National Gallery departures reflect 'necessary' change, says interim CEO - Action News
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National Gallery departures reflect 'necessary' change, says interim CEO

The interim director and CEO of the National Gallery of Canada says recent staff changes, which have sparked concern among former employees and critics, reflect the need fornecessarytransformation at the country's premier arts institution.

'Transformation is necessary,' Angela Cassie says amid scrutiny over staff moves

Angela Cassie took over as interim director and CEO of the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa this past summer. Now she's fielding concerns about recent staff departures at the gallery. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

The interim director and CEO of the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa says recent staff departures,which have sparked concern among former employees and critics, reflect the need for change at the country's premier arts institution.

"Transformation is necessary, and I recognize that for some, that understanding about this need for change is not shared," Angela Cassie said in an interview with CBCon Friday.

Cassie, who took over as head of the Ottawa-based institutionlast July,is speaking one week after a letter written by seven former gallery workers was made public and sent to Canadian Heritage MinisterPablo Rodriguez.

The letter claimed key positions at the gallery were vacant in the wake of four recent departures, as well as at least 10 previous staff exits under the tenure of former CEO and directorSasha Suda.

The four more recent departures included the gallery's long-servingsenior curator of Indigenous art.its chief curator, its directorofconservation and technical research, and its senior manager of communications, according to an internal memo that surfaced publicly and cited"a restructuring within the organization."

While decliningto get into specifics about individual employees, Cassie said the gallery has been and is welcoming new team members"who are contributing their skill, knowledge and expertise to moving us forward."

"In this process, we're also including voices that have been historically excluded from this institution," she said.

A glass building is seen in the background with autum leaves in the foreground.
The facade of the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa framed by autumn leaves in early November 2021. (Hugo Belanger/Radio-Canada)

Earlier this year, the gallery launched a new department of Indigenous ways and decolonization.

"That team is growing and they will be caring and leading the curatorial work through this transition and will be working collaboratively to implement our commitments to Indigenous people," Cassie said.

Eliminating the position of chief curator of Indigenous art is tied to the evolution of the new department, she added.

"It is leading us to look at different ways of working in different structures," she said.

Responding to concern about NDAs

The letter from ex-workersalso complainedthe gallery has allegedly spent money on non-disclosure agreements (NDAs), retirement packages and consultants' fees that represent"a significant burden for a Crown corporation."

When asked about NDAs, Cassie said she was "not at liberty to begin discussingindividual agreements."

One of the letter co-signees, DianaNemiroff who previously worked at the gallery for over two decades said NDAs are not standard practice.

Gabrielle Moser, an art historian at York University, said in her experienceNDAs are "now exceedingly common in the world of visual arts."

"I've heard increasingly of people who need to sign NDAs in order to even accept a contract at mostcultural festivals, cultural organizations, or non-profits in the Canadian art world these days," Moser said.