MAAM Leadership

The Board of Directors includes an Executive Committee as well as at least one representative each from Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York, and Members-at-Large.

STAFF

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Kahla DeSmit

Executive Director

Kahla DeSmit is the former Executive Director of the Lewisburg Children’s Museum. Previously she worked as the Interim Visitor Services Manager at Gracie Mansion in New York City. DeSmit holds a B.A. degree from Susquehanna University and an M.A. degree from the SUNY Oneonta Cooperstown Graduate Program. She is a passionate life-long learner and advocate of the special place museums can and should have in our communities.

 

 

 

Michelle Baumgarten

Membership and Operations Manager

Michelle currently serves as Membership and Operations Manager. With a Masters degree in Museum Studies from the Cooperstown Graduate Program, Michelle is passionate about fundraising and nonprofit administration. She has raised over $30 million for nonprofit organizations via Major Gifts, Sponsorship, Special Events, Membership, and Foundation support.

Board of Directors

Executive Committee

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President: Amanda Dunyak Gillen

Executive Director, The Frick Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA

Amanda Dunyak Gillen holds a B.A. in History from Allegheny College and an M.A. in Public History from Duquesne University. Her museum career began in the curatorial departments at the Senator John Heinz History Center and at the Frick Pittsburgh. For several years her work spanned across both curatorial and education departments at the Frick, where she also served on the design team for the Frick’s $15 million dollar expansion (a new Visitor Center, a renovated Car & Carriage Museum, collections storage, and a new Education Center).  She served as the Frick’s Director of Learning for 11 years before recently moving into the Executive Director role.  She is also an adjunct professor in the Public History graduate program at Duquesne University.

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Vice President: Jacqueline Eyl

Chief Program Officer, KID Museum, Bethesda, MD

Jacqueline Eyl is the Chief Program Officer at the KID Museum in Bethesda. Prior to that, she was the founding Director of Youth Education at the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC. She holds a Master’s Degree in Teaching from the Museum Education Program at The George Washington University and a Bachelor’s of Arts in Archaeology from Emory University. She has over 30 years’ experience working in museums in both exhibition and interactive development as well as educational program and curriculum development. She has worked at the Michael C. Carlos Museum in Atlanta Georgia, The Freer and Sackler Galleries at the Smithsonian Institution, the National Building Museum, Discovery Creek Children’s Museum and the National Museum of Dentistry. Most recently, Jackie was a creative lead on the reimagining of the International Spy Museum’s exhibitions and move to a new state of the art building in L’Enfant Plaza, DC. She researched and curated various exhibitions and led the development of the new RFID-enabled Undercover Mission interactives. Jackie also currently serves as an adjunct faculty member in the Museum Studies program at Johns Hopkins University and teaches and mentors students in The George Washington University Museum Education Program.

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Treasurer: Jean Hershner (Delaware)

Vice President and Executive Director, Nemours Estate, Wilmington, DE.

Jean Hershner is Vice President and Executive Director of Nemours Estate, a 220- acre historic property sharing a campus and a legacy with Nemours Children’s Hospital in Wilmington, Delaware. She has earned a B.A. in Integrative Arts and an M.A. in American Studies from The Pennsylvania State University, as well as an M.S. in Nonprofit Management from Eastern University. At the conclusion of her graduate programs, she received the Joel Sater Award for Creative Achievement in American Studies (Penn State) and the Harold C. Howard Servant Leader Award (Eastern University). In building her nonprofit career, Jean has worked in local, statewide, and national organizations that include York History (York, PA); Preservation Pennsylvania (Harrisburg, PA); and American Walks (national, remote), respectively. She joined the staff of Nemours Estate in 2018 as Manager of Museum Operations before ascending through the ranks to her current role in January 2021. Most recently, Nemours Estate was the inaugural recipient of the Mid-Atlantic Association of Museums’ Making an Impact Award. Jean is grateful for the Estate’s creative and dedicated staff team! Aside from work, she enjoys reading and traveling (usually to see her two grown children) and lives in Wilmington, Delaware.

