curator
curator — noun
1. someone who manages the collection of objects, artworks, or animals in a museum,
someone who manages the collection of objects, artworks, or animals in a museum, art gallery, library, or zoo and decides what to display to the public
Quinn has worked as a curator at the city's art museum for over a decade.
present perfect: has worked as…curator at…for [duration]
The curator, Reema, carefully selected the paintings for the new exhibition.
curator selects works for an exhibition
The zoo's curator decided to move the young pandas to a larger, shaded enclosure.
Kwame became the curator of the university's collection of rare books from the 17th century.
Minho, the museum's curator, trained the new assistants on how to safely handle ancient pottery.
- keeper
used mainly in British museums and the British Library; older and more traditional than 'curator'
- conservator
focuses on preservation and restoration rather than overall collection management and exhibition planning
- custodian
broader term that can refer to a caretaker or guard; less precise for the intellectual/curatorial role
文法句型
curator + of + collection/institution
possessive + curator: [institution]'s curator
用法筆記
Often followed by 'of' to specify the collection or institution (e.g., 'curator of Asian art', 'curator of manuscripts'). The possessive form is also very common: 'the museum's curator', 'the gallery's curator'. A curator is not simply a worker at a museum — the role specifically involves decisions about what the collection contains and how it is presented to the public.