Mission
The mission of the American Academy in Rome, founded in 1894, is to foster the pursuit of advanced research and independent study in the fine arts and humanities.

The Academy awards the prestigious Rome Prize to a selected group of artists and scholars invited to Rome to pursue their creative goals in an atmosphere conducive to artistic innovation and progressive scholarship.

Over the years, the Academy paid tribute to grand ideologies and fostered collaborative relationships which became the legacy of Rome Prize Fellows. Today, the Academy remains a dynamic, inspirational cultural site, a unique intellectual community involved in a complex and changing network of individuals and institutions with similar values.

The Academy provides a multi-disciplinary environment where groups of talented and ambitious artists and scholars come together, influence each other, and contribute to the artistic movements and scholarly culture of their time. Central to its mission are encounters with the Eternal City, deepening and intensifying all the Academy has to offer.


New York Contact Information
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7 East 60 Street
New York, New York 10022-1001 USA
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Phone
212 751 7200

Fax
212 751 7220

Email
info@aarome.org


Rome Contact Information
Address
Via Angelo Masina 5
00153 Roma ITALIA
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Phone
39 06 58461

Fax
39 06 5810788

Email
info@aarome.org
Features
February 8, 2010

A Conversation With Corey Brennan


Beginning 1 July 2009, T. Corey Brennan was appointed to a three-year term as the Andrew W. Mellon Professor-in-Charge of the School of Classical Studies at the American Academy in Rome. In an email conversation, Pamela Hovland, FAAR 06, talked with Corey about his first six months at the Academy, his perceptions of the changes since his fellowship year, his current projects and his stint as a rock star with the Lemonheads.

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January 22, 2010

A Glimpse into Richard Wittman’s Day

Photograph: Annie Schlechter

Richard Wittman is the 2009-10 Millicent Mercer Johnsen Post-Doctoral Rome Prize winner. He was awarded the fellowship to allow him the time and proximity needed to investigate various aspects of 19th- and early 20th-century architecture and planning in Rome. Recently he led a group of Fellows on a “walk and talk” in EUR and discussed the area’s Fascist-era planning and architecture and its function within Mussolini's dream of creating a new Roman (Italian) Empire. On a typical day, however, Richard can be found writing in his AAR study; his desk faces a tall window overlooking the Cortile where both inspiration and distraction are readily available. As Richard’s research is more about studying texts than the material fabric of buildings, he is often at work in the AAR library, the Archivio di Stato or at the Biblioteca Nazionale.

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January 5, 2010

A Glimpse Into Russell Maret's Studio

Russell Maret, a designer, typographer and letterpress printer based in New York City, was awarded the Peter Rolland Rome Prize fellowship in Design. He arrived in Rome in early September 2009 and quickly settled into a spacious studio overlooking the fountain and a view of the historic center of Rome. For his six month fellowship, he brought with him only a few tools, including a ruler, a protractor and a laptop computer.

Russell describes his project in this way: I came to Rome to study vernacular classical lettering styles as source material for new digital typefaces. Since arriving, I have been overwhelmed by the abundance of letterforms scattered throughout the city, particularly the broken private memorials plastered into walls like ersatz public sculpture. As a type designer I operate within microcosmic spaces, editing in thousandths of inches in an effort to minimize the ostentatious characteristics of individual letters. In Rome I am approaching letter design from the opposite direction - making large public letters, emphasizing and celebrating their irregularities.

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December 17, 2009

Auguri/Best Wishes



This beautiful and fascinating image was taken by Architect David Erdman, co-Director of the practice davidclovers, and winner of the 2008-09 Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Rome Prize in Design. His project, entitled Plasticity Now, explored the idea that plasticity, as a conceptual premise for the genesis of architectural form, was born in Rome. The photograph is taken from a set of images evoking particular sensations in architecture, in this instance luminescence. It reminds us of the enduring importance of Rome for artists and scholars today and of the necessity of the American Academy. As 2009 draws to a close, please consider making a contribution to the Academy's Annual Fund, if you have not done so already.

Make a Donation

December 14, 2009

American Academy in Rome Appoints Christopher Celenza its 21st Director


Historian and Latinist Christopher S. Celenza, FAAR'94, has been named the 21st Director of the American Academy in Rome, it was announced today by Academy President Adele Chatfield-Taylor, FAAR'84. Professor Celenza's 3-year tenure begins in July of 2010. He succeeds Professor Carmela Vircillo Franklin, FAAR'85, RAAR'02, who will step down during the summer of 2010 after a five-year tenure, to return to Columbia University and teaching.


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December 8, 2009

A Cabaret to Celebrate the Rome Prize Fellowship

The very first American Academy in Rome Cabaret took place on Wednesday 2 December, on New York City’s Lower East Side as a celebration of the Rome Prize fellowship. The event was conceived, curated and carried off by renowned performance artist Laurie Anderson, RAAR’06 and American Academy in Rome Trustee, and included performances by musician Lou Reed, together with other leading and emerging artists, musicians, dancers, and filmmakers – including a number of Academy Fellows and Residents.

