Agnes Husslein, also Agnes Husslein-Arco, (born 22 May 1954) is an Austrian art historian and art manager.
Life
Husslein was born the daughter of Felicitas (née Boeckl) and Carl Heinrich Arco in Vienna (1920–1978).[1] She is a granddaughter of the Austrian painter Herbert Boeckl [de].
Husslein was managing director of Sotheby's Austria, Managing Director of Sotheby's Prague and Sotheby's Budapest from 1989 to 2000, and Senior Director, Sotheby's Europe from 1990 to 2000. She was Director of European Development of the Guggenheim Museum from 1990 to 1998 and organiser of the Guggenheim Association Salzburg and the Austrian Guggenheim Advisory Board from 1990 to 2000.[3]
In 2016, she applied for another term of office. Subsequently, the supervisory board investigated allegations that Husslein had had problems with compliance rules for directors. Husslein admitted various allegations and paid 30,000 euros in damages to Belvedere; on the basis of this, otherwise criminally relevant actions were not pursued further because of actual remorse [de]. The investigation on suspicion of embezzlement was discontinued in January 2018.[4]
In July 2016, Dieter Bogner [de] was appointed interim commercial director. At the end of July 2016, it was published that the Chancellor's Office MinisterThomas Drozda (SPÖ) would not renew Husslein's service contract.[5] The contractual relationship ended on 31 December 2016; legal disputes over mutual claims were not settled until August 2019.[6]
In October 2016, Drozda announced the duo in charge of the Austrian Gallery Belvedere from 2017. Stella Rollig [de] was appointed as her successor for the artistic area.
For billionaire Heidi Horten, she is currently overseeing the construction of a museum to showcase her private art collection in the Hanuschhof [de] in Vienna from 2022.[9][10]
In 2001, it has been alleged that she lost her job at Sotheby's because she invited the FPÖ politician Thomas Prinzhorn to give a lecture.[13] In 2000, a birthday party for Prinzhorn was held in her private flat.[14]
In 2003, she opened the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia in Klagenfurt with the FPÖ politician and then Carinthian governor Jörg Haider.[14]
In Salzburg (Museum der Moderne), most of the staff was replaced after she took office (early 2001);[15] during her first months at the Belvedere, numerous staff members resigned.[16][17]
Die Grünen criticised her as a "jet-setter" and a "side-eye lady".[15]
Her inaugural exhibition at the Belvedere was probably based on an exhibition from the Salzburg museum that was cancelled after Husslein's departure, but without naming Christian Huemer, the art historian who had been instrumental in the conception of the exhibition in Salzburg. Huemer called in the Ombudsman Board [de].[17][16]
References
^genealogy.euweb. cz: Karl Heinrich in the family tree list after Karl Ferdinand Anton Graf von Arco (1776–1845)