5 • 884 Ratings
🗓️ 18 August 2025
⏱️ 76 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | To me, the most compelling work we do is often outside this building. |
| 0:15.0 | Sometimes it's quiet and invisible. |
| 0:17.3 | People don't know that our designers serving on a committee that's looking at city codes |
| 0:24.5 | But you know if you want to have impact on your community you have to be part of the community |
| 0:29.6 | You have to show up you can't just be separate you can't sit in the |
| 0:35.7 | proverbial ivory tower it just doesn't work in a place like ours. |
| 0:40.3 | It would be a mistake to think of ourselves as separate from our community or something above the community. |
| 0:49.3 | Our biggest wish, our biggest goal, our biggest priority is to be part of the community and to |
| 0:54.7 | provide something useful to the people that live here. And if we can be useful to the people |
| 1:00.3 | that live here, then I think we have a story to tell people around the globe. That was Julie Decker. |
| 1:08.9 | She's the director and CEO of the Anchorage Museum. |
| 1:12.6 | But before that, she practiced as an artist and ran her own art gallery. |
| 1:19.6 | Since then, she's fostered a belief in the power of museums to spark action, |
| 1:25.6 | whether that means picking up a paintbrush, reading a new book, |
| 1:29.9 | or seeing the world differently. Her connection to the Anchorage Museum runs back to childhood, |
| 1:36.7 | when it was little more than a single room with a borrowed collection. Her dad was a visual artist and an art teacher. He was her earliest and most influential |
| 1:48.2 | guide into that world. He taught her to be an observer, to notice the small things, and she watched |
| 1:55.9 | as his own work appeared in solo shows and juries exhibitions at the museum. |
| 2:03.0 | So for Julie, the Anchorage Museum isn't just a workplace. |
| 2:07.7 | It's been a constant presence in her life, shaping her sense of art, community, and possibility. |
| 2:16.5 | In the work she does now, Julie envisions the Anchorage Museum as less a keeper of artifacts and more of a living platform for Alaska's stories. It acts as a collaborator and a partner, a place that listens to communities, amplifies the voices of Alaskans, and connects local |
| 2:35.7 | narratives to global conversations. |
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