In welcoming remarks, AAR’s President, Adele Chatfield Taylor, FAAR‘84, described the evening as “one part performance, one part family reunion and one part introduction to a whole new circle of friends.” Over 250 guests attended the cabaret which was held at the Angel Orensanz Foundation, a former 19th century synagogue now used for the creation and diffusion of contemporary art. Films and videos were shown throughout the space and featured recent work by Richard Barnes, FAAR’06, Hisham M. Bizri, FAAR’09, Charles Norman Mason, FAAR’06, Alex Schweder, FAAR’06, Laurie Simmons, RAAR ‘05, Brenda Way, RAAR’09 and Carrie Mae Weems, FAAR’06. Cabaret performers included Derek Bermel, FAAR’02, Molissa Fenley, FAAR’08, Oscar Hijuelos, FAAR’86, Bob Holman, Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed. Net proceeds will benefit the fellowship that is the American Academy in Rome.

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November 5, 2009

Please Join Us for the Patricia H. Labalme Friends of the Library Lecture


The Board of Trustees of the American Academy in Rome
William B. Hart, Chairman of the Board
Adele Chatfield-Taylor, FAAR-84, President
and The Friends of the Library

invite you to:

The Patricia H. Labalme Friends of the Library Lecture
Paris, Menelaos and Helen: Reflections of the Saga in Etruscan Mirrors
by Helen Nagy, FAAR'86, RAAR'09
Professor Emerita of Art History at the University of Puget Sound

17 November 2009 at 6:00pm
7 East 60 Street, New York, NY 10022

Proseco will be served.

RSVP to Christiana Killian
FOL@aarome.org or 212.751.7200, ext. 46

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October 21, 2009

Announcing the Norton-Van Buren Seminar Room

Photography: Matthew Monteith, FAAR'09

The American Academy in Rome is pleased and honored to announce the naming of the Norton - Van Buren Seminar Room, the culmination of the long-held dream to preserve and catalogue the Academy's Archaeological Study Collection, and make this important resource more accessible to Fellows, students in the Academy's summer programs, as well as to other researchers. We are grateful to Helen (Ili) Nagy, FAAR'86, RAAR'09, Eric Lindgren and the Lindgren Foundation for their longstanding dedication to this collection and for their generous support for this project.

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October 14, 2009

Rome Prize Application Deadline is November 1st

The competition deadline for the 2009-10 Rome Prize is 1 November 2009 with an extended deadline of 15 November 2009 for an additional fee.

Each year, the coveted Rome Prize is awarded to thirty emerging artists and scholars in the early or middle stages of their careers who represent the highest standard of excellence in the arts and humanities. Prize recipients are invited to Rome for six months or eleven months to immerse themselves in the Academy community where they will enjoy a once in a lifetime opportunity to expand their own professional, artistic, or scholarly pursuits, drawing on their colleagues' erudition and experience and on the inestimable resources that Italy, Europe, the Mediterranean, and the Academy have to offer.

Fellows are chosen from the following disciplines:

Architecture
Design
Historic Preservation and Conservation
Landscape Architecture
Literature (awarded only by nomination)
Musical Composition
Visual Arts
Ancient Studies
Medieval Studies
Renaissance and Early Modern Studies
Modern Italian Studies

To apply

October 13, 2009

Arman Schwartz Receives the Royal Musical Association’s Roche Prize

The Royal Musical Association has awarded Arman Schwartz, FAAR’07, the Jerome Roche Prize for his article titled “Rough Music: Tosca and Verismo Reconsidered.” The prize is awarded annually by the RMA for a distinguished article by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career.

According to Arman, the life of his essay began as his “shop talk” during his fellowship at the Academy. It evolved into an article that the prize jury described as “a well-structured argument linking text and context and including detailed and insightful discussion of Tosca’s music as well as a sophisticated discussion of the opera's ambivalent appeal and the links to wider twentieth-century issues.

Read Arman's essay (PDF)

October 2, 2009

A Reminder: October Deadlines for Two AAR Positions

The American Academy in Rome invites qualified individuals to apply for the positions of Andrew Heiskell Arts Director and Classical Summer School Director. The application deadlines are October 13 and October 26, respectively. Please spread the word and/or consider nominating qualified candidates for the two positions. The Academy welcomes nominations, self-nominations, and applications from all qualified persons.

View full description for Arts Directorship (PDF)
View full description for Classical Summer School Directorship (PDF)

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Archive

September 2009
August 2009
May 2009
April 2009
Blog
February 8, 2010

At the Academy in Rome, Dutch artist Roma Pas exhibits “Strangely Great” through 25 February


AAR Affiliated Fellow Roma Pas (left) with Gordon Powell FAAR’88 at the “Strangely Great” exhibition opening 5 February

“Over the library door of the American Academy I found this text saying: THE THINGS THAT / MUST BE ARE SO / STRANGELY GREAT.” And with this, Roma Pas introduces her exhibition of recent, untitled works—a product of her first five months at the AAR as Royal Dutch Institute Affiliated Fellow.

“The works that I’m showing at the galleries”, Pas explains in her statement for the show, “are the results of an artist-in-residence period. They react to features like inscription, ornament, ruin, archeology, wisdom and greatness and attempt to connect to the contemporary media landscape.”

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February 8, 2010

Updating the Academy: the Latest Number of the SOF News


SOF News cover from “Valentino a Roma: 45 Years of Style,” a show at Rome’s Ara Pacis

“This issue of the SOF News”, writes newsletter Editor James L. Bodnar (FAAR’80), “has, in the tradition of Janus, a group of articles that look to both the past and the future.” Members of the Academy’s Society of Fellows will already have received the fall 2009 issue in their mailboxes; and everyone can download a digital copy of this semiannual publication here.

