Archive | May, 2013
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To the Class of 2013

24 May

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‘Ink and Image’ publishes its Fifth Issue

23 May

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Ink and Image, New York University’s journal of undergraduate research in the history of art, architecture, and urban design, published its fifth issue this month.

The journal’s student editors for the 2012-13 academic year were Art History majors Rachel High, Thor Shannon, and Nora Boyd, all class of 2013; Boyd is also an Urban Design and Architecture Studies minor.  The cover was designed by Suzy Shaheen, Art History ’10.  Once again, Professor Carol Krinsky provided invaluable assistance as faculty advisor.  Six articles, all by undergraduates studying at NYU, appear in the fifth issue.  The authors and their essays are as follows:

–Kaylee Alexander (Art History ’13), “Blue Hole, Flood Waters, Little Miami River:  The Aesthetics of Abolitionism and the Underground Railroad.”

–Vivian Chen (Art History ’13), “The Elgin Loot:  National Treasures and Cultural Properties from Greece and China.”

— Zachary Fine (Gallatin ’15), “Lucia Freud’s Naked Girl with Egg: A Meditation on Temporality.”

— Anna van Niekerk (Art History/Politics ’14), “Failure to Integrate: 41 Cooper Square, New York, Thom Mayne and Morphosis.”

— James Walsh (Urban Design and Architecture Studies ’13), “Selling a Community: Shopping Centers and the Suburbs.”

— Karen Zabarsky (Urban Design and Architecture Studies ’13), “Design Intent in the Preservation of Modern Architecture: The Aluminaire House.”

Ink and Image was founded in 2009 by department alumni Malcolm St. Clair ’09 and Alexis Wang ’09 with the goal of expanding the community of scholars at NYU by publishing original undergraduate research in the history and theory of art and architecture.  St. Clair and Wang served as executive editors of the inaugural issue, while Adrian Marshall ’10 served as associate editor and Professor Kenneth Silver as faculty advisor.  The first issue featured articles by Art History majors Chase Booker, Alexander Kauffman, Natalie Dûpecher, and Michael DeNiro.  Marshall and Kauffman edited Issue 2, which included articles by Alex Govenar, Anne Feng, and Hannah Green, all Art History majors or minors.  Issue 3, edited by Art History majors Sofia Chirico ’11 and Mia Laufer ’11, and John Kwiatkowski, Gallatin ’11, featured articles by Lindsey Berfond, Whitney Theis, Christopher Purpura, and Sam Siegel and Peter Spalding, all Art History or Urban Design majors (see our May 27th, 2011 post).  Art History majors Alexander Ciesielski ’12, James Newhouse ’12, and Hillary Pearson ’12 served as editors of Issue 4, which featured articles by Kaylee Alexander (a two-time Ink and Image author), Renny Grinshpan, Alicia Caticha, Julia Gage, and Nick Kazmierski – all Art History or Urban Design majors – as well as Eun Jin Kang, a Comparative Literature/Cinema Studies major, and Dina Münzfeld, an international exchange student from the Humboldt University of Berlin (see our May 7th, 2012 blogpost).

The articles published in each issue of Ink and Image develop out of term papers and other research conducted by students in advanced Art History and Urban Design courses, independent studies, and senior honors theses.

College of Arts & Science Dean Matthew Santirocco and Dean Sally Sanderlin provided crucial support toward the launch of Ink and Image, which continues to benefit from the support of the current CAS Dean, Gabrielle Starr, the CAS administration, and the CAS Student Council.   Ink and Image is distributed to the New York Public Library, the Library of Congress, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Getty Research Institute, as well as Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland, and Technical University in Dresden, Germany.

Kathryn A. Smith

The Fine Arts Society: ring out the old board, ring in the new!

20 May

Great thanks to this year’s terrific Fine Arts Society executive board — co-presidents Olivia Zhang and Riad Kherdeen, treasurer Valerie Itteilag, secretary Nora Gorman, PR officer Vivian Chen, and board member Emily Yang — for putting together a wonderful program of events for the 2012-13 academic year (see our April 17th, 2013 blogpost).

