Age: 39
Job Title: Executive Director and CEO, Alberta Museums Association
Why She’s A Top 40: Since volunteering for the Winnipeg Art Gallery in her early 20s, she has risen steadily through the ranks of Canada’s cultural institutions. She is now at the helm of Alberta’s museum sector, ensuring the province’s museums remain sustainable, relevant and accessible.
Key To Her Success: She followed her first love, museums, through childhood and adolescence, until she was old enough to turn her obsession into a career.
In 2005, Alexandra Hatcher found herself at the Getty Centre in Los Angeles, sitting at a table with a director from the Smithsonian Institution and other high-ranking museum professionals from around the world. At the time, she was director of the Muse Heritage Museum in St. Albert, managing four staffers and an annual budget of less than $400,000. She was the youngest person in the room and just one of two Canadians selected for the centre’s prestigious Leadership Institute, a three-week course for up-and-coming museum leaders.
“I remember thinking, ‘Wow, I have just as much to contribute [to the conversation] as the other people around the table,'” says Hatcher, who studied art history at the University of Winnipeg and graduated from Grant MacEwan’s cultural administration program in 1999. “I’ve always considered myself a leader – that was already there. But that experience pushed me and challenged me to look at what I could contribute to the sector.”
Four years later, Hatcher was offered the role of executive director and CEO of the Alberta Museums Association, a non-profit society offering support to 250 institutions and galleries that preserve cultural history.
Hatcher manages a $2.5-million budget. She packs a tight schedule, meeting regularly with her nine employees about core grant programs and development courses for professionals, and then getting in a car and driving to galleries all over the province to advise staff and volunteers.