In this number of the SOF News, the article Soft Infrastructure, by Guy J. P. Nordenson (RAAR’09) and Catherine Seavitt Nordenson (FAAR’98), “looks at the historic role of flooding in Rome and the potential for future flood control in New York”. Richard Meier’s Ara Pacis—A Drive-By Recollection, by Michael Gruber (FAAR’96) “recalls the initial design process for the Ara Pacis Museum and considers the reactions to the completed building.” James Bodnar interviews AAR Andrew Heiskell Arts Director Martin Brody (RAAR’02), and poet Sarah Arvio (FAAR’04) in Master and Torso offers recent work that arose out of her Lectureship at Princeton’s Lewis Center for the Arts.

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January 23, 2010

In Rome, the AAR Pays Homage to Composers Luigi Nono, Elliott Carter

Carter concert at the Villa Aurelia 21 January: Parco della Musica Contemporanea Ensemble

It’s hard to believe it all happened in the space of just over 25 hours. A 20 January concert on Viale Trinità dei Monti at the French Academy, co-sponsored by the AAR, in homage to composer Luigi Nono (1924-1990). The next evening, on the Gianicolo at the American Academy, a lecture and the opening of an exhibition on Nono’s opera Intolleranza 1960. And a concert at the AAR’s Villa Aurelia in homage to 101 year old Elliott Carter (FAAR’53, RAAR’63, ’69, ‘80), including the European premieres of his Tintinnabulation and Figment V for percussion ensemble.

The programs highlighted two giants of contemporary music, and underlined certain trans-Atlantic symmetries in their careers. As is well recognized, Italian composer “Luigi Nono created some of the most exploratory, disturbing, and influential music of the 20th century”, explains AAR Heiskell Arts Director Martin Brody (RAAR’02). Plus “Nono’s life as an avant-garde activist artist brought him into contact with an astonishing variety of collaborations and influences.”

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January 19, 2010

In Rome, AAR Resident Calvin Tsao Discusses an Eclectic, Global Sensibility of Design and Architecture

From left, at the Villa Aurelia, AAR Resident Calvin Tsao, AAR President Adele Chatfield-Taylor, AAR Director Carmela Franklin. Photo: Annie Schlechter

Precisely how is the domain of architecture and design evolving in a polyglottal world? Calvin Tsao FAIA offered one powerful case study Tuesday 12 January in a lively public lecture at the Academy’s Villa Aurelia. Tsao is Principal at TsAO & McKOWN Architects in New York,  and also currently serves as President of the Architectural League of New York.

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January 12, 2010

In Anaheim, Academy’s Society of Fellows gathers at annual meeting of classicists, archaeologists

When the Academy’s alums last week kicked off the new decade with a poolside party in Anaheim California, somehow the distance to Rome seemed a little bit less than the actual 10200 kilometers. The occasion? The 111th Joint Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America and the American Philological Association. Over 70 alumni/ae, affiliates, and friends of the Academy attended the Thursday 7 January reception—a blend of Mediterranean and So Cal flavors, complete with mariachi band.

Organizing the event for the American Academy in Rome and its Society of Fellows were SOF Council members Michael Gruber FAAR’96, who also delivered the Los Angeles group of the SOF, and Joanne Spurza FAAR’88. The reception immediately followed the annual business meeting of the Advisory Council of the School of Classical Studies of the AAR, and that of the Classical Society of the American Academy in Rome.

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December 28, 2009

How Sweet It Is: A Gingerbread McKim, Mead & White AAR Building is Constructed in Rome

The American Academy in Rome building on the Gianicolo hill (1912-1914) is one of just a handful of  structures outside of the United States designed by the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White—by any reckoning the most prominent designers of the Gilded Age. As it happens, firm partner Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909) was among the founders of the Academy and President of the AAR when the building was first conceived. The building has a clear Renaissance inspiration (which it shares with the MM&W north and south wings of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC), with a five-bay facade, a ‘piano nobile’, and an interior courtyard with a Paul Manship (FAAR’12) fountain in its center. It also contains most of the living and working quarters for the Rome Prize Fellows, the Library, a gallery and administrative offices, plus public rooms for many of the Academy’s events.

And now, thanks to the efforts of current Fellows Kiel Moe, Jon Calame, and a host of helping hands, the Academy’s MM&W building has been realized for the 2009 holiday season in gingerbread and gumdrops. It’s something approaching 1:100 scale, carefully constructed from the original plans. The universal reaction so far from Academy alums and friends: “Don’t eat it!”. Here’s a photo essay on how this sugary architectural wonder—all dedicated to the Academy’s Kitchen staff—came to be. Photo thanks throughout: Jon Calame and Pamela Keech (FAAR’82).

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December 21, 2009

At the Academy in Rome, Opening Up Off-Limits Italy

AAR Fellow Matthew Bronski investigates burial niches (columbaria) underground in Rome’s Doria Pamphili park. Photo: Diana Mellon

AAR Arts and Humanities Intern Diana Mellon writes:

In his first few months at the Academy, current Fellow Matthew Bronski has already gained access to scaffolding on the colonnade of St. Peter’s, consolidation works on the Palazzo Braschi, and restricted areas in Herculaneum. “If one is to do this type of work, binoculars just don’t suffice,” he says. “You really have to be hands-on. You have to be right there, have your face in the materials and be able to even poke and prod a little bit and see what’s happening.” Matthew’s historic preservation project aims to understand the physical strengths and weaknesses of ageing buildings of all time periods through up-close observation. “That’s really one of the most essential parts of my project. It’s really, in my case, the primary research,” he says.

