Cincinnati From 1927 to 1930 she taught advanced French at
Goucher College in Towson, Maryland. Her experience at Harvard University led to her hiring as general curator at the
Cincinnati Museum of Art in 1930, working under museum director Walter Siple.
San Francisco In December 1934, she was hired as the curator of the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, slated to open in early 1935. Eventually her title changed to director. In her first years at the museum, she organized exhibitions dedicated to Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, and Henri Matisse. By the 1940s and '50s she was holding 100 shows per year, many from the New York MoMA and Peggy Guggenheim's gallery in Manhattan. She also established the first gallery tours for any museum in the West as well as art history courses, a public art library, an art rental gallery, the first film program at an American museum—"Art in Cinema"—, and the television series
Art in Your Life. She was second vice-president,
American Federation of Arts, 1939; counsellor for arts at the
Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, 1941; a member of the Committee of the Fine Arts Buildings of the
Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco, and director of Pacific House 1940, a member of the Committee of Experts on the Arts, State Department, 1940–1945. Between 1946 and 1949, she took leave from the
San Francisco Museum of Art, and became consultant for museums at
UNESCO Preparatory Commission in Germany, and then as the head of its Museums Division as a consultant with French, American, and British authorities. However, in 1958, she decided to leave San Francisco along with her ties to the museum due to disagreements with the board of directors. "After being forced to leave S.F. in 1958, she cut off ties with most of her friends and colleagues in the Bay Area, which is one reason her memory has been somewhat buried", Morley scholar Kristy Phillips wrote in a 2006 email on ArtsJournal.com. "She felt betrayed here by the museum and its trustees and at one point declared that she wanted to forget S.F. completely."
Time magazine wrote about her in her twentieth year with the museum, and again on her resignation in 1958. Her resignation was also published in the
San Francisco Examiner.
New Delhi In 1959, she served as the assistant director of the Guggenheim Museum before she decided to move to India. In India, under the supervision of Prime Minister Jawawarlal Nehru she opened the country's first major art museum. == Personal life and death ==