
abroad. Consequently, the gallery should be committed to the campus
first, but also to the community that the campus is a part of."
Zwart is the son of post-war immigrants from the Netherlands, and he
grew up in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. After his 1997 graduation from
Calvin he went on to earn a master's degree in Historical Administration
from Eastern Illinois University (he was a Dean's list honoree at both
institutions). While a Calvin student he interned with the Muskegon
Museum of Art and the Public Museum of Grand Rapids.
At the Holland
Historical Trust his duties included providing leadership and training
for docent guides, managing volunteer and intern projects, creating
public programming, and conducting media interviews. While in graduate
school he was a gallery assistant at the Tarble Arts Center.
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