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December 15, 2009

In Rome, ‘Performing Voices’ and the Week that Followed

At the Academy’s Villa Aurelia, soprano Anna Caterina Antonacci and pianist Donald Sulzen receive a standing ovation from “Performing Voices” participants

It’s been quite a month at the American Academy in Rome—and it’s not much more than half over. Following hard on the heels of the Academy’s much-praised 2 December Cabaret in NYC, came a blockbuster conference in Rome, co-sponsored by the AAR and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin. Entitled “Performing Voices: Between Embodiment and Mediation”, this ambitious conference ran for three days (Friday 4 December-Sunday 6 December) at the Academy’s Villa Aurelia. Co-facilitating were Martin Brody (RAAR’02), Heiskell Arts Director at the AAR, and Julia Kursell and Andreas Mayer, Research Scholars at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science.

The aim of the conference was to foster a new understanding of the paradox of the singing voice, by bringing together singers, scientists, historians, philosophers, and musicologists. Carmela Vircillo Franklin (FAAR’85, RAAR’02), AAR Director, and Hans-Jörg Rheinberger, Director of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, jointly introduced the proceedings. A thrilling centerpiece of the conference was a recital at the Villa Aurelia, Echi della Belle Époque, by soprano Anna Caterina Antonacci and pianist Donald Sulzen.

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December 7, 2009

In Rome, ‘Flying Soles’ Showcases the Work of NY Designer Lincoln Brown

In Rome, the American Academy unveils this week a long-anticipated  exhibition of the work of fashion designer Lincoln Brown, curated by Ester Coen and Lexi Eberspacher.

 The show opens Thursday 10 December from 18.00 to 21.00, and remains on view by appointment through 14 January 2010. Founder of Lincoln’s NY, Lincoln Brown is a noted designer of shoes and accessories. His work has won over style-conscious celebrities such as the artist Enzo Cucchi, the designer Anna Sui, the actress Halle Berry, and the musician Mary J. Blige—to name just a few.

The exhibition “Flying Soles” features Lincoln’s NY’s one-of-a-kind, dazzling and hand-made shoes.  

Plus the event aims to cross over the threshold of the American Academy, and reach into the center of Rome. See a narrated slideshow of the exhibit here.

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November 25, 2009

Looking back, a week of November events at the American Academy in Rome

As the American Academy prepares for its Giorno del Ringraziamento (=Thanksgiving) festivities, there’s something to be said for taking stock—if only of events of the days leading up to the holiday.

Those events included two shop talks by current Fellows (filmmaker Abigail Child, typographer Russell Maret), a commemoration of the life of Roman historian Lily Ross Taylor (FAAR’18) by Mellon Professor Corey Brennan, a moonlit “walk and talk” for members of the Academy community along the Tiber (with contributions by Fellows Robert Hammond and Kiel Moe), a fireside chat by Rachel Donadio (Rome Bureau Chief for The New York Times),  a marathon of contemporary music at the Villa Aurelia under the auspices of the Nuova Consonanza artistic circle (with performances by Fellows Lisa Bielawa and Don Byron), and a visit by the newly appointed US Ambassador to the Italian Republic and San Marino, David H. Thorne. All that was over eight—not atypical—days in all. A few glimpses of that week can be found below…

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November 9, 2009

A happy 90th birthday to architectural historian and AAR Trustee Emeritus James S. Ackerman (FAAR’52, RAAR’65, ‘70, ‘75, ‘80)

James Ackerman at the Villa Lante (Rome), October 2009

It can be confidently stated that the leading historian of Renaissance architecture and Italian Renaissance architectural theory is James Sloss Ackerman (FAAR’52, RAAR’65, ‘70, ‘75, ‘80), Trustee of the American Academy in Rome 1967-1984, and now Trustee Emeritus. As it happens, James Ackerman and his wife, artist and professor Jill Slosburg-Ackerman, are spending five weeks at the AAR this fall. During that time, he has delivered a lecture on “Michelangelo, Palladio and Public Magnificence” to a capacity audience in the Academy lecture room, and has participated in a wide range of less formal walks and talks in Rome. Plus, on 8 November, he celebrated his 90th birthday at the Academy.

James Ackerman was educated at Yale; his graduate work was at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, completing his degrees (MA 1947, PhD 1952) following World War II service in the US Army in Italy. From 1949 through 1952, he was a Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. Ackerman taught at Berkeley and from 1960 at Harvard as Arthur Kingsley Porter Professor of Fine Arts until his retirement in 1990. In an in-depth interview, AAR Arts and Humanities Intern Diana Mellon asks James Ackerman about his formative experiences in Italy, his fellowship years at the AAR, his perceptions of changes at the American Academy over the decades, and of larger developments in the field of architectural history. And following the interview is appended Ackerman’s own current “must see” list for Rome and Venice.

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Archive

October 2009
October 31, 2009

Three Exhibitions and a Monograph for Richard Barnes FAAR’06

AnimalLogicFrom the cover of Richard Barnes’ new book (Princeton Architectural Press, 2009)

The work of New York-based photographer Richard Barnes, FAAR’06, is the subject of three exhibitions and a new monograph.

