AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME
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THE AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME ANNOUNCES THE 2008-09
ROME PRIZE WINNERS
Click here to download a printable press release.
New York (10 April 2008) – Today the Trustees of the American Academy in Rome announced the winners of the 112th annual Rome Prize Competition. Awardees are provided with a stipend, a study or studio, and room and board for a period of 6 months to 2 years.
The announcement was made by Adele Chatfield-Taylor, FAAR’84, President of the American Academy in Rome, who stated that the Trustees had awarded the fellowships at the board meeting earlier in the day. The following individuals will take up residence at the American Academy in Rome in September 2008:
ROME PRIZE WINNERS 2008
ANCIENT STUDIES
Emeline Hill Richardson/Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year one of a two-year fellowship)
SCOTT CRAVER
McIntire Department of Art, University of Virginia
Patterns of Complexity: An Index and Analysis of Urban Property Investment at Pompeii
Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
SUSAN A. CURRY
Department of Classical Studies, Indiana University
Human Identities and Animal Others in the Second Century C.E.
Frances Barker Tracy/Samuel H. Kress Foundation/ Helen M. Woodruff Fellowship of the Archaeological Institute of America Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year two of a two-year fellowship)
JOHN N. N. HOPKINS
Department of Art and Art History, The University of Texas at Austin
The Topographical Transformation of Archaic Rome: A New Interpretation of Architecture and Geography in the Early City
Andrew Heiskell Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
PATRICIA LARASH
Assistant Professor, Department of Classical Studies, Boston University
Martial's Readers, Rome's Audiences
Arthur Ross Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
MATTHEW NOTARIAN
Department of Classics, University at Buffalo
Civic Transformation in Early Imperial Latium: An Archaeological and Social History of Praeneste, Tibur and Tusculum
National Endowment for the Humanities/Andrew Heiskell Post-Doctoral Rome Prize HÉRICA VALLADARES
Assistant Professor, Department of Classics, Johns Hopkins University
On Tenderness: The Semantics of Love in Roman Painting and Poetry
ARCHITECTURE
Arnold W. Brunner Rome Prize
MATTHEW HURAL
Lecturer, Department of Architecture, University of Virginia
Designer, Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects
Between Inside and Out. Aurelian Gates
Gorham P. Stevens Rome Prize
URSULA EMERY McCLURE & MICHAEL A. McCLURE
Principals, emerymcclure architecture
Terra Viscus: Hybrid Tectonic Precedent.
DESIGN
Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Rome Prize
DAVID ERDMAN
Department of Architecture and Urban Design University of California, Los Angeles
Principal, davidclovers
Plasticity Now
Katherine Edwards Gordon Rome Prize
CATHY LANG HO
Independent Writer and Editor
Broadband Architecture: A study of how new media outlets are challenging the authority of print publications
HISTORIC PRESERVATION AND CONSERVATION
National Endowment for the Arts Rome Prize
ANDREW J. KRANIS
Decor Project Manager, Whole Foods Market
Green Piazza: Community Ecology in the City
Booth Family Rome Prize
ROSA LOWINGER
Conservator of Sculpture and Architecture, Los Angeles, CA
Art Vandalism: A Comprehensive Study of its Causes and Effects, With an Emphasis on Conservation of Contemporary Public Art.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
Prince Charitable Trusts Rome Prize
CHRIS COUNTS
Senior Associate, Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates Inc., Landscape Architects
Painting and Drawing as a Means to Study the Spatial Registration, Appropriated Use, and Movement of Masterpieces of the Italian Urban Landscape
Garden Club of America Rome Prize
HOPE H. HASBROUCK
Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, The University of Texas at Austin
Interpreting Cultural Territories Through Prospect and Passage
LITERATURE
John Guare Writer’s Fund Rome Prize, a gift of Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman
BRAD KESSLER
Writer
Editing The Goat Diaries and starting a new novel
Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize, a gift of the Drue Heinz Trust/American Academy of Arts and Letters
DANA SPIOTTA
Writer
Unnamed Novel
MEDIEVAL STUDIES
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
CARRIE BENEŠ
Assistant Professor of Medieval and Renaissance History, New College of Florida
SPQR Transformed: Post-Classical Fortunes of a Classical Acronym
Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year two of a two-year fellowship)
ERIK GUSTAFSON
Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Tradition and Renewal in the Thirteenth-Century Franciscan Architecture of Tuscany
Phyllis G. Gordan/Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year one of a two-year fellowship)
ANNIE MONTGOMERY LABATT
History of Art, Yale University
In Search of the “Eastern” Image: Sacred Painting in Eighth and Ninth Century Rome
National Endowment for the Humanities/Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
JOHN PARKER
Associate Professor, Department of English, Macalester College
Drama and the Death of God, or The Gospel of Seneca
MODERN ITALIAN STUDIES
Paul Mellon Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
MARGARET FISHER
Video Director and Publisher, Second Evening Art / BMI
Through the eyes of children: a re-assessment of the role of futurism in the development of early Italian Radio under Fascism
Donald and Maria Cox Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
GREGORY TENTLER
History of Art, University of Pennsylvania
Made in Italy: Piero Manzoni and the Birth of the International Avant-Garde 1954-1963
MUSICAL COMPOSITION
Luciano Berio Rome Prize
KEERIL MAKAN
Assistant Professor of Music, Music and Theater Arts Section, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Three new works: Hover for electric guitar and orchestra; a trio for flute, viola, and harp; and Tracker, a chamber opera
Elliott Carter Rome Prize
KURT ROHDE
Assistant Professor, Composition/Theory, Department of Music, University of California, Davis
Co-director, The Empyrean Ensemble
Artistic Director, The Left Coast Chamber Ensemble
Composition of Two New Works: A Violin Concertino for violinist Axel Strauss, and a puppet opera entitled “A Shadow Opera”
RENAISSANCE AND EARLY MODERN STUDIES
Marian and Andrew Heiskell Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
ERIC BIANCHI
Department of Music, Yale University
Center of the World: Athanasius Kircher at the Jesuit Colleges of Rome
Millicent Mercer Johnsen Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
ELIZABETH McCAHILL
Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of the South
Reinventing Rome: 1400-1450
VISUAL ARTS
John Armstrong Chaloner/Jacob H. Lazarus-Metropolitan Museum of Art Rome Prize
HISHAM M. BIZRI
Filmmaker and Assistant Professor of Film, Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature, University of Minnesota
Screenplay: The Last Day of Summer
Harold M. English Rome Prize
DAVID HUMPHREY
Artist and Instructor, School of Art, Yale University
Blind Handshake
Joseph H. Hazen Rome Prize
MARIE LORENZ
Artist, Brooklyn, NY
Tiber River Navigation
Abigail Cohen Rome Prize
MATTHEW MONTEITH
Artist/Photographer, Brooklyn, NY
Living City, Living Art
THE JURYS
The Rome Prize is awarded annually through an open competition that is juried by leading artists and scholars in the fellowship fields. Forty-three individuals were invited to make up nine juries to review the applications. The juries this year were chaired by Michael C.J. Putnam, FAAR'64, RAAR'70 (Ancient Studies), Michael Graves, FAAR'62, RAAR'78 (Design); Charles Granquist (Historic Preservation & Conservation), Charles Simic (Literature, through the Committee for Awards of the American Academy of Arts and Letters), Richard Gyug (Medieval Studies), Alexander Stille (Modern Italian Studies), Fred Lerdahl, RAAR’88 (Musical Composition), John Pinto, FAAR'75, RAAR'06 (Renaissance and Early Modern Studies), and Laurie Simmons, RAAR’05 (Visual Arts). For a complete list of jurors and their professional affiliations, please click here.
FAAR - Fellow, American Academy in Rome
RAAR - Resident, American Academy in Rome
THE AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME
Established in 1894 and chartered by an Act of Congress in 1905, the American Academy in Rome is a center that sustains independent artistic pursuits and humanistic studies. It is situated on the Janiculum, the highest hill within the walls of Rome. Each year, through a national competition, the Rome Prize is awarded to up to 30 individuals -- emerging artists (working in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Design, Historic Preservation and Conservation, Literature, Musical Composition, or Visual Arts) and scholars (working in Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Early Modern, or Modern Italian Studies). The application deadline is November 1st. The Academy community also includes invited Residents and Affiliated Fellows. For more information please visit www.aarome.org.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Shawn Miller, Program Director
American Academy in Rome
7 East 60 Street
New York, NY 10022
Tel. 212-751-7200 ext. 42
Fax. 212-751-7220
E-mail: s.miller@aarome.org
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