Jamie Bosket

President & CEO, Virginia Museum of History & Culture

Welcoming all, reflecting all

11/8/2022

15 min

On a sunny, summer day in 2019, Jamie Bosket got a glimpse of the future.

The Virginia Museum of History & Culture was hosting a ceremony to rename its street. Tennis legend Arthur Ashe was the honoree. The change held deep significance. As a Black man, Ashe had been denied entry to the courts in the once-segregated park that stood at the street’s opposite end.

Jamie, the museum’s President and CEO, calls the event a milestone. It was the first time the organization had stepped outside its comfort zone to join the community and advocate for change. At the ceremony’s conclusion, one woman walked up the steps to embrace Jamie.

“My parents told me this wasn’t a place for people who looked like me,” she whispered in his ear. “Today I’m going inside for the first time.”

The Virginia Museum of History & Culture is the oldest cultural organization in the commonwealth. It was founded in 1831 as the Virginia Historical Society. It, and its neighboring state art museum, now sit on land that was one of Virginia's last Confederate veterans’ camps.

This complicated legacy proved an overwhelming barrier. As the museum expanded its facility over the years, it sought to make programming more public. There were ups and downs and many good intentions. Yet the organization’s relationship to much of its community remained tenuous or even nonexistent.

“As an organization, we have been witness to, party to and connected to some of the great failings and traumas of the past,” Jamie says. “That’s what makes all of this, what we’re doing, so important.”

What they’re doing is fundamentally redefining the museum’s relationship to its community.

What they’re doing is fundamentally redefining the museum’s relationship to its community. Since 2017, the museum has adopted a new name, a new team and a bold, new strategic plan. In spring 2022, two years ahead of schedule, a renovated facility opened. Several exhibition spaces were co-curated with community partners. The Education and Conference Center serves as free gathering space for local nonprofits.

Museum fundraisers also built time in their capital campaign to secure money for others. Through its Commonwealth History Fund, the museum will give away close to a half-million dollars every year, in perpetuity. Recipients include groups, museums and projects across the state that lift underrepresented history.

“This approach is both grassroots and big picture,” Jamie says. “And that is just the beginning. We are, through all of this and so much more, living up to the promise we made to our community.”

Today the museum is building new relationships based in trust. The community has responded with enthusiasm.

Jamie admits the museum didn’t get everything right. “We have a lot more work to do, but we have changed,” he says. “And we’ve learned. We’ve learned that to successfully reach out, we had to look deep within. We couldn’t shy away from our own history.”

“We had to acknowledge our past and our baggage with humility and institutional self-awareness,” he says. “And we had to relentlessly, methodically and continually prove and prove again that we are committed to reflecting and welcoming all.”

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This post is based on a presentation by Jamie Bosket as part of Tessitura’s Innovator Series. He spoke at the Tessitura Learning & Community Conference in August 2022.

Jamie Bosket

Jamie Bosket

President & CEO
Virginia Museum of History & Culture

Jamie Bosket began his tenure as President & CEO of the Virginia Museum of History & Culture in 2017.

A private nonprofit founded in 1831, the VMHC is the oldest cultural organization in the Commonwealth of Virginia, and one of the oldest and most distinguished history organizations in the nation. Previously, Jamie served in a number of leadership positions at George Washington’s Mount Vernon over a period of nearly 10 years. In his final role, Vice President for Guest Experience, Jamie led Mount Vernon’s largest operating unit, which was responsible for welcoming and engaging more than one million annual guests.

During his time at Mount Vernon, Jamie also contributed to the planning and building of the George Washington National Library. Jamie was elected to the board of the Virginia Association of Museums, the leading state museum association in the nation, in 2014. He has also served on the board of the Alexandria Historical Society. He currently sits on the Board of Visitors to Mount Vernon and, in 2020, he was appointed by the Governor of Virginia to help lead Virginia’s American Revolution 250th Commission.

Topics

Arts & Culture

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Innovator Series