Angela Winand

Secretary: Dr. Angela Winand (Washington, DC)

Program Administrator, Professional Curation Program, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington, D.C.

Dr. Angela Winand is currently the Program Administrator, Professional Curation Program at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. Previously, she was the Director of the Mitchell Center for African American Heritage and Diversity Programming at the Delaware Historical Society in Wilmington where she worked with her colleagues to create engaging educational experiences for visitors of all ages at the Delaware History Museum, and to develop collections focused on preserving black history in Delaware. Dr. Winand currently serves on the board of the Redding House Foundation, which manages the childhood home of Louis Redding, the first African American lawyer in the state and a key figure in a companion case to the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision.  Dr. Winand created educational programs at George Washington’s Mount Vernon and the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. Before starting a new career as a museum professional, she spent 20 years teaching courses in African American history and culture at the college level. She holds a Ph.D. in American Culture from the University of Michigan, and is a graduate of the Museum Studies Master’s program at Johns Hopkins University.

Representatives

MAAM Board Members (1)
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Maryland: Nancy Proctor

Executive Director, SNF Parkway

Nancy Proctor is formerly the Chief Strategy Officer and founding Executive Director of The Peale, Baltimore’s Community Museum, based in the first purpose-built museum in the U.S. Previously, Nancy was Deputy Director of Digital Experience and Communications at the Baltimore Museum of Art (2014-2016), Head of Mobile Strategy and Initiatives at the Smithsonian Institution (2010-2014), and Head of New Media Initiatives at the Smithsonian’s American Art Museum (2008-2010).

With a PhD in American art history and a background in filmmaking, curation and feminist theory and criticism in the arts, Nancy lectures and publishes widely on technology and innovation in museums, in French and Italian as well as English. She edited Mobile Apps for Museums: The AAM Guide to Planning and Strategy in 2010, and coordinated the publication of Inclusive Digital Interactives: Best Practices + Research for MuseWeb with Access Smithsonian and the Institute for Human Centered Design in 2020. Nancy served as Co-chair of the international MuseWeb (formerly Museums and the Web) Conferences with Rich Cherry, and edited its annual proceedings from 2012-2020. Nancy created her first online exhibition in 1995 and went on to publish the New Art CD-ROM and website of contemporary art – a first in the UK – in 1996.

She co-founded TheGalleryChannel.com in 1998 with Titus Bicknell to present virtual tours of innovative exhibitions alongside comprehensive global museum and gallery listings. The Gallery Channel was later acquired by Antenna Audio, where Nancy led New Product Development from 2000-2008, introducing the company’s multimedia, sign language, downloadable, podcast and cellphone tours. She also directed Antenna’s sales in France from 2006-2007, and was part of the Travel Channel’s product development team 2007-2008.

As program chair Nancy led the development of the Museums Computer Network (MCN) conference programs 2010-2011, and co-organized the Tate Handheld conference 2008 & 2010 with Jane Burton. She started the MuseumMobile wiki and podcast series in 2008, was Digital Editor of Curator: The Museum Journal from 2009-2014, and has served on the Journal’s editorial board, as well as on the Board of Directors of the Omnimuseum Project.

New Jersey: Sean Blinn

Director of Programming, Heritage Trail Association: Bridgewater, NJ

Sean Blinn is a museum professional specializing in evaluation and participatory experiences. He is Director of Programming and a trustee of the Heritage Trail Association in Bridgewater, NJ, and a Board member and former President of the Jacobus Vanderveer House in Bedminster, NJ. He also serves on the American Association for State and Local History’s Small Museums Committee and blogs for AASLH about advocating for museums with local government.

Beyond museums, Sean is active in municipal and county government, serving on the Bedminster Township Historic Preservation Commission and the Somerset County Cultural and Heritage Commission’s Arts and History Committees. He previously chaired Bedminster’s Environmental Commission and was Vice Chair of its Planning Board. Before entering the museum field, he worked in technology at AT&T as Senior Manager of Quality and Process. Sean holds M.A. degrees in Museum Studies (Johns Hopkins University) and Political Science (Binghamton University), and a B.A. in Political Science (Haverford College).

