News | December 24, 2024

Charles Dickens Museum Names New Director

Charles Dickens Museum

Cindy Sughrue (left) and new Director Frankie Kubicki (right)

The Charles Dickens Museum has announced that its current Deputy Director, Frankie Kubicki, will become Director of the Museum in March 2025. 

Kubicki has been with the Museum for eight years, initially as Curator, before progressing to Senior Curator and, latterly, Deputy Director: Programmes & Collections. She follows Cindy Sughrue, who will leave the Museum at the end of March, having served for nearly 10 years. 

“We are delighted that Frankie will be our new Director," said Sandra Lynes Timbrell, Chair of the Museum’s Board of Trustees. "She was the standout candidate for the post and demonstrated a clear vision for the future of the Museum. We are grateful to outgoing Director Cindy Sughrue for her dedication and leadership. She transformed the Museum and, during Covid in particular, worked tirelessly to ensure its continued success."

Frankie Kubicki said: “I am truly delighted and honoured to be stepping into this new role and to be able to help to shape the future of this special place. Charles Dickens is as compelling as he ever has been and the issues and themes that absorbed him remain strikingly relevant. It has been a real pleasure to work with Cindy over the past eight years, during which time, and due to her impressive leadership, the Museum has become increasingly vibrant and vital."

Speaking about her time at the Museum, Cindy Sughrue added: “It has been an honour to lead this wonderful Museum through nearly a decade of development, which has included establishing our regular programme of ambitious temporary exhibitions, securing a number of major collection acquisitions, improving and expanding our learning programme and developing a range of income streams to support all of this. We’ve raised some £4.2m for acquisitions and projects, expanded our partnerships, and increased trading income by 65% and visitor numbers by 32%, despite the pandemic setback. All of this would have been impossible without the talented and dedicated team of people who have been part of our Museum over the years. The Museum is stronger than ever.”

2025 will be the centenary year of the Museum, at 48 Doughty Street, Holborn, the only surviving London house in which Charles Dickens lived.