Art Institute of Chicago President on Leave After Stripping on Plane


Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) President and Director James Rondeau has taken a voluntary leave of absence amid an ongoing investigation into accusations of stripping in public while aboard a flight to Germany last month. 

Rondeau, who has helmed the museum since 2016, was allegedly under the influence of alcohol and prescription medication, as first reported by CBS News. Sources told the news outlet that the incident happened on April 18 during an overnight United Airlines flight from Chicago to Munich. 

After the plane landed, police officers were called to the scene in response to reports that a passenger had taken off his clothes.

“The Art Institute takes this very seriously and has opened an independent investigation into the incident to gather all available information,” an AIC spokesperson told Hyperallergic in a statement.

United Airlines declined to comment. Rondeau has not yet responded to Hyperallergic’s inquiry.

Founded in 1879 as the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, the AIC is one of the United States’s most internationally recognizable arts museums, known for its permanent collection of more than 300,000 works, which began with a specific focus on avant-garde European painting and sculpture, and for its affiliated arts institution, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Rondeau, who makes more than $1 million a year in salary (as of 2023), has been with the museum for nearly three decades. He first joined the AIC in 1998 as an associate curator of contemporary art before moving into a curator position of Modern and Contemporary Art in 2004.

Avatar photo

Maya Pontone (she/her) is a Staff News Writer at Hyperallergic. Originally from northern New Jersey, she currently resides in Brooklyn, where she covers daily news affecting the arts and culture, both…
More by Maya Pontone



Source link

Scroll to Top