Pennsylvania: Averie Shaughnessy-Comfort

Executive Director, Presque Isle Light Station | Lake Erie Lights in Erie, Pennsylvania

Averie Shaughnessy-Comfort is the Executive Director of Presque Isle Light Station | Lake Erie Lights in Erie, Pennsylvania where she is the chief strategist, fundraiser, and historic preservationist for the organization. Previously, Averie served as the Development Director at the Erie Art Museum and as the Executive Director for the Mid-Atlantic Association of Museums between 2017 and 2021. She is passionate about preserving historic structures, particular in Rust Belt cities, that illustrate the narratives of the people that worked in and around them. In her current role, she strives to make historic sites more approachable to the general public, and seeks to tie their connections to the communities and environment in which they reside.

Averie has also worked at various museums and nonprofit organizations including the Carnegie Science Center, Adirondack Experience, and the Otsego Land Trust. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in English from Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, PA and Master’s from the Cooperstown Graduate Program at the State University of New York (SUNY) Oneonta. Averie is an ongoing Project Grant Reviewer for the New Jersey Historical Commission and serves her community as a Judge of Elections for her precinct in Erie County. In her free time, Averie sings in the Erie Philharmonic Chorus and serves as their Friends of the Chorus Fundraising Committee Chair. You can sometimes find Averie co-hosting Great Lakes episodes of “Light Hearted”, the official podcast of the United States Lighthouse Society with lead host Jeremy D’Entremont. She is a native of Pittsburgh and a lover of all things black and gold.

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New York: Melissa Kiewiet

Executive Director, Dyckman Farmhouse Museum Alliance, New York, New York

Melissa Kiewiet is the Director of Development and Community Engagement at the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum Alliance. Kiewiet wears many hats in their position, a few of which are: creating and implementing a social media strategy, bolstering individual, corporate and institutional giving, creating new guiding initiatives aimed at bettering the neighborhood, managing the internship program, and overseeing museum operations. They are passionate about museums as drivers for social change and as community anchors. 

Kiewiet earned her Bachelors’ degree in History from Maryville College in Maryville, Tennessee. They are a graduate of the Cooperstown Graduate Program at the State University of New York College at Oneonta where they earned their Masters degree in Museum Studies. They have worked in various development departments in the arts and culture sector prior to their current position and serves on the Maryville College Alumni Association Board.

At-Large

MAAM Board Members (2)

At-Large: Nancy Bateman

Senior Registrar & Director of Collections, National Building Museum (Washington, DC)

Nancy Bateman is the Senior Registrar and Director of Collections at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC. She manages a team of four full-time collections specialists, oversees 30,000 square feet of gallery space featuring three long-term exhibitions and up to four temporary exhibitions a year, and is responsible for the Museum’s permanent collection of over 500,000 artifacts. Nancy received her BA in Anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania and her MA in Museum Studies from the George Washington University. She previously ran the artifact lab at the El Purgatorio Archaeological Dig site in Peru; managed the Geoffrey Diner Art Gallery in Washington, D.C.; and served as Collections Manager at the International Spy Museum.

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At-Large: Tonika Berkley

Africana Archivist for Special Collections, JHU Sheridan Libraries, Baltimore, MD