It is a pleasure to introduce the club’s executive board for the 2013-14 academic year:

Olivia Zhang ’14 – Co-President

Linse Kelbe ’14 – Co-President

Valerie Itteilag ’15 – Treasurer

Eliza Blackman ’14 – Secretary

Sarah Bigler ’16 – Co-Archivist

Da Young Kim ’14 – Co-Archivist

Dorothy Vickery ’14 – PR Officer

Elizabeth Fazzare ’14 – Marketing Chair

Caitlin Wood ’14 – Board Member

Rachel Weinert ’14 – Board Member

Thomas Fallon ’15 – Board Member

Many thanks to all of you for your willingness to serve on the board of our CAS student club.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Student News, 2012-13

14 May

Congratulations to all of our Art History and Urban Design and Architecture Studies majors on their hard work and many achievements this academic year. Best wishes for a productive and restorative summer! To supplement or correct the information presented here, please contact Professor Kathryn Smith (Kathryn.smith@nyu.edu) with a copy to Peggy Coon (peggy@nyu.edu).

Kaylee Alexander (Art History) holds part-time positions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Morgan Library & Museum. She has been admitted to the M. A. program in Art History at the IFA for this fall. Her article, “Blue Hole, Flood Waters, Little Miami River: The Aesthetics of Abolitionism and the Underground Railroad,” will appear in Ink & Image 5 this spring. Kaylee presented a paper on “Landscape and Experience: A Changing Aesthetic in Post-Revolutionary France” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference in April.She will complete her certificate in Appraisal Studies for Fine and Decorative Arts in May.

Zakariya Al-Haffar (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) presented a paper on The Unexpected Role of the Caravanserai of the Ottoman Empire in Greater Syria: A Story of Hybridization and Political Legitimacy” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April.

Thomas Baldwin (Art History/German) presented a paper on “Hannah Höch’s Die Journalisten” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April. He has an internship at the Whitney Museum of American Art in Registration and Collections Management for the fall semester.

Andrew Barron (Art History) is the recipient of the Eileen Guggenheim Award, presented for scholarly accomplishments in the fine arts.

Nora Boyd (Art History/Urban Design & Architecture Studies minor) received a DURF grant for work on her honors thesis, which she is writing under the supervision of Professor Jon Ritter. The grant allowed Nora to conduct research in Shanghai. She presented a paper on The Shanghai Lilong: A Miscast Type in the Discussion of Colonialism and Westernization in Shanghai” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April. This spring she earned the Sherborne Vernon Damerel Memorial Award from the CAS Dean’s Office. Nora is one of three co-editors of Ink & Image 5. “I’ve had a fantastic time in the department in the last four years, and am very sad to be leaving it,” writes Nora. “Thank you so much for all the resources and opportunities!” Nora is the recipient of a Faculty Choice Award from the Department of Art History and Program for Urban Design & Architecture Studies.

Erica Chang (Art History) interned at MoMA in their International Program Department. She was involved in a project called Post, a new digital initiative the Museum is undertaking as a sub-site of moma.org. Erica also conducted research analysis for art institutions around the world that may be potential future partners of MoMA. This summer, she will be a marketing analyst intern at Samsung’s Shinsaegae luxury department store in Seoul, South Korea.

Victoria Damutz (Art History) presented a paper on Gothic Dreamers: The Dichotomy Between Neoclassicism and Romanticism in Fuseli’s The Nightmare and Goya’s The Sleep of Reason” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April.  She is the recipient of a Faculty Choice Award from the Department of Art History.

Matthew Dowsett (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) is the recipient of the Evelyn Jablow Lilienthal Scholarship, presented to an accomplished junior in the Urban Design and Architecture Studies Program.

Ellis Edwards (Art History) has been interning at the contemporary auction house, Phillips, in their Contemporary Jewelry department, since the beginning of the spring semester. Working for a cataloguer and an administrator, Ellis helped to prepare for the auction on April 24th by preparing condition reports, cataloguing lots, managing numerous spread sheets, dealing with clients and dealers, etc. She will return in fall, but this time in the Contemporary Art department — her area of expertise.

Franco Forti (Urban Design & Architