April 10, 2014 nine seventeen at the AAR Gallery Prabhavathi Meppayil’s first solo exhibition in Europe opened last Wednesday evening at the AAR Gallery with the artist in attendance. Read more
April 8, 2014 2014–15 Rome Prize Winners Announced The American Academy in Rome congratulates the winners of the 118th annual Rome Prize Competition. Read more
April 7, 2014 Max Page Observes How We Individually Wrestle with the Past Max Page is the winner of the Mark Hampton Rome Prize and a professor of architecture and history in the Department of Art, Architecture, and Art History at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Read more
April 3, 2014 Celebrating a Centennial: The Academy in Times of War On October 1, 1914, the doors of the McKim, Mead & White building opened solemnly onto a world at war. It was a war, they said, to end all wars, yet the institution would survive to see it end and another conflict begin. Read more
March 31, 2014 Peter Streckfus Works on Poetry Inspired by ‘Acqua Alta’ and the Bass Garden Peter Streckfus is the winner of the Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize, a gift of the Drue Heinz Trust/American Academy of Arts and Letters, and an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at George Mason University. Read more
March 24, 2014 Celebrating a Centennial: Charles Follen McKim and the Architecture of the Academy Since opening on October 1, 1914, the McKim, Mead and White building has been a crucible for artistic and humanistic innovation. Read more
March 20, 2014 Jessica Nowlin Examines Funerary Sites in Central Italy During the 8th and 7th Centuries BCE Jessica Nowlin is the winner of the Frank Brown/Samuel H. Kress Foundation/Helen M. Woodruff Fellowship of the Archaeological Institute of America Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize in Ancient Studies and a Ph.D. candidate at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University. Read more
March 20, 2014 Thomas Kelley Vows to Focus Solely on Drawing in Rome Thomas Kelley is the winner of the James R. Lamantia, Jr. Rome Prize in Architecture and a Visiting Assistant Professor at the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a Partner at Norman Kelley, LLC, in Chicago, IL and New York, NY. Read more
March 11, 2014 Jerome Lecturer Aldo Schiavone Traces Ancient and Modern Equality This year’s Jerome Lectures were delivered by eminent historian of Roman law and Italian culture Aldo Schiavone of the Scuola Normale Superiore, who spoke on the notion of equality as it emerged within ancient Greco-Roman models and evolved within modern systems of governance. Read more
March 7, 2014 Sheramy Bundrick is Focused on the Dynamics of Trade and Etruscan Customers of Athenian Vases Sheramy D. Bundrick is the winner of the American Academy in Rome Post-Doctoral Rome Prize in Ancient Studies and an Associate Professor of Art History at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg. Read more
February 27, 2014 New Discoveries at the Mausoleum of Augustus, Circus Maximus and Aqua Claudia Last Wednesday the Academy welcomed archaeologists from the Sovrintendenza Capitolina ai Beni Culturali to discuss recent research at the Mausoleum of Augustus, Circus Maximus and Aqua Claudia. Read more
February 21, 2014 Fingertips Dance: the Scharoun Ensemble Berlin Season Six Three magnificent concerts by the Scharoun Ensemble last weekend at the Villa Aurelia featured music by eight composers and covered over two hundred years of musical evolution. Read more
February 18, 2014 Mari Yoko Hara Discovers Rome Through the Renaissance Painter-Architect Baldassarre Peruzzi Mari Yoko Hara is the winner of the Samuel H. Kress Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies and a Ph.D candidate in the McIntire Department of Art at the University of Virginia. Read more
February 18, 2014 Catie Newell Tests Her Methods of Research and Production in the Darkness of Rome Catie Newell is the winner of the Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Rome Prize in Architecture, an Assistant Professor of Architecture at Taubman College at the University of Michigan and a Principal at *Alibi Studio in Detroit, Michigan. Read more
February 13, 2014 Cinque Mostre: Time and Again Last Thursday the American Academy in Rome inaugurated its 2014 edition of Cinque Mostre, five individual exhibitions in discrete locations of the McKim, Mead & White building, grouped under the collective title Time & Again. Read more
February 11, 2014 Catherine Chin Focuses on How Late Antique Christian Writers Consider the Past and Future Catherine M. Chin is the ACLS/Frederick Burkhardt Residential Fellow in Ancient Studies and an Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of California in Davis. Read more
February 10, 2014 Maya Maskarinec Considers How Christian Sanctity Transformed Early Medieval Rome Maya Maskarinec is the winner of the Phyllis G. Gordan Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize in Medieval Studies and a Ph.D candidate in the Department of History at the University of California in Los Angeles. Read more
February 6, 2014 Celebrating the Centennial: Finding the Janus View This year marks a century of the American Academy’s presence on Rome’s Janiculum Hill and by now it gives an impression of organic belonging here. Read more
February 6, 2014 Launching the Centenary from the Capitoline with Ignazio Marino, Mayor of Rome Last Tuesday the American Academy in Rome launched a centenary year from the Sala della Protomoteca on the Campidoglio with an event to commemorate the past hundred years of collaboration between the American Academy and Roma Capitale. Read more
February 3, 2014 Stephanie Frampton Studies Authors and Inscription in Ancient Rome Stephanie Frampton is the winner of the Andrew Heiskell Post-Doctoral Rome Prize in Ancient Studies and an assistant professor of classical literature in the Department of Literature at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Read more