Ms. Tonika Berkley is the Africana Archivist for Special Collections at JHU Sheridan Libraries and is co-director of the Inheritance Baltimore’s Community Archives Program. She has her MAA in Applied Anthropology/Heritage from University of Maryland-College Park and her BA in Sociology/Anthropology from the University of Maryland-Baltimore County. Ms. Berkley is an archivist, historical researcher, museum educator, humanities facilitator and curator, and has worked for various museums and cultural institutions in Baltimore, Washington, DC, and Philadelphia over the past 20+ years, including the Walters Art Museum, the Baltimore Museum of Industry, The Decatur House on Lafayette Square, The Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture, Penn Museum of Archeology & Anthropology and Scribe Video Center. In 2018-19, she served as Research Coordinator and Curator of prototype physical and digital exhibitions for “Education Will Be Our Pride: The Colored School at the Peale (1878-89)”, and curator of a 3D scanned tour of the Peale building, based on the history of Male and Female Colored School No. 1. Ms. Berkley also coordinated the development of a microsite, “School1,” an online repository for the history of 19th century education of African Americans in Baltimore City and surrounding counties. As the Africana Archivist at Sheridan Libraries, she has also developed the “From Enslavement to Liberation: Legacy of Slavery at Homewood Museum” oral history collection within the Special Collections department. Ms. Berkley has also co-curated two exhibitions for Sheridan Libraries: “Community Archives: Preserving Black Baltimore’s History” in 2022 and “Black Foodways: A Culinary Diaspora” in 2023 and is currently co-curating a photography exhibition for the Eubie Blake Cultural Center, “Bearing Witness: Black Photography in Baltimore”.

MAAM Board Members

At-Large: David Cole

President and CEO, Science History Institute, Philadelphia, PA

David Cole began his tenure as President and CEO of the Science History Institute in Philadelphia in May 2020. Previously, he served as Executive Director of the Hagley Museum and Library in Wilmington, DE.  Prior to his tenure at Hagley, Dr. Cole served as Vice President at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, MA and as Director of Strategic Initiatives for the Harvard Art Museums of Harvard University.  A graduate of Vanderbilt University, he received a master’s degree from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in the history of art and American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin.  Dr. Cole has been a Henry Luce Foundation Fellow, a Research Fellow of the Learning Innovations Laboratory (LILA) of Harvard University, and has taught at Harvard University, Rice University, and the University of Texas at Austin.  He is a trustee of the Robert Creeley Foundation, the Catalogue for Philanthropy, and the Delaware Council on Economic Education.

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At-Large: Greer Luce

Curator of Education & Public Programs, Morven Museum & Garden, Princeton, NJ

Greer Luce is the Curator of Education and Public Programs at Morven Museum & Garden in Princeton, NJ, where she manages the museum’s public events, educational programs, and community partnerships. Prior to Morven, Greer served as Chief Communications Officer at the New Jersey Historical Commission, a division of the New Jersey Department of State. There she oversaw the Commission’s communications outlets, developing content and implementing strategies for public outreach, and led several statewide programmatic efforts, including the 2020 NJ Women Vote: The 19th Amendment at 100 and 2021 Indigenous History initiatives. She also planned the Commission’s annual New Jersey History Conferences. Greer has held positions in development and volunteer management at the Student Partner Alliance, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, and Visiting Nurse Association of Northern New Jersey. She currently serves on the Board of the New Jersey Association of Museums (NJAM) and chairs that organization’s Programming Committee. Greer earned a BA in History from Gettysburg College and an MA in History Museum Studies from the Cooperstown Graduate Program. While at Cooperstown, Greer worked as a 2016 – 2017 Graduate Assistant supporting the Mid-Atlantic Association of Museums (MAAM) in planning its Annual Meeting and Building Museums Conference.

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At-Large: David Searles, AIA, LEED AP

Partner, JacobsWyper Architects, Philadelphia, PA

David Searles is an architect specializing in museum and cultural projects including planning, renovations, and the design of new buildings.  For more than 30 years, he has supported institutions such as The Franklin Institute, Independence Visitor Center, Nemours Estate, and the Academy of Natural Sciences fulfill their visions of growth while remaining true to their heritage.  With such a diverse portfolio of work he has honed a unique set of skills to coalesce the built environment with the exhibits, interpretation, and education they serve. Understanding clients’ needs and adapting to ever shifting circumstances, David excels in synthesizing complex projects to enhance the communities they serve. David takes a wholistic, human-centered approach to his work, “born in my interest in solving problems for people…” making their day-to-day lives better, perhaps even enlightening.

