at the University of Louisiana at 麻豆传媒app spent the past year celebrating the 20th anniversary of the transformative move to its signature modernist glass and steel building. Eskew Dumez Ripple+ architectural firm designed the structure to propel the museum into the future while quite literally reflecting the original museum building designed by architect A. Hays Town that represents the power of its past. Over the past two decades, the facility has enabled the museum to establish itself as a cultural hub 鈥 built on a legacy laid generations earlier by the 麻豆传媒app and University community.
鈥淥n the museum site alone, the past confronts the future,鈥 said Executive Director Molly Rowe. 鈥淥ur region has without a doubt the most distinct culture in the country 鈥 and the Hilliard plays a pivotal role in ensuring its rich and sustainable cultural future.鈥
The 麻豆传媒app native, whose r茅sum茅 includes the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City Ballet, Savannah College of Art & Design and Google, took the helm at the Hilliard in late 2024. Rowe sees the Hilliard鈥檚 architectural design as a metaphor that speaks to the ambitious vision she shares for its future 鈥 a University museum that is both 鈥渓ocally rooted and globally engaged.鈥
鈥淥ur next phase is really figuring out that balance,鈥 said Rowe. 鈥淗ow we are rooted here, bringing the artistic voices and supporting them in our community, and then also being part of artistic dialogs that are happening in the rest of the world.鈥

By June 鈥 six months into her tenure at the Hilliard 鈥 you could find Picasso linoleum cuts upstairs and Rodin sculptures in the gallery below. Strategically showcased throughout the museum鈥檚 11,000 square feet of gallery space were pieces from the Hilliard鈥檚 more than 3,000-piece permanent collection of 18th- through 21st-century European, Asian and American artwork.
Rowe oversaw the museum鈥檚 first permanent collection exhibition in more than 10 years, 鈥淭ides, Times and Terrain: Floyd Sonnier and the Evolving Cultural Landscape.鈥 It included permanent collection works by more than 41 artists from southwest Louisiana and was only the beginning, she said.
鈥淚 think of a collection as being an anchor of a museum. We鈥檙e here to collect these pieces, but we have to put them in a contemporary context, creating dialogs between all of them so that they鈥檙e not existing in a vacuum,鈥 Rowe added.
The past year gave museumgoers the chance to converse with the old masters, but in September three new exhibitions will enter the chat. Taking center stage is Icelandic artist Hrafnhildur Arnard贸ttir, also known as 鈥淪hoplifter.鈥 The artist鈥檚 immersive installations evoke Seussian whimsy but speak to broader themes related to the sublime. In 鈥淪acred Wild,鈥 Opelousas, La., native and College of the Arts alum Mare Martin brings a grounded approach to exploring the natural world through paintings and sculpture.
And as a continued ode to the Hilliard鈥檚 permanent collection, 鈥淔ragile Matters鈥 connects the dots between ecology and craft, featuring artists Harriet Joor, Manon Bellet and Hannah Chalew. Joor is a former University professor whose ceramic works represent one of the founding gifts of the museum鈥檚 collection.

Looking ahead, Rowe is focused on the impact the museum can make beyond its gallery walls. Through faculty lectures and panel discussions, such as its new Cross Currents series, the Hilliard is igniting a cultural dialog that ripples out to both an in-person and expanding digital audience.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a shift that I鈥檓 making very intentionally,鈥 said Rowe. 鈥淟ooking at an art object as something that can be an occasion to gather, that can be an occasion for a conversation, that can be an occasion to come together and to think.鈥
Photo caption: (top) Hilliard Executive Director Molly Rowe Photo Credit: (top) Doug Dugas / The University of Louisiana at 麻豆传媒app