Shamim M. Momin is an American art director and curator of contemporary art.[1]
Creative work
Momin is currently the Director of Curatorial Affairs at the Henry Art Gallery.[2] Formerly of the head of the Los Angeles Nomadic Division, a non-profit art organization she co-founded in Los Angeles, California, Momim also served ten years at the Whitney Museum of American Art where she co-curated the 2008 and 2004 Whitney Biennial exhibitions (and previously served as Branch Director at Altria, the Whiney's one-time midtown space, and oversaw the Contemporary Project Series).[3] Other projects include PavilioM. at the 53rd Venice Biennale (2009), a commissioned solo exhibition of video artist Alex Bag (2009) at the Whitney, a group exhibition entitled Nothingness and Being (2009) at Colección Jumex near Mexico City, and The Station, an independent group exhibition which took place in approximately 14,000 square feet (1,300 m2) of unoccupied raw space in a mid-town Miami development during Art Basel 2008.[4]
Momin has also contributed to various art-related publications including Phaidon's 2007 exhibition-in-a-book Ice Cream,[10] as well as artist monographs for Alex Katz, Terence Koh, Barnaby Furnas, and Ellen Harvey. Momin also co-authored Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria: 25 Years with Whitney director Adam D. Weinberg. In 2007, Momin was Adjunct Professor of Contemporary Art in the Williams College Semester in New York program.[11] Her other curatorial projects include Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast: The Impossibility of Translation (2007), a curated book project with artist Olga Adelantado; No Ordinary Sanctity (2005), a group exhibition at the Deutsche Bank project space, Salzburg, as well as Will Boys be Boys?: Examining Adolescent Masculinity in Contemporary Art (2004–2007), which was organized in conjunction with Independent Curators International and traveled to six venues nationally.
In 2012, she organzied the first monograph for artist Sarah Cain titled with essays by Andrew Berardini and Franklin Sirmans, amongst others, and designed by Brian Roettinger.