British independent arts curator, writer and television broadcaster
Kathleen Soriano
Born
(1963-07-18) 18 July 1963 (age 60)
London, England, United Kingdom
Nationality
British
Alma mater
University of Leicester
Years active
1989 – present
Known for
Ex-Director of Exhibitions - Royal Academy of Arts
Television
Artist of the Year
Spouse
Peter Greenhough
Children
Martha
Parents
Salvador Soriano (father)
Kathleen O'Neill (mother)
Kathleen Soriano (born 18 July 1963) is a British independent arts curator, writer and television broadcaster.
Background
Kathleen Soriano was born in 1963 in London to parents Salvador Soriano and Kathleen O'Neill.[1] She studied at the
University of Leicester from 1982 until 1985 and obtained a
Bachelor of Arts Honours in History of Art and English. In 1995 she married Peter Greenhough.[1]
In February 2006, she left the National Portrait Gallery and became the director at
Compton Verney in
Warwickshire.[4] In 2007, Soriano became one of three judges who selected 238 works from 1600 entries from across the West Midlands for the Birmingham Open Art Exhibition.[5]
In late 2008, she was appointed the new director of exhibitions at the Royal Academy of Arts, replacing the retiring Sir
Norman Rosenthal who had held the post for 31 years.[6] This was a new position replacing the former Exhibitions Secretary post.[7] She took up the role in January 2009. During her time at the Royal Academy of Arts she developed exhibitions such as Bronze, David Hockney, Van Gogh, and Degas.[2] In 2013, she curated the exhibition Australia at the Royal Academy.[8] It featured both Aboriginal heritage and Australian art covering 200 years.[8] She left the Royal Academy in 2014 and was replaced by
Tim Marlow.[9]
From April 2014, Soriano began working independently as an art curator and on other cultural projects.[2] She was one of five judges of the Place Prize for Choreography in 2008 when Adam Linder won the main prize.[12]
In October 2016, Soriano was appointed as the chair of the board of trustees for the
Liverpool Biennial, replacing Paula Ridley.[13]
During January 2018, she curated the
London Art Fair's 30th Anniversary - Art of the Nation: Five Artists Choose.[14] In early 2019, she curated an exhibition of the works of
Harald Sohlberg for the
Dulwich Picture Gallery, the first exhibition of his works in the UK.[15]
Soriano was appointed chair of the
Art UK charity in December 2022, replacing Charles Gregson.[16]
Publications
Liz Rideal and Kathleen Soriano (16 April 2018). Madam and Eve: Women Portraying Women
Tai-Shan Schierenberg, Kathleen Soriano, and Kate Bryan (6 November 2014). Portrait Artist of the Year: A Little Book of Portraits
Richard Davey, Kathleen Soriano, Christian Weikop (29 September 2014). Anselm Kiefer
Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anna Gray, Deborah Hart, Thomas Keneally, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas (4 February 2014). Australia
Kathleen Soriano, Emmanuel Cooper and Xavier Salomon (30 April 2010). Compton Verney
Filmography
Films
Mirrors to Windows: The Artist as Woman (2015)
Television
Portrait Artist of the Year (2013)
Landscape Artist of the Year (2015)
Landscape Artist of the Year (2016)
Portrait Artist of the Year (2016)
Landscape Artist of the Year (2017)
Portrait Artist of the Year (2017)
Portrait Artist of the Year (2018)
Portrait Artist of the Year (2019)
Portrait Artist of the Year (2020)
References
^
ab"Soriano, Kathleen, (Born 18 July 1963), Director of Exhibitions, Royal Academy of Arts, 2009–14; Director, Kathleen Soriano LTD, since 2014".
Soriano, Kathleen. December 2009.
doi:
10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U249933.
Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 9 June 2016. {{
cite book}}: |website= ignored (
help)
^
abcde"Kathleen Soriano". Leading Culture Destinations Awards. 5 May 2018.
Archived from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
^
ab"Clore Fellows". The Clore Leadership Programme.
Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2018.