Release Date: October 30, 2002
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART'S CENTER FOR ADVANCED STUDY IN THE VISUAL
ARTS ANNOUNCES 2002-2003 APPOINTMENTS
Washington, DC -- The National Gallery of Art's Center for Advanced
Study in the Visual Arts (CASVA) has announced the appointments of Wolf-Dieter
Dube as Samuel H. Kress Professor for 2002-2003, Caroline Elam as Andrew
W. Mellon Professor for 2002-2004, and Manfred Leithe-Jasper as the first
Edmond J. Safra Professor for spring 2003.
The Center also announced the appointment of seven senior and eight
visiting senior fellows, a guest scholar, a postdoctoral fellow, and ten
pre-doctoral fellows. The fellows are from the United States and several
foreign countries including Australia, Bangladesh, China, the Czech Republic,
England, Germany, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, and The Netherlands. The
appointments were ratified by the Gallery's Board of Trustees.
CASVA was founded 23 years ago to promote the study of the history, theory
and criticism of art, architecture and urbanism through the formation
of a community of scholars. A variety of private sources supports the
program of fellowships.
The position of Samuel H. Kress Professor was created in 1965. It is
reserved for a distinguished art historian who, as the senior member of
the Center, pursues scholarly work and counsels predoctoral fellows in
their dissertation research. Professor Wolf-Dieter Dube, born in Schwerin,
Mecklenburg, studied art history and classical archaeology before receiving
his Ph.D. in 1961. He became curator for Flemish paintings at the Bavarian
State Paintings Collections in 1966, and three years later was made head
of the State Gallery of Modern Art in Munich. In 1976 he became deputy
to the director general of the Bavarian State Paintings Collection. Internationally
recognized as an expert in museum technology and architecture, Dube was
appointed director general of the State Museums of Berlin in 1983, and
supervised the merger of the state museums within both parts of the city
from the time of German reunification until his retirement in 1999.
The position of Andrew W. Mellon Professor was created in 1994 for distinguished
academic and museum professionals. Mellon professors serve two consecutive
years and pursue independent research at CASVA. Caroline Elam has been
editor of The Burlington Magazine since 1987. During her tenure
she was the recipient of numerous honors and fellowships, including her
appointment as visiting scholar at CASVA, National Gallery of Art, in
May 1999. She was also a fellow at the Harvard University Center for Renaissance
Studies, Villa I Tatti, Florence, in 1981-1982. She continues to serve
as trustee of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, and as Honorary Fellow
for Life, King's College, Cambridge. Elam has authored numerous articles
and co-authored Florence and Italy (London, 1988) with Peter Denley.
The position of Edmond J. Safra Visiting Professor has been established
through a grant from the Edmond J. Safra Philanthropic Foundation. For
each of the next four years, a Safra Professor will serve for up to six
months, forging connections between the research of the curatorial staff
and that of visiting scholars at the center. At the same time, the Safra
Professor will advance his or her own research on subjects associated
with the Gallery's permanent collection. The Safra Professor may
also present seminars or curatorial lectures for graduate students and
emerging scholars and curators from other institutions. The area of expertise
of the Safra Professor will vary from year to year, ranging through the
collection from sculpture to painting to works on paper of all periods.
Leithe-Jasper will be in residence from January to June 2003.
As Visiting Senior Curator of Sculpture in 2001-2002, Leithe-Jasper was
engaged in the installation of the National Gallery's new sculpture
galleries, which opened to the public on September 29. He was formerly
director of the Kunstkammer at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, and
is the author of a series of internationally acclaimed exhibition catalogues
and monographs, including Renaissance Master Bronzes from the Kunsthistorisches
Museum (National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1986/1987); Giambologna,
1529-1608: Sculptor to the Medici (Edinburgh, 1978); and many other
articles and catalogues on sculpture, including the work of Alessandro
Vittoria, L'Antico, and other artists represented in the Kunstkammer.
CENTER MEMBERS FOR 2002-2003
Members of the Center for the 2002-2003 academic year are listed below
with their current affiliations and research topics.
