Category
page 1Women curators

Bel-Shalti-Nanna
Ennigaldi-Nanna (Babylonian cuneiform: 120x120px En-nígaldi-Nanna), also known as Bel-Shalti-Nanna and commonly called just Ennigaldi, was a princess of the Neo-Babylonian Empire and high priestess (entu) of Ur. As the first entu in six centuries, serving as the "human wife" of the moon-god Sin, Ennigaldi held large religious and political power. She is most famous today for founding a museum in Ur 530 BC. Ennigaldi's museum showcased, cataloged, and labelled artifacts from the preceding 1,500 years of Mesopotamian history and is often considered to have been the first museum in world history.
Miriama Bono
French museum director
Noor Al Suwaidi
artist from Abu Dhabi
Jepchumba
Jepchumba is a Kenyan digital artist, cultural ambassador, curator and activist. She was the creator of the digital art dissemination platform African Digital Art, and has been recognized by the American magazine Forbes as one of the "20 most powerful young women in Africa" and named by the British newspaper The Guardian as one of the 25 most relevant female entrepreneurs on the African continent.
Hoor Al Qasimi
Emirati art curator
Klára Kubičková
Slovakian architectural historian
Faustina K. Rehuher-Marugg
Palauan curator and politician