TN State Museum gets new executive director
News release from Tennessee State Museum
Nashville, TN — February 7, 2017— The Douglas Henry State Museum Commission announced today that Tennessee native Ashley Howell has accepted the position of executive director of the Tennessee State Museum. The commission voted to offer Howell the position at its meeting on January 24. She succeeds long serving director Lois Riggins Ezzell who retired December 31.
“Ashley Howell will bring a new level of leadership to the Tennessee State Museum,” Commission Chairman Tom Smith said. “I am confident she is the right choice at the right time. Her background in all aspects of museum management will serve us well, and her ties to Tennessee make her an ideal choice as we prepare for the new museum’s opening late next year.”
Howell, 40, currently serves as the deputy director of the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville.
“As a child, I visited the Tennessee State Museum,” Howell said. “From early museum visits, I have taken my love of history and art and built a career around museums. It has been an honor to work at two of our state’s outstanding cultural institutions, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts and the Knoxville Museum of Art. I look forward to working with Governor Haslam, the General Assembly, the museum commission and the museum foundation to lead the Tennessee State Museum at this exciting time.”
A Nashville native, Howell graduated from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville with a degree in art history. She holds a master’s degree from UT in communication and a master’s of business administration degree from Boston University with a certificate in museum studies. She joined the Frist Center in 2007 as director of development and most recently served as deputy director.
Howell joins the Tennessee State Museum with a new museum currently under construction at the northwest corner of the Bicentennial Mall in Nashville. The state museum is one of the oldest and largest state museums in the nation with more than 150,000 artifacts in its holdings.
Gov. Bill Haslam proposed and the Tennessee General Assembly approved $120 million in the FY 2015-2016 budget for the museum with an additional $40 million to be raised in private monies.
The new 137,000 square foot facility is slated to open in late 2018. The Tennessee State Museum currently hosts about 115,000 visitors each year. The new museum is expected to host more than 220,000 visitors annually, adding to the growing menu of memorable and educational opportunities Tennessee has to offer.
Howell will assume her new role on April 1.
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