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At-Large: Annie Storr

Affiliate Scholar, Brandeis University Women’s Studies Research Center

Annie Storr has devoted her career to connecting art history and public education. She holds an M.A.T. in Museum Education from GWU, a Ph.D. in Art History from the University of Delaware, and additional degrees in Art and Religion. A National Graduate Fellow of the U.S. Department of Education, her dissertation traced core themes in American art museum docent tours to the 18th century. She was founding Chair of the Education Studies Department at the Corcoran College of Art + Design, and previously served as Head of Education Programs for the American Alliance of Museums and Director of Arts Management at American University. A museum educator for over 30 years, she began as Curator of Education at the Winnipeg Art Gallery. With colleagues and students, she developed the guided-looking method “Exercises for the Quiet Eye” (EQE). In 2021, as the Frances Shaw Fellow at Ragdale, she drafted a book on EQE. Based in the Washington, DC area, she is a Terra Foundation Research & Education Fellow at Hull House, Affiliate Scholar at Brandeis University’s Women’s Studies Research Center, and teaches at the College of the Holy Cross and the University of New Hampshire.

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At-Large: Beth Van Why

Senior Project Manager, Becker & Frondorf, Philadelphia, PA

Beth Van Why is an owner’s rep project manager with Becker & Frondorf, focusing primarily on work with museums and cultural institutions. Beth has a variety of museum and design experience, and a deep understanding of the challenges that are intrinsic to the project development process. She has a thorough understanding of Board relations, communication and approval processes, and the timelines needed to complete museum projects. Beth joined B&F in 2018 and has worked with a variety of museums and non-profits throughout the mid-Atlantic.

She has served on MAAM’s Building Museums planning and sponsorship committees since 2019.

Prior to joining B&F, Beth was with the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites, where she oversaw exhibitions, education and programming, maintenance, security, and historic preservation teams for the 12 locations associated with ISMHS. She led the in-house design and renovation of six permanent galleries, creation of more than 20 temporary exhibitions throughout the system, and implementation of a new interpretive center. As part of the senior leadership team, she also worked on system-wide strategy development. Prior to working at ISMHS, she was the Director of Exhibition Operations at the National Constitution Center where she led the travel and installation of the award-winning exhibition American Spirits.

Van Why holds a master’s degree in Industrial Design from the University of the Arts and a bachelor’s degree in architecture with a minor in history from Virginia Tech.

At-Large: Nicholas West, DPhil

Co-director, University Museums, Hamilton, NY

Dr. Nicholas West is the co-director of University Museums and curator of Picker Art Gallery at Colgate University. He has also been designated a research affiliate in the university’s department of art. West has held curatorial and administrative positions in several museums in the Los Angeles area, including the J. Paul Getty Museum, the City of Lancaster Museum of Art and History, and the University of Southern California’s (USC) Fisher Museum of Art. West managed the USC Fisher Museum of Art’s successful application for reaccreditation with the American Alliance of Museums and played a lead role in the planning and design of a new facility for the City of Lancaster Museum of Art and History.

West holds MSt and DPhil degrees in Archaeology from the University of Oxford along with an MA degree in Arts Management from Claremont Graduate University. His research interests include the history of collections, the post-antique reception of Greek and Roman art, and curatorial methodologies for academic museums.

Board Member Emeritus: Gretchen Sullivan Sorin

Director, Cooperstown Graduate Program

Gretchen Sorin holds a B.A. in American Studies (Rutgers University), an M.A. in Museum Studies (Cooperstown Graduate Program) and a Ph.D. in American history (University at Albany/SUNY). Dr. Sorin has over 35 years of experience in the museum profession consulting with more than 250 museums. She has served as guest curator for many exhibitions including Through the Eyes of Others: African Americans and Identity in American Art; the nationally acclaimed traveling exhibition, Bridges and Boundaries: African Americans and American Jews for the Jewish Museum (NY), and the award-winning Wilderness Cure: Tuberculosis and the Adirondacks for the Adirondack Museum. She is Director and Distinguished Professor of the Cooperstown Graduate Program. Dr. Sorin writes and lectures frequently on African American history and museum practice.

PO Box 4 Cooperstown, NY 13326

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