The University of Michigan Art Museum in Ann Arbor has just opened a Barnes solo show titled (Un)natural History: The Museum Unveiled. And an exhibition titled Past Perfect/Future Tense features all new work and is located at the Institute for the Humanities at the University of Michigan where Richard Barnes is the 2009 Sidman Fellow for the Arts. Included in this show is a full scale cast of a primitive whale species hung from the ceiling of the gallery.

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October 23, 2009

At the AAR: Celebrating Nancy A. Winter, Honoring Antonio Martina

Symbols2On Tuesday 20 October 2009 the American Academy in Rome celebrated the publication of Symbols of Wealth and Power: Architectural Terracotta Decoration in Etruria and Central Italy, 640-510 B.C. by Nancy A. Winter. It is the latest installment, the 9th, in the Supplements to the Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, published by the University of Michigan Press, and the most significant contribution to Etruscan architectural history in the last 70 years.

Nancy Winter presented on her new monumental book—some 728 pages—with Ingrid E.M. Edlund-Berry (FAAR’84) of the University of Texas at Austin as commentator. The audience included many of the leading ancient terracotta experts in the world, gathered in Rome for the conference Deliciae Fictiles IV at the Dutch Academy, as well as members of the AAR community. 

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October 17, 2009

At the AAR Gallery, Meteor Stream: Recital in Four Dominions, by Terry Adkins After John Brown

AdkinsInvite
Terry Adkins, Professor of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania, is the current Jesse Howard, Jr./Jacob H. Lazarus-Metropolitan Museum of Art Rome Prize Fellow in Visual Arts at the American Academy in Rome. On Friday 16 October 2009 his show Meteor Stream: Recital in Four Dominions opened in the Gallery of the American Academy, to a large and responsive audience from the AAR and the Roman public.

Meteor Stream is the latest incarnation of Terry Adkins’ ongoing cycle of site-inspired recitals on the abolitionist John Brown that began in 1999 at the John Brown House and sheep farm in Akron, Ohio. Commemorating the 150th anniversary of his Harper’s Ferry, Virginia campaign, the opening of Meteor Stream coincided with the inception of Brown’s 16 October 1859 raid on a U.S. armory to his execution by hanging on that December 2nd at Charlestown.

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October 15, 2009

Book launch at the AAR: Oretta Zanini De Vita’s Encyclopedia of Pasta

966_AAR_PastyParty_003Credit: Annie Schlechter

An audience of more than one hundred packed the American Academy in Rome on Saturday morning 10 October 2009 for the launch of the English translation of Oretta Zanini De Vita’s Encyclopedia of Pasta (2009). The book is a carefully researched compendium of historical and geographical information on this staple of the Italian diet, and is the latest installment in the California Studies in Food and Culture series of the University of California Press.

Rachel Donadio in the 14 October 2009 New York Times profiled Zanini De Vita’s Encyclopedia, terming it “a social history disguised as a food book”.  The New York Times article also highlighted the warm reception Oretta Zanini De Vita has received at the Academy. “’I think of her as a kind of Julia Child,’ said Mona Talbott, the executive chef at the American Academy in Rome and coordinator of its Rome Sustainable Food Project, founded by Alice Waters. ‘Julia Child demystified French food. Oretta demystifies pasta.’” You can read eyewitness accounts of the 10 October AAR event by current Fellow Matthew Bronski here (”Week Five”) and by Fellow Traveler (and food expert) Amy Campion here.

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October 12, 2009

From the town of Ciciliano in Lazio, a notable tribute to Lily Ross Taylor FAAR’18

CicLibLRTPortrait bust of Lily Ross Taylor in the AAR Library

This 18 November marks the 40th anniversary of the death of Lily Ross Taylor (1886-1969) FAAR’18, who is widely and justifiably regarded as one of the foremost Romanists that North America has produced. During her career at Vassar and (especially) Bryn Mawr, Taylor produced six books—each of unusual importance—some seventy articles and almost sixty reviews.  Taylor also was the first woman to hold a Rome Prize in the united American Academy in Rome, and served as Professor-in-Charge at the AAR during two pivotal eras (1934-1935, and 1951-1955).

In one of her essays that appeared in Memoirs of the American Academy of Rome, Taylor surveyed the vexed problem of the location of the ancient municipality of ancient Trebula Suffenas, before definitively placing its location in the territory of modern Ciciliano, 13 km east of Tivoli in Lazio. Here Taylor also traced the whole story of the town’s Plautii Silvani, a powerful family that formed part of the circle of the emperor Augustus and his wife Livia. This past weekend a cultural association from the town of Ciciliano “Committee Article 9” paid tribute to Lily Ross Taylor and her 1954 article “Trebula Suffenas and the Plautii Silvani” by naming a piazza and adjoining garden in her honor, complete with a memorial stele.CicMonument

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October 9, 2009

Celebrating art historian Stephanie Leone FAAR’00 at the Palazzo Pamphilj in Piazza Navona

LeoneBook

The magnificent Galleria Cortona of the Brazilian Embassy in Rome’s Piazza Navona was the setting Thursday 8 October for a presentation and panel discussion of the recent book of Stephanie Leone FAAR’00, The Palazzo Pamphili in Piazza Navona:  Constructing Identity in Early Modern Rome (Harvey Miller/ Brepols, 2008).

Stephanie Leone, a 2001 Ph.D. in Art History from Rutgers University, is associate professor in the Fine Arts department of Boston College. Aurimar Jacobino de Barros Nunes, Primo Segretario at the Embassy of Brazil in Rome, organized the event in collaboration with Anne Coulson from the Programs Department of the American Academy in Rome.

