Carnegie Museum of Natural History

Carnegie.jpg

CARNEGIE MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY

Sarah Crawford named Director of Exhibitions


We are pleased to announce that Sarah Crawford has been appointed as Director of Exhibitions of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, PA, effective November 23, 2020. Sarah succeeds Becca Shreckengast, who departed the museum earlier in 2020. Museum Search and Reference guided the national search, with Dan Keegan as Lead Consultant.

Crawford has relocated from Los Angeles, CA with her husband Evan Burbridge. She formerly served as Senior Manager of Exhibition Design and Development at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. Prior to her position in Los Angeles Sarah was an exhibition developer at the San Diego Museum of Us and the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.

Sarah holds an MFA degree in museum exhibition planning and design from University of the Arts in Philadelphia and earlier worked as an art director at Elisco Advertising and Blattner Bruner agencies in Pittsburgh. Crawford has developed 18 permanent, temporary, and traveling exhibitions including The Cyrus Tang Hall of China, Mummies: Images of the Afterlife, PostSecret, and Rise Up LA: A Century of Votes for Women.

"I'm thrilled to return to Pittsburgh and to become part of this amazing community once again," said Crawford. "It's such an honor to join the team of this beloved museum and the entire Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh family. I look forward to advancing the great work of those who have led this wonderful exhibitions department before me."

"From a very impressive group of candidates, Sarah emerged as a clear favorite," said Stephen Tonsor, Daniel G. and Carole L. Kamin Interim Director of Carnegie Museum of Natural History. "Her ingenuity and aesthetic in exhibit design, her mastery in making the most of her budget, her embrace of the collaborative ethic we've been working on in the natural history museum, and her unbridled enthusiasm made it clear to us that she is the kind of leader we've been seeking. We are very fortunate that she has joined us and look forward to a bright future for exhibits in the museum."

Crawford's extensive experience will prove valuable as the museum embarks on an interpretive masterplan that will guide a re-framing of the museum's classic content while looking to the future with a focus on the Anthropocene, the proposed name of the current geological age of profound human impact on all planetary systems.