Vishakha N. Desai

Vishakha N. Desai
Born Vishakha Nirubhai Desai
(1949-05-01) 1 May 1949
Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
Residence New York City, New York, U.S.
Nationality American
Title Senior Advisor for Global Affairs to President Lee C. Bollinger Columbia University
Spouse(s) Dr. Robert B. Oxnam

Dr. Vishakha N. Desai is an Asia scholar with a focus on art, culture, policy, and women’s rights. She currently serves as Senior Advisor for Global Affairs to the President of Columbia University and Senior Research Scholar at its School of International and Public Affairs. She also serves as Senior Advisor for Global Programs to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and is President Emerita of the Asia Society (2004 – 2012).[1] In recognition of her leadership in the museum field, President Barack Obama appointed her to serve on the National Commission on Museums and Libraries in 2012.[2] Dr. Desai has been recognized as one of the Most Powerful Women in New York by Crains and for her Distinguished Service to the Visual Arts by ArtTable.[3] She is a recipient of five honorary degrees from Centre College, Pace University, the College of Staten Island, Susquehanna University, and Williams College.[4]

Life and career

Dr. Vishakha N. Desai is Senior Advisor for Global Affairs to the President of Columbia University and Senior Research Scholar at the School of International and Public Affairs. She also serves as Senior Advisor for Global Programs to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation.[5]

Dr. Desai served as President and CEO of the Asia Society, a global organization dedicated to strengthening partnerships among peoples of Asia and the U.S. from 2004 through 2012. As President, she set the direction for the Society’s diverse sets of programs ranging from policy initiatives and national educational programs to ground breaking exhibitions and performing arts programs throughout its network of eleven offices in the U.S. and Asia. Under her leadership the society expanded the scope and scale of its activities with the opening of new offices in India and Korea, a new center of U.S.–China Relations, various leadership initiatives, and inauguration of two new architecturally distinguished facilities in Hong Kong and Houston.[6] Prior to becoming President, Dr. Desai held various senior positions at the Asia Society from 1990 to 2004.[7]

Before joining the Asia Society in 1990, Dr. Desai was at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston as a Curator and the Head of Public Programs and Academic Affairs.[8] She has taught at Columbia University, Boston University, and the University of Massachusetts where she was given a tenured appointment. A Scholar of Asian Art and a public intellectual, Dr. Desai is a frequent speaker at international forums on subjects focusing on cultural roots of Asia’s economic and political transformation and challenges. She has authored opinion pieces on political, cultural, and women’s development in Asia that have appeared in more than fifty publications around the world. Author of major exhibition catalogues and editor of a major scholarly publication on Asian Art History for the 21st Century, Dr. Desai is internationally recognized for her leadership in presenting contemporary Asian Art to western audiences.[9]

Dr. Desai holds a B.A. in political Science from Bombay University and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Asian Art History from the University of Michigan.[10]

The recipient of numerous international and national grants and fellowships, Dr. Desai has received four honorary degrees from American Universities. For her work on Asian American issues, she has received awards from the University of Massachusetts, City University of New York, Asian Americans for Equality, and Leadership Education for Asian Pacific Americans (LEAP).[11] For her leadership in the arts, she has been honored by ArtTable, a national organization of women leaders in the arts, and has received a Gold Medal from the National Institute of Social Sciences. Dr. Desai was selected by Crain’s New York as one of the “100 most powerful women leaders” in New York, by India Abroad, the leading national weekly for Indian Americans, as one the “50 most distinguished Indian Americans,” and was honored by Zee T.V. (India) as the outstanding International Woman of the Year.[12]