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October 8, 2009

A Cabaret for the Academy, Wednesday 2 December 09 in NYC

CABARETbig+borderfinal

Get ready for a great party: the American Academy in Rome Cabaret, the evening of Wednesday 2 December 2009, in New York City.

Performers include Laurie Anderson, RAAR’06, Derek Bermel, FAAR’02, Molissa Fenley, FAAR’08…and more. The venue is hard to beat: the Angel Orensanz Foundation at 172 Norfolk Street, in New York’s Lower East Side.  It’s an ex-synagogue turned downtown event space.

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September 2009
September 17, 2009

An interview with photographer Tod Papageorge RAAR’09

PapageorgeTod Papageorge. Credit: Deborah Flomenhaft

Tod Papageorge is the Walker Evans Professor of Photography and Director of Graduate Studies in Photography at the Yale School of Art. The Features section of the Academy website has posted eight compelling photographs from his work this summer in Rome (”In the Street, June 15-July 27″). Recently AAR Mellon Professor Corey Brennan caught up with Papageorge to ask him about his six weeks at the Academy this summer as the Photographer in Residence, and about some aspects of his approach to photography in general.

You are well-known as a black-and-white photographer of people in public spaces. For your Rome photographs, you are using a digital camera (a Leica M8.2) for the first time, and shooting in color. How much of a departure are your Rome images from your work to date?

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September 8, 2009

For painter Doug Argue FAAR’98, the 2009 London International Creative Competition first prize

ArgueScaffold

“My work is meant to be physically experienced”, says San Francisco based artist Doug Argue FAAR’98. Still, a selection of images of Argue’s meticulous, large-scale paintings impressed the jurors of the London International Creative Competition (LICC) so much that they awarded the artist first prize in its 2009 contest. The announcement was made in a ceremony at the Soho Theatre on London’s Dean Street the evening of 6 September.

Now in its fourth year, the LICC “was formed to provide an open platform and an even playing field for artists from all walks of life.” The LICC’s mission statement underlines its breadth and scale: “the competition is open to artists from around the world and is judged solely on the artwork.” It’s a massive enterprise: this year saw entries from over 5000 artists from more than five dozen countries, yielding fifteen finalists. Argue’s work, as well as that of the other finalists, will also be showcased during the 2009 Lucie Awards for photography at New York’s Alice Tully Hall on 19 October.

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August 2009
August 15, 2009

Looking back at the AAR’s summer 2009: the Gabii Project

GabiiViscontiAn early look at Gabii’s Temple of Juno, from E. Q. Visconti, Monumenti gabini (1835)

The holiday of Ferragosto (15 August) has now come and gone, so perhaps it’s not too early to start taking stock of this past summer at and around the American Academy in Rome. Let’s start 12 miles east of the city—with the field program of the Gabii Project, an unusually promising new major archaeological campaign under the patrocinio of the AAR. The Academy in recent years has extended this “patronage” status to about a dozen significant Roman archaeological excavations, at sites that range from the Forum and Palatine to points as far afield as the island of Jerba in Tunisia. But the Gabii Project is easily the largest of these AAR-affiliated digs.

The Gabii Project is an international, multi-institution initiative under the direction of Professor Nicola Terrenato of the University of Michigan. The Project’s goal is the excavation, study, interpretation, and analysis of Gabii, an ancient city-state in Latium that had a significant cultural influence on Rome, especially in the sphere of religion. It now emerges—thanks specifically to the work of the Project—that Gabii also offers a surprisingly early example for Italy of regular, orthogonal town planning. The details of this important discovery for ancient urbanism are scheduled for publication in the October 2009 issue of the American Journal of Archaeology. See also the end of this post for a video interview on the site of Gabii with Nicola Terrenato, where he explains some of the more significant attributes of the ancient city.

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July 2009
July 30, 2009

‘Konzert zur Einweihung’: Yotam Haber FAAR’08 composes for architect Peter Zumthor RAAR’08

IMG_0586Yotam Haber and Peter Zumthor at Leis. Credit (all photographs): Luca Nostri

Peter Zumthor RAAR’08—and 2009 Pritzker Architecture Prize winner—recently designed and built a new house for his wife Annalisa in Leis, a tiny five family settlement high up in the mountains above the town of Vals in Switzerland. He celebrated the event by commissioning two pieces of music from Yotam Haber FAAR ’08, which were perfomed in an intimate concert in Leis on 21 June. Roberto Caracciolo, Visual Arts Liaison to the American Academy in Rome, was there, as was incoming Italian Fellow in the Arts, Luca Nostri, who photographed the occasion. Roberto Caracciolo writes:

“The concert took place in Leis’ St. Jakob Kapelle, a very small and charming church, decorated with simple frescoes. Before the music started Annalisa Zumthor introduced and thanked the audience which was a unique way of welcoming all present.”

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July 28, 2009

New memoir ‘Goat Song’ wins instant accolades for writer Brad Kessler FAAR’09

BradHannahCredit: Dona Ann McAdams

It’s been out only a month, but Brad Kessler’s new memoir is set to go into a second printing. Quite an impressive achievement for any author—and even more striking since Kessler’s book is essentially an elegy to goats.

