Sturgis worked at the National Gallery, an art museum in London, from 1991 to 2005.[3] Beginning his career in the education department,[2] he later served as exhibitions and programmes curator for six years, from 1999 to 2005.[4][5] In 2005, he was appointed Director of the Holburne Museum in Bath.[6] During his time at Holburne, he oversaw a renovation of the museum that included a £13 million extension.[7]
His publications include Rebels and Martyrs: The Image of the Artist in the Nineteenth Century (2006) and Presence: Sculpture and the Portrait (2012).
Personal life
In his spare time, Sturgis is a magician under the name The Great Xa and once appeared on 1990s British TV programme The Word appearing to swallow sharp razor blades.[10][11][12][13]
Selected works
Sturgis, Alexander (1994). Magic in art: tricks, perspective, illusions. London: Belitha Press. ISBN978-1855613577.
Sturgis, Alexander (1998). Faces. London: National Gallery Publications. ISBN978-1857092226.
Sturgis, Alexander (2000). Telling time. London: National Gallery Company. ISBN978-1857099058.
Sturgis, Alexander; Child, Lauren (2003). Dan's angel: a detective's guide to the language of painting. London: Frances Lincoln. ISBN978-0711218857.
Sturgis, Alexander; Christiansen, Rupert; Oliver, Lois; Wilson, Michael (2006). Rebels and martyrs: the image of the artist in the nineteenth century. London: National Gallery Company. ISBN978-1857093469.
Sturgis, Alexander (2009). Faces (2nd ed.). London: National Gallery Company. ISBN978-1857094640.
Sturgis, Alexander (2012). Presence: the art of portrait sculpture. Suffolk: Antique Collectors Club. ISBN978-1851496853.
Vestey, Joanna; Sturgis, Alexander; Roberts, Russell (2015). Custodians. Oxford: Ashmolean Museum Publications. ISBN978-1854442970.