In 2012, in recognition of Dr. Desai’s leadership in the museum field, President Barack Obama appointed her to serve on the National Commission on Museums and Libraries – she also serves as a member of the Mayor’s Commission for Cultural Affairs in New York City and on the International Advisory Committee for the House of World Cultures, Berlin, and for the Auroville Foundation, Berlin.[13] She is also an Advisory Trustee of the Brookings Institution, and a Trustee of the Bertelsmann Foundation USA and Citizen’s Committee for New York. She served as President of the Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD) from 1998 to 1999 and on the board from 1995 to 2000. She has served on the board of the Andy Warhol Foundation for Visual Arts, College Art Association, ArtTable, and the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities.[14]

Dr. Desai is married to Robert Oxnam, a China scholar, who was Asia Society’s President from 1981-1992.[15]

Bibliography

Books

Select Op-Eds

Select Articles

References

  1. Columbia News Staff, “Asia Society’s Vishakha Desai to Join Columbia as Special Advisor for Global Affairs and Faculty Member,” On Campus Columbia University, 4 October 2012, http://news.columbia.edu/oncampus/2907.
  2. "Vishakha N. Desai," Bertelsmann Foundation, http://www.bfna.org/person/vishakha-n-desai.
  3. "Miriam Kreinin Souccar, Most Powerful Women in New York 2007: Vishakha Desai," Crain's New York Business, http://www.crainsnewyork.com/gallery/20070916/FEATURES/309169999/35.
  4. Columbia News Staff, “Asia Society’s Vishakha Desai to Join Columbia as Special Advisor for Global Affairs and Faculty Member,” On Campus Columbia University, 4 October 2012, http://news.columbia.edu/oncampus/2907; "Vishakha N. Desai," Pace University Honorary Degree Citations, http://www.pace.edu/current-students/commencement-2009/general-information/honorary-degree-recipients/vishakha-n-desai; "Williams College Announces its 2014 Honorary Degree Recipients," Williams College, http://communications.williams.edu/news-releases/3_19_2014_honorarydegree/.
  5. Columbia News Staff, “Asia Society’s Vishakha Desai to Join Columbia as Special Advisor for Global Affairs and Faculty Member,” On Campus Columbia University, 4 October 2012, http://news.columbia.edu/oncampus/2907.
  6. "Vishakha N. Desai," Pace University Honorary Degree Citations, http://www.pace.edu/current-students/commencement-2009/general-information/honorary-degree-recipients/vishakha-n-desai.
  7. Abbie Fentress Swanson, "Asia Society Leader Leaves Post to Consult at Guggenheim," WNYC, 9 May 2012, http://www.wnyc.org/story/207874-asia-society-leader-leaves-post-consult-guggenheim/.
  8. "Vishakha N. Desai," South Asian Women's Leadership Forum Congress 2013: Participants, 9 March 2013, http://www.southasianwomen.org/congress/VisahakhaDesai.html.
  9. Sayed, R. “Dr. Vishakha Desai,” NRI Press, 20 July 2013, http://nripress.com/2013/07/20/dr-vishakha-n-desai/.
  10. "Vishakha N. Desai," South Asian Women's Leadership Forum Congress 2013: Participants, 9 March 2013, http://www.southasianwomen.org/congress/VisahakhaDesai.html.
  11. "Executive Profile: Vishakha N. Desai," Bloomberg Businessweek, http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=4995322&privcapId=4522612&previousCapId=398625&previousTitle=GOLDMAN%20SACHS%20GROUP%20INC.
  12. "Vishakha N. Desai," South Asian Women's Leadership Forum Congress 2013: Participants, 9 March 2013, http://www.southasianwomen.org/congress/VisahakhaDesai.html.
  13. "Vishakha N. Desai," South Asian Women's Leadership Forum Congress 2013: Participants, 9 March 2013, http://www.southasianwomen.org/congress/VisahakhaDesai.html.
  14. "Vishakha N. Desai," South Asian Women's Leadership Forum Congress 2013: Participants, 9 March 2013, http://www.southasianwomen.org/congress/VisahakhaDesai.html.
  15. “Vishakha Desai,” The Asia Society, http://asiasociety.org/vishakha-desai.
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