This past year Brad Kessler FAAR’09 has been the recipient of the John Guare Writer’s Fund Rome Prize, a gift of Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman. It was at the American Academy that he completed Goat Song: A Seasonal Life, a Short History of Herding, and the Art of Making Cheese (Scribner). He also is the author of the novel Birds in Fall (Scribner), winner of the 2007 Dayton Literary Peace Prize. Goat Song, writes Kessler, is “a story about what it’s like to live with animals who directly feed you. I tell of cheese and culture and agriculture, but also of the rediscovery of a pastoral life.”

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July 6, 2009

For the latest from the AAR and its alums, Spring 2009 SOF News now online

The odd thing is that it feels even quicker than a semiannual. Just a few short months ago—or at least it seemed that way—the Winter 2008/9 edition of the Society of Fellows News rolled off the presses and into our mailboxes. And at the same time a downloadable .pdf version on the SOF webpage joined seven year’s worth of archived back issues.

And then last month the latest number popped up, again in large format and blazing full color. You can read the Spring 2009 SOF News here in .pdf format. On the cover (and inside): Stephen Harby FAAR’00 shares an evocative portfolio of sketches from his journey to some of the less well known places of Rajasthan in northern India.

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June 2009
June 13, 2009

From LIFE archives, more unpublished glimpses of 1957 American Academy in Rome

AAR1957EllisonNew view of writer Ralph Ellison FAAR’57, at the Academy’s Casa Rustica. Credit: James Whitmore/LIFE

Last November, Google Inc. began hosting an online archive of LIFE magazine’s photographs. Many images in this archive—there are reportedly some 10 million in all—never saw print publication. It seems Google is now posting these photos a few million at a time. But many carry no caption, or even date. Plus typos are rampant. So a bit of detective work is often necessary to find what you want and then sort out what you are seeing.

In December the Society of Fellows Weblog reported on the first batch of images that the LIFE/Google partnership produced. That included about 125 largely unpublished photos of the American Academy in Rome in 1947, 1949, and 1957. Now half a year later, a few hundred new photos from the May 1957 LIFE photoshoot have cropped up via Google Images. You can see the full set here (Google search phrase: “American Academy in Home”!).

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June 5, 2009

In Buenos Aires ceremony, architect Peter Zumthor RAAR’08 receives 2009 Pritzker Architecture Prize

Peter Zumthor RAAR’08. Credit: Gary Ebner

Swiss architect Peter Zumthor RAAR’08 received this year’s prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize at a ceremony last Friday (29 May) in Argentina at the Legislative Palace of the City of Buenos Aires.

Zumthor, aged 66, received a $100,000 grant and a bronze medallion for what is widely considered as the “Nobel Prize of architecture”. The Pritzker Prize was established in 1979 by the Pritzker family, based in Chicago, to honor a living architect whose works produce “consistent and significant contributions to humanity.”

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June 5, 2009

At Brooklyn Museum, ‘Harriet Hosmer, Lost and Found’, an exhibition of watercolors by Patricia Cronin FAAR’07

Patricia Cronin, The Sleeping Faun by Harriet Hosmer, 1865 (2006)

A group of twenty-eight watercolors by Brooklyn-based conceptual artist Patricia Cronin FAAR’07, inspired by the work of nineteenth-century sculptor Harriet Hosmer (1830-1908), will be on view in the Sackler Wing of the Brooklyn Museum from today (5 June 2009) through 24 January 2010.

In an article for Artnet, Charlie Fitch sketches out the basics of this ambitious and unusually memorable show, entitled Harriet Hosmer: Lost and Found.

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May 2009
May 28, 2009

Celebrating Pina Pasquantonio, for 25 extraordinary years of service on the staff of the AAR

Pina Pasquantonio. Credit: James Bodnar FAAR’80

In Rome, it’s the start of Trustees’ Week at the Academy. And one of the most important items on the AAR community’s agenda is to celebrate Pina Pasquantonio, who now marks her 25th year on the staff of the American Academy.

Pina, who holds the title of Assistant Director of Operations, has had a unique and extraordinary effect on the life of every Fellow and Resident since 1984.

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May 25, 2009

This spring, spotlight on AAR composers: Bermel, Carter, Currier, Makan, Norman, Rohde, Ueno

It’s been quite a season for American Academy in Rome Fellows in Musical Composition. Here are just three snapshots from the last few months…

On 11 March, the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton NJ) announced the appointment of composer and clarinetist Derek Bermel FAAR’02 as its Artist-in-Residence. His term begins on 1 July 2009.

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May 20, 2009

A new SOF President for 2009: painter Drew Beattie FAAR’95

Drew Beattie, in Cambridge MA, May 2009

The Council of the AAR Society of Fellows has elected painter Drew Beattie, FAAR’95 in Visual Arts, interim President of the Academy’s alumni organization for the remainder of 2009.

Beattie, who takes office 21 May, replaces T. Corey Brennan FAAR’88, who is stepping down to join the staff of the Academy this July as Mellon Professor-in-Charge for a three year term.

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May 14, 2009

A 2009 C.O.L.A. Visual Art Award (and Individual Artists Exhibit) for Maureen Selwood FAAR’03

Maureen Selwood. Credit: Monica Nouwens


The City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs has awarded its peer-reviewed 2009 City of Los Angeles (C.O.L.A.) Individual Artist Fellowships to fifteen exemplary mid-career artists.

Among them – one of nine in the visual arts – is Maureen Selwood FAAR’03.

