Lisa Phillips is an American museum director, curator, and author. She is the Toby Devan Lewis Director of the New Museum of Contemporary Art, in New York City. In 1999, Phillips became the second director in the museum's history, succeeding founding director Marcia Tucker. Prior to beginning her directorship at the New Museum, she worked at the Whitney Museum of American Art for twenty-three years.
Phillips began her career as a Helena Rubinstein Fellow in the Whitney's Independent Study Program in 1976. She quickly rose to become a curator in 1982. During her twenty-two-years at the Whitney, she organized over thirty exhibitions, including the notable thematic exhibitions “The Third Dimension: Sculpture of the New York School” ; “High Styles: the History of American Design” ; “Image World: Art and Media Culture” ; “Beat Culture and the New America, 1950–1965” ; and “The American Century Part II: 1950–2000” ; midcareer surveys of works by Terry Winters, Cindy Sherman, Julian Schnabel, and Richard Prince ; as well as a major retrospective of the work of Frederick Kiesler. Known for championing midcareer and emerging artists, Phillips was also a curator for six Whitney Biennials.
New Museum
After joining the New Museum as Director in 1999, Phillips spearheaded and oversaw the successful completion of the Museum's first freestanding building by the leading architectural team SANAA, which opened on the Bowery in 2007. The building was also recognized when SANAA received the 2010 Pritzker Prize, making Kazuyo Sejima the second female architect to receive the prestigious award. The presence of the Museum on the Bowery also spurred a renaissance of the street and neighborhood, including a new district for galleries and creative spaces. In 2008, Phillips led the acquisition of an adjacent fifty-thousand-square-foot property at 231 Bowery. During her tenure, the museum's operating budget has expanded from $3.5 million to $13 million annually. Under Phillips's leadership, the museum expanded its programming to include several initiatives, including the TRIENNIAL for emerging international artists; the MUSEUM AS HUB, a partnership of international organizations to study and share art from around the globe; IdeasCity, an international festival that explores the art and culture of urban centers; and NEW INC, a museum-led incubator. The New Museum created a dedicated space for digital art projects in 2000, which subsequently led to bringing on RHIZOME] as an affiliate organization in 2003. Phillips has also organized a number of benchmark exhibitions at the New Museum, including exhibitions of the works of Paul McCarthy, Carroll Dunham, John Waters, and Chris Burden. Ms. Phillips has been running an art museum in New York longer than anyone except Glenn Lowry at the Museum of Modern Art She is one of only two directors in the city who has overseen the construction of a brand-new building. And she is now in the midst of an $80 million capital campaign to double her museum's size.
Other activities
Phillips has served and continues to serve on several boards and advisory boards, including the Fabric Workshop and Museum, the Fulbright Fellowship Program, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, White Columns, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, the Azuero Earth Project, CIFO, the Frederick Kiesler Foundation, the Jay DeFeo Trust, and the Association of Art Museum Directors, where she is the chair of the Professional Issues Committee and works on the Futures Task Force. She has consulted for several companies, including Peat Marwick, Chase Manhattan Bank and Goldman Sachs, and has held several education posts, including Visiting Critic at Yale University. In 2013, she helped lead a study of the gender-based compensation disparity among American museum directors, which received national attention.
Personal life
Phillips is married to Leon Falk and has twin daughters. She lives in New York City.
Awards
Phillips was voted a top New Yorker by Time Out New York and New York Magazine and was the recipient of the Battery Park Conservancy's cultural medal of honor ; the StellaRe Prize, Turin ; and the ArtTable Award of Distinction . She was named one of the “100 Most Influential Women in Business” by Crain's in 2007.