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Drexel veteran to take helm at Moore College

A Drexel art administrator will become the new president of Moore College of Art & Design, replacing longtime leader Happy Fernandez, officials announced Thursday.

Cecelia Fitzgibbon will become the new president of Moore College of Art & Design in July, after 16 years at Drexel University. She was chosen from about 40 candidates. (Michael S. Wirtz / Staff Photographer)
Cecelia Fitzgibbon will become the new president of Moore College of Art & Design in July, after 16 years at Drexel University. She was chosen from about 40 candidates. (Michael S. Wirtz / Staff Photographer)Read more

A Drexel art administrator will become the new president of Moore College of Art & Design, replacing longtime leader Happy Fernandez, officials announced Thursday.

Cecelia Fitzgibbon, director of Drexel's graduate arts administration program for the last 16 years, will take the helm at the small private arts college in July.

Fernandez announced in May that she would be leaving Moore, at 20th and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, where she became president in 1999.

Fitzgibbon, 57, of Wilmington, was selected from about 40 candidates for the job at Moore, which enrolls more than 460 undergraduate students and more than 50 in graduate programs.

She starts in July.

"Her deep experience in academia and arts administration will be a great asset to the Moore community," Richard Hevner, chairman of Moore's 11-member search committee and treasurer of the board of trustees, said in a prepared statement.

Fitzgibbon said she was looking to lead a school, and Moore seemed a perfect fit to use her skills and knowledge of the cultural community and her ability as a creative thinker.

"This is a chance to put those together to benefit Moore and make a difference," she said. "What could be better than that?"

She would like to see more involvement by the faculty, possibly by creating a faculty assembly to focus on curriculum issues, and said she would be open to discussing the role of full-time and part-time professors at the school. As a visual-arts college, Moore likes the model of putting professionals in the classroom to teach and mentor students. The faculty includes 24 full-time and 85 part-time educators.

A further integration of technology also will be on her plate. The school recently gave all of its freshmen iPads.

"That comes easy for me because I come from Drexel, and we're a technology university," she said.

She will also look to forge more alliances with institutions such as the Barnes Foundation.

Moore, the only women's arts college in the country, recently began accepting men into its graduate programs. There is no current plan to consider men in undergraduate programs, Fitzgibbon said.

"Right now, that's not on the books to look at," she said.

Born in Camden, Fitzgibbon earned her bachelor's degree in landscape architecture and regional planning from the University of Massachusetts and her master's in arts administration from New York University.

She was director of the Delaware Division of the Arts, and she has been involved in various cultural research and planning projects.

At Drexel, Fitzgibbon also was a professor of leadership and transition and served as department head of the college's arts and entertainment enterprise.

Though she is not an artist, she is married to a painter, Scott Cameron, and has two sons, Stuart, who works at the PFM Group in Philadelphia, and Ross, a junior at Bard College majoring in biology but also a musician, painter, and poet.

"We live, sleep, and breathe the arts," Fitzgibbon said.

She plans to find a house in Philadelphia, she said.