Los Angeles is one of a handful of municipalities honoring local artists with grant contracts (in this case, worth $10,000) to create and present new works for the public.

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May 8, 2009

NYC photo exhibit explores architectural work at the pre-WWII American Academy in Rome

Piazza del Popolo and the Pincio Gardens, Rome. Aerial Perspective. Ernest F. Lewis FAAR’11

Now on display at the New York offices (7 East 60th Street) of the AAR: "An Exhibition of Architectural Drawings by the Fellows of the American Academy in Rome, 1910-1935".

The show is curated by Fikret K. Yegul, RAAR ’98 (Professor, History of Architecture/Classical Archaeology, University of California, Santa Barbara) and John Pinto, FAAR ’75, RAAR ’06 (The Howard Crosby Butler Professor of Architectural History, Princeton University).

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May 1, 2009

Poet Craig Arnold FAAR’06 missing on Japanese island during volcano hike

Craig Arnold FAAR’06 is currently missing on Kuchinoerabu-jima, a small island in the northern Ryukyu Islands of southern Japan, just west of Yakushima. For more than a week, teams searched on both land and from the air for this award-winning poet and University of Wyoming professor who failed to return from a hike to a volcano on Monday 27 April. Arnold was doing research for a poetry and essay book on volcanoes. Though the search now has been scaled down, a small US-based team was reported to be finding new clues on Wednesday 6 May.

For the details, and how you can help, the Poetry Foundation blog provides the fullest account. The Facebook group "Find Craig Arnold", the only site associated with Arnold’s family, has gathered over 3000 members since its launch, and provides up to the minute news of the rescue mission. Most recently (8 May) it reports "his trail indicates that after sustaining a leg injury, Craig fell from a very high and very dangerous cliff and there is virtually no possibility that Craig could have survived that fall."

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April 2009
April 30, 2009

AAR ‘ultime notizie’: for late April, a look at what the papers (and e-media) say

Don’t ask why it’s taken so long. But starting now on this Weblog’s sidebar, you can track breaking news about the American Academy in Rome and the members of its Society of Fellows via a Google News feed. (Look to the right and scroll down a bit.)


Of course, there will always be more than a few AAR items that escape Google’s automated news aggregator.

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April 23, 2009

Trustee Thom Mayne, Bruce Nauman RAAR’87, Jessye Norman receive AAR Centennial Medals at 15 April NYC Gala

Soprano Jessye Norman upon her award of the Centennial Medal of the American Academy in Rome

Cipriani 42nd Street, New York, 15 April 2009.

The American Academy in Rome, Adele Chatfield-Taylor, FAAR’84, President, and William B. Hart, Chairman of the Board, hosted the AAR’s annual Gala dinner. This year’s theme was "Celebrating the Arts".

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April 17, 2009

AAR Fellows, Residents for 2009/10 announced at Rome Prize Ceremony in New York

New York’s Metropolitan Club was the setting on 16 April for the announcement of the 2009/10 Fellows and Residents of the American Academy in Rome at the Arthur and Janet C. Ross Rome Prize Ceremony.

Lots to report – including the details of an electrifying performance at that event by the Cassatt String Quartet of pieces by Academy composers Andrew Norman FAAR’07, Ken Ueno FAAR’07 and Sebastian Currier FAAR’94.

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April 13, 2009

Remembering Dorothy Cullman (1918-2009), longtime Trustee and magnificent supporter of the American Academy in Rome

Trustees Chuck Close and Dorothy Cullman at the April 2001 AAR Benefit (Cipriani 42nd St.)

The Trustees, Fellows and staff of the American Academy in Rome mourn the loss of our dear longtime Trustee, Dorothy Cullman. She died peacefully on April 6 at home due to complications from a long illness.

Dorothy Cullman served as an extraordinarily engaged member of the Academy’s Board of Trustees from 1991 to 2004, and after that as a Trustee Emerita.

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April 10, 2009

On a National Day of Mourning in Italy for Abruzzo earthquake victims, ways to help

The terrain of L’Aquila in Abruzzo, from the N by NW as seen by Google Earth

Our Pina Pasquantonio (AAR Assistant Director for Operations, and abruzzese) writes from the American Academy in Rome:

"As many of you may already know the region of Abruzzo and, more specifically, the town of L’Aquila and its immediate surroundings were struck by a terrible earthquake on Monday. The death toll has risen above 280 and over 20,000 people are homeless. L’Aquila is a beautiful medieval town and most of its historic monuments have been very seriously damaged, if not destroyed. The end is not in sight yet as the tremors continue and people are spending nights outside of their homes in cars or in tents."

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March 2009
March 25, 2009

Academy Benefits for 2009: Looking back at Ojai, and ahead to April and May galas in New York, Rome

Scene from last year’s AAR April gala at Cipriani 42nd Street NYC

The centerpiece of the Academy’s events year comes Wednesday 15 April 2009 at Cipriani 42nd Street NYC, a benefit gala to celebrate the arts that will honor AAR Trustee and architect Thom Mayne, artist Bruce Nauman, and opera singer Jessye Norman.

Co-chairing the event are composer Robert Beaser FAAR’78, architect Wendy Evans Joseph FAAR’84, and visual artist Laurie Simmons RAAR’05. Click here for the Benefit Reply Card and schedule of (tax deductible) ticket prices. Proceeds from the Benefit support the ongoing programs of the American Academy in Rome.

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