Tessa Jackson


Jane Thérèse "Tessa" Jackson, OBE is a British contemporary art curator, writer and administrator.
The daughter of John Nevill Jackson and Viva Christian Thérèse Jackson, she was educated at the University of East Anglia, the University of Manchester and the University of Bristol, where she took her Master's degree.
She served as CEO of the London-based Institute of International Visual Arts in London, from 2010-15.

Career

In 1988, Jackson was appointed as the director of the Arnolfini, in which she played a leading role in the redevelopment of the institution.
In 1999, she was appointed director of the Scottish Arts Council, where she was responsible for the public funding of the arts in Scotland. After two years in post, she left, after falling out with SAC chairman James Boyle.
In 2002, she became the founding artistic director and chief executive of the Artes Mundi Prize, a contemporary art prize in Wales, a position which she held until 2010. Simultaneously, she was also the chair of the Edinburgh Art Festival between 2005-10.
Appointed to her position as CEO of Iniva in 2009, she has continued to uphold the organisation's remit to bring leading black, Asian, African, Middle-Eastern, Caribbean, Oceanic and Latin American contemporary artists from around the world to the London venue, which had become, in 2007, the capital's first purpose-built, publicly funded international contemporary art gallery since the Hayward Gallery in 1968.
Speaking to LabKulture in 2011, Jackson stated that her aim at Iniva was, "to diversify how we look at society – through the visual arts... poking society in the ribs a little bit and reminding us there are different view points, different histories that historically in Britain we haven’t always given a proper platform to."
During her time at Iniva, the organisation's Arts Council National Portfolio Organisation core funding was reduced by 75%.

Awards

In 2011, Jackson was awarded an OBE in the Queen's New Year's Honours List, in recognition for her 25 years of service to art.

Selected bibliography