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Provenance Researcher Jobs (NOW HIRING)

Experience with vehicle identification tools, title documentation, and provenance research. * Prior experience in a customer-facing role involving negotiation. * Bachelor's degree or equivalent ...

Associate Curator

New York, NY · On-site

$90K - $100K/yr

Experience with the stewardship of a permanent collection, including acquisitions and committee processes, provenance research, loans and administrative management, collection database systems, and ...

Platform Engineer

New York, NY · On-site

$200K - $280K/yr

... and researching filings. No more double-checking every number AI spits out. Every number tracing back to the source, every time. But the architecture - provenance, deterministic computation ...

You will partner closely with AI/ML research, the ML platform / MLOps function. You own the data ... Governance & Provenance: Practical experience enforcing data governance in pipelines classification ...

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Provenance Researcher information

See salary details

$30K

$113.1K

$164.5K

How much do provenance researcher jobs pay per year?

As of Jul 8, 2026, the average yearly pay for provenance researcher in the United States is $113,102.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $67,000.00 and $154,000.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What are some common challenges faced by provenance researchers when tracing the history of art objects?

Provenance researchers often encounter incomplete or missing documentation, making it challenging to establish a continuous ownership history for art objects. They may need to consult a variety of sources—including archives, auction records, and personal correspondence—while dealing with language barriers or restricted access to certain records. Collaboration with curators, legal experts, and international institutions is frequently necessary to resolve complex ownership disputes or clarify ambiguities. Adaptability and strong research skills are essential in overcoming these obstacles and ensuring accurate, ethical research outcomes.

What are provenance researchers?

Provenance researchers are professionals who investigate the history of ownership and origin of artworks, artifacts, or cultural objects. They trace the 'provenance,' or chain of custody, to ensure items are authentic and to establish whether they were acquired legally and ethically. This work is especially important in museums, galleries, and auction houses to prevent the sale or display of stolen or looted items. Provenance researchers often analyze archival documents, auction records, and historical databases to reconstruct an object's past.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a Provenance Researcher, and why are they important?

To thrive as a Provenance Researcher, you need expertise in art history, archival research, and historical documentation, often supported by a relevant degree such as art history or museum studies. Familiarity with databases, cataloguing software, and digital archives is essential, as well as knowledge of provenance standards and sometimes foreign languages. Strong analytical thinking, attention to detail, and effective communication are critical soft skills for interpreting complex histories and sharing findings. These abilities ensure rigorous, ethical tracking of artwork origins, help prevent illicit trade, and uphold institutional integrity.

What is the difference between Provenance Researcher vs Archivist?

AspectProvenance ResearcherArchivist
Required CredentialsBachelor's or Master's in History, Art History, or related fields; research experienceBachelor's or Master's in Archival Studies, History, or Library Science; archival certification often preferred
Work EnvironmentMuseums, galleries, auction houses, or private collectionsArchives, libraries, museums, or institutional repositories
Industry UsageUsed in art, historical artifacts, and rare collections to verify originsUsed in preserving, organizing, and maintaining records and collections

Provenance Researchers focus on tracing the history and authenticity of objects, often working in art and historical sectors. Archivists manage and preserve records and collections within institutions. While both roles require research skills and relevant credentials, Provenance Researchers specialize in object history, whereas Archivists focus on record management and preservation.

What cities are hiring for Provenance Researcher jobs? Cities with the most Provenance Researcher job openings:
What states have the most Provenance Researcher jobs? States with the most job openings for Provenance Researcher jobs include:
Infographic showing various Provenance Researcher job openings in the United States as of July 2026, with employment types broken down into 2% Internship, 2% As Needed, 87% Full Time, 7% Part Time, 1% Temporary, and 1% Contract. Highlights an 87% Physical, 1% Hybrid, and 12% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $113,102 per year, or $54.4 per hour.
AI Safety & Alignment Principal Lead - SAFERpower.ai

AI Safety & Alignment Principal Lead - SAFERpower.ai

Electric Power Research Institute, Inc.