Paul Mellon Senior Fellow (spring 2003)
Hal Foster
Princeton University
Primitive Scenes and Prosthetic Gods
Samuel H. Kress Senior Fellows
Alfred Acres
Princeton University
Renaissance Invention and Christ's Haunted Infancy
Joanna Woods-Marsden
University of California Los Angeles
Portrait of the Renaissance Lady
Ailsa Mellon Bruce Senior Fellows
Sheryl Reiss
Cornell University
The Making of a Medici Maecenas: Giulio de' Medici (Pope Clement
VII) as Patron of Art
Carla Yanni
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
The Architecture of American Insane Asylums: Victorian Psychiatry
and the Environmental Cure
Frese Senior Fellow
Cinzia Sicca Bursill-Hall
Università degli Studi di Pisa
Fashioning the Tudor Court: Florentine Commerce and the Image of
the Modern English Courtier
Ailsa Mellon Bruce National Gallery of Art Sabbatical Curatorial Fellow
Nancy H. Yeide
Department of Curatorial Records
The Goering Collection
Podhorsky Guest Scholar (fall 2002)
Olga Pujmanová
National Gallery, Prague
Catalogue of Italian Gothic and Renaissance Paintings in the Czech
Republic
Paul Mellon Visiting Senior Fellow (fall 2002 --winter 2003)
David Marshall
University of Melbourne
The Villa Patrizi and the Recovery of the Roman Rococo, 1710--1740
Ailsa Mellon Bruce Visiting Senior Fellows (fall 2002 --winter 2003)
Gregory Maertz
St. John's University, New York
The Invisible Museum: The Secret Postwar History of Nazi Art
Dennis P. Doordan
University of Notre Dame
Modern Architecture and the Cold War: The Curious Case of Frank Lloyd
Wright and Post-WWII Italian Architecture
Starr Foundation Visiting Senior Research Fellow (fall 2002)
Sadasiba Pradhan
Sambalpur University
Symbolism in Orissan Rock Art
Samuel H. Kress Paired Fellows for Research in Conservation and
the History of Art and Archaeology
Barbara Hepburn Berrie
National Gallery of Art
Louisa C. Matthew
Union College
The Pigments of Venetian Renaissance Painters: Procurement, Process
and the Finished Picture
J. Paul Getty Trust Paired Fellows for Research in Conservation and
the History of Art and Archaeology
Elizabeth Childs-Johnson
New York City
Zhengyao Jin
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
Stylistic and Scientific Studies on Early/Middle Shang Bronzes: Metallurgy,
Material Sources and Cultural Character
Samuel H. Kress Postdoctoral Curatorial Fellow
Alona Nitzan-Shiftan
National Gallery of Art, Archives
I.M. Pei's East Building of the National Gallery of Art in Context
Predoctoral Fellows
(in residence)
Fabio Barry (David E. Finley Fellow, 2000-2003)
Columbia University
Painting in Stone: The Symbolic Identity of Colored Marbles in the
Visual Arts from Late Antiquity until the Age of Enlightenment
Kevin Chua (Samuel H. Kress Fellow, 2001-2003)
University of California, Berkeley
Seeing Tears: Greuze and the Epistemology of Sensibility
Teresa Nevins (Mary Davis Fellow, 2001-2003)
University of Delaware
Viewing Revelation: Text and Image in Ninth-Century Apocalypse Manuscripts
Adnan Morshed (Wyeth Fellow, 2001-2003)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The Aesthetics of Aerial Vision: The Futurama of Norman Bel Geddes
Yukio Lippit (Andrew W. Mellon Fellow, 2001-2003)
Princeton University
The Birth of Japanese Painting History: Authentication and Inscription
in the Seventeenth Century
Alice Tseng (Ittleson Fellow, 2002-2003)
Harvard University
Art in Place: Shaping the Imperial Museum of Japan, 1872-1909
Pamela Warner (Paul Mellon Fellow, 2000-2003)
University of Delaware
At the Crossroads of Word and Image: Theories of the Pictorial in
the Art Criticism of the Goncourt Brothers
Predoctoral Fellows
(not in residence)
Guendalina Ajello (Paul Mellon Fellow, 2001-2004)
New York University
The Afterlife of Rome's Ancient Spectator Buildings
Kyung-hee Choi (David E. Finley Fellow, 2001-2004)
New York University
Illuminating Liturgy and Legend: The Missal of Saint-Denis and the
Royal Abbey in the Fourteenth Century
Nina Dubin (David E. Finley Fellow, 2002-2005)
University of California, Berkeley
Monumental Ruins: Hubert Robert, Paris Urbanism, and the Crisis of
Revolutionary France
Sabina de Cavi (Paul Mellon Fellow, 2002--2005)
Columbia University
Spain in Naples: Building, Sculpting, and Painting for the Viceroys
(1585-1621)
Meredith Hale (Samuel H. Kress Fellow, 2002--2004)
Columbia University
Romeyn de Hooghe and the Birth of Political Satire
Adriaan Waiboer (Mary Davis Fellow, 2002--2004)
New York University
Gabriel Metsu (1629-1667): Life and Work
Alison Syme (Wyeth Fellow, 2002--2004)
Harvard University
Hedge-whores, Wagtails, Cockatrices, Whipsters:
John Singer Sargent and His Coterie of Nature's Artful Dodgers
Kate Lingley (Ittleson Fellow, 2002--2004)
The University of Chicago
Negotiating Identity: Social Aspects of Sixth-Century Buddhist Art
Patronage
Yu Jiang (Andrew W. Mellon Fellow, 2002--2004)
University of Pittsburgh
Statecraft and Cemetery in Early Dynastic China: Yu Funerary Arts
in the Zhou
Leopoldine Prosperetti (Robert H. and Clarice Smith Fellow, 2002--2003)
The Johns Hopkins University
Jan Brueghel and the Landscape of Devotion: Spiritual Reform and
Landscape Subjects in Antwerp Painting between 1595 and 1625
Jordan Kantor (Chester Dale Fellow, 2002-2003)
Harvard University
Jackson Pollock's Late Paintings (1951-1956)
Morna O'Neill (Chester Dale Fellow, 2002-2003)
Yale University
"Art Is Born Again": Painting as a Practice in the Work
of Walter Crane, 1877-1902
For more information about CASVA programs and fellowships, call
(202) 842-6482 or visit the Gallery's Web site at www.nga.gov.
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