Congratulations to SAH members Peyvand Firouzeh, Gül Kale, Emily Neumeier, and Sarah Selvidge who all were awarded Getty/ACLS Postdoctoral Fellowships. The Getty Foundation and the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) announced on April 23, 2018, the first 10 recipients of Getty/ACLS Postdoctoral Fellowships in the History of Art. The fellowships mark the first time the Foundation has supported postdoctoral grants since 2009. The new program is non-residential and builds on the Foundation’s earlier fellowship program by encouraging diverse, international perspectives. The program is administered by ACLS, a preeminent representative of American scholarship in the humanities and related social sciences.
Below are the 2018 Getty/ACLS Postdoctoral Fellows and their planned research topics:
Nadya Bair - The Decisive Network: Magnum Photos and the Postwar Image Market
Brooke Belisle - The Bigger Picture: A History and Theory of Expanded Views
Gianluca del Monaco - The Early Stages of the Illustration of the Decretum Gratiani
Peyvand Firouzeh - Constructing Legitimacy along Sea Routes: Things and Ideas between Fifteenth-Century Iran and Deccan India
Andrew James Hamilton - The Emperor's New Clothes: The Biography of a Royal Inca Tunic
Natilee Harren - Fluxus Forms: Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network
Gül Kale - Unfolding Text, Image, and Artifact: Theory, Poetics, and Ethics in Cafer Efendi’s Seventeenth-Century Book on Early Modern Ottoman Architecture
Emily Neumeier - Fortune and Triumph: The Architectural Transformation of the Ottoman Provinces in the Age of Revolutions
Sarah Selvidge - Modernism and Miracles: Housing in Post-Revolutionary Mexico
Christina Weyl - Living in Color: The Explosion of Color in American Printmaking, 1935-1965
The initial Foundation grant to ACLS of $2,350,000 over three years is supporting 10 postdoctoral fellows each year, including the fellows named above, who are selected by a distinguished committee of scholars. Each 12-month fellowship includes a $60,000 stipend and an additional $5,000 for travel and research. Awardees will convene at the Getty for a week-long residency upon completion of their fellowships, creating a community of scholars connected to one another. As with the Foundation’s earlier postdoctoral program, the fellowships encourage projects that make substantial and original contributions to the understanding of art and its history, an endeavor that now includes both technical and digital art history.
“We believe that research support is essential to maintain art history as a strong and vital discipline in the humanities,” said Deborah Marrow, director of the Getty Foundation. “The Getty Foundation’s partnership with ACLS is an opportunity to provide promising scholars the time and space they need to write, travel, and interact with collections and peers. We hope these fellows will become future leaders in art history.”
The Postdoctoral Fellowships were a flagship Getty Foundation program for 25 years. From 1984 to 2009, over 350 fellowships were awarded to scholars at the beginning of their careers. The program focused on broadening the definition of the visual arts and strengthening the connection between art history and other humanistic disciplines.
The new program allows for more cross-disciplinary research, new modes of interpretation, and projects that have an impact on the broader field of art history beyond the recipient’s specific sub-fields.
“This year’s awardees exemplify the new fellowship program’s commitment to advancing innovative research that not only broadens the understanding of art and its history, but enriches humanistic knowledge around the world,” said Pauline Yu, president of ACLS. “We look forward to another amazing and global pool of applicants next year.”
ACLS, a private, nonprofit federation of 75 national scholarly organizations, is widely recognized for its administration of fellowship programs, offering over $20 million in fellowships to support more than 350 scholars worldwide. These fellowships provide a range of opportunities for scholars in all fields of the humanities and at all career stages, from graduate students and distinguished professors to independent scholars.
More information on the recipients and their projects is available here.
More about the Getty/ACLS grant program can be found here.
Contact: Matthew Goldfeder, fellowships@acls.org