Washington, DC • On-site, Remote

Full-time

Medical, Dental, Vision, Life, Retirement, PTO

Posted 28 days ago


Job description

Job Title:
AI Safety & Alignment Principal Lead - SAFERpower.ai
Location:
Remote/Home Based
Job Summary and Description:
The AI Safety & Alignment Principal Lead is a strategic thought leader focused on developing a deep understanding of emerging AI-enabled energy system needs, engaging EPRI and industry SMEs in evaluating potential innovative AI technologies, assurance and risk models, and deployment solutions to address those needs, while working collaboratively within EPRI's member utilities and industry stakeholders to develop and execute upon an overall strategy to demonstrate and deploy AI safely, accountably, fairly, explainably, and reliably.
In this role you will work directly with EPRI's R&D Leadership to advance SAFERpower.ai as EPRI's sector-specific AI risk assurance, and alignment initiative for the electric power sector. The role requires building collaborative relationships with key stakeholders across EPRI R&D sectors, member utilities, ISOs/RTOs, technology partners, standards organizations, policy stakeholders, and other industry leaders.
This position is intended for an executive-level leader who can operate across disciplines, not a legal, compliance-only, cyber-only, or generic enterprise AI risk governance profile. The successful candidate will combine senior energy-sector judgment, emerging technology leadership, applied AI credibility, and the ability to translate AI safety and alignment into practical research strategies, evidence packages, pilots, workshops, executive communications, and member-facing deployment guidance.
Job Functions:
  • Accumulate and maintain a knowledge base of emerging AI technologies, AI incident and failure patterns, AI governance and alignment practices, assurance methods, standards, and the integration of those technologies into the electric power sector; use this knowledge to develop thought leadership pieces and executive communications.
  • Work directly with EPRI R&D Leadership and Program Managers to shape and execute SAFERpower.ai as a cross-sector initiative supporting safe, accountable, fair, explainable, and reliable AI deployment across generation, transmission, distribution, grid operations, planning, customer operations, nuclear, cybersecurity, DER, and enterprise functions.
  • Lead matrixed teams across EPRI R&D sectors to develop and execute strategic R&D efforts related to AI Safety, alignment, assurance, testing/evaluation/verification/validation (TEVV), AI system registries, data provenance, product assurance, deployment assurance, and operational monitoring.
  • Support other strategic initiatives and projects associated with key EPRI objectives related to AI-enabled energy systems, grid modernization, operational reliability, emerging technology adoption, technology partner due diligence, and the safe operationalization of AI.
  • Support leadership in communication of SAFERpower.ai strategy, research initiatives, pilot results, and framework outputs to EPRI member executive advisories, including the EPRI Board of Directors and Research Advisory Committee, as well as member utility executives and other industry stakeholders.
  • Support processes by which EPRI program managers develop cross-cutting research strategies to address strategic AI research priorities and integrate AI assurance, and alignment considerations into existing and future EPRI research portfolios.
  • Assess the technical, operational, economic, risk, regulatory, and market viability of selected AI technologies and evaluate AI deployment scenarios in conjunction with ongoing scenario planning exercises, member pilots, domain-specific playbooks, and workshops.
  • Coordinate with utility executives, EPRI technical staff, ISOs/RTOs, technology partners, implementation partners, standards organizations, policy stakeholders, and other industry SMEs to identify common evidence needs, priority use cases, adoption barriers, and research gaps.
  • Help manage technology and knowledge transfer to key internal and external stakeholders by communicating the state of developing AI technology and key developments in AI safety, alignment, and assurance via reports, playbooks, presentations, working groups, workshops, and member engagement.
  • Guide the development of SAFERpower.ai framework artifacts, including SAFER principles and glossary, U-SAFER assessment methodology, AI System File, AI use-case dossiers, AI system cards, data and provenance records, autonomy and human oversight profiles, TEVV reports, monitoring and incident plans, product assurance guidance, deployment assurance guidance, and toolkit roadmap.
  • Contribute to EPRI strategic planning scenario development efforts and other internal initiatives to ensure AI technology advancement, autonomy risks, governance needs, assurance requirements, and deployment constraints are appropriately accounted for and represented to members.
  • Augment the pipeline of future EPRI strategic research initiatives related to AI alignment, agentic AI, foundation models, utility AI use cases, OT/cyber interfaces, AI reliability, product and deployment assurance, and member adoption of SAFERpower.ai.

Qualifications:
  • Must have a strong background with at least 15 years of experience leading energy system strategic planning, energy industry emerging technologies, utility analytics or applied AI, AI governance and assurance, power-sector technology deployment, or efforts to develop and integrate advanced technologies to provide energy system solutions.
  • Must be able to work with a variety of levels across EPRI, including direct interface with R&D Leadership, Program Managers, technical staff, marketing and communications, legal, cybersecurity, data and AI experts, and EPRI officers.
  • Must be able to build credibility with member utilities and industry stakeholders by understanding utility operating realities, reliability obligations, cybersecurity and OT constraints, data governance challenges, technology partner dependencies, and the difference between AI pilots and governed operational deployment.
  • Must be able to lead matrixed, cross-functional efforts; multi-task; quickly assess potential AI technologies; provide strong strategic and technical support; coordinate and develop executive presentation materials oftentimes outside the area of immediate expertise; develop workshops; identify new initiatives; and monitor key progress and milestones.
  • Must have demonstrated ability to translate complex technical topics into executive-ready communications, R&D strategies, member-facing guidance, and practical deployment frameworks.
  • Experience with AI ethics, responsible AI, model risk management, AI assurance, AI safety or alignment, AI testing and validation, AI incident analysis, or relevant standards and frameworks such as NIST AI RMF, ISO/IEC 42001, ISO/IEC 23894, IEC 62443, NERC CIP, or related industry practices is strongly preferred.
  • Experience working with electric utilities, ISOs/RTOs, grid technology providers, utility-focused consulting organizations, standards bodies, or research consortia is strongly preferred.
  • Have excellent written, oral, executive communication, and collaboration skills.
  • Bachelor's degree in engineering, computer science, data science, economics, business administration, energy resources, public policy, or a related discipline required.
  • Master's or Doctorate in engineering, computer science, data science, economics, business administration, energy resources, public policy, or a related discipline highly pref

The salary range for this position is $0 USD to $0 USD annually.
This salary range is an estimate, and the actual salary may vary based on various factors, including without limitation applicant's education, experience, skills, and abilities, as well as internal equity and alignment with market data. The salary may also be adjusted based on applicant's geographic location.
This role is eligible to participate in EPRI's annual incentive program. The amount of incentive varies and is subject to the terms and conditions of the plan.
This role is eligible to participate in EPRI's standard employee benefit programs, which currently include the following: medical, dental, vision, 401k, STD/LTD and paid family leave, life and accident insurance, paid time off (flexible vacation, sick leave, and holiday pay).
EPRI participates in E-Verify, an online system operated jointly by the Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration (SSA). EPRI uses the system to check the work status of new hires by comparing information from the employee's I-9 form against SSA and Department of Homeland Security databases.
EPRI is an equal opportunity employer. EEO/AA/M/F/VETS/Disabled
Together . . . Shaping the Future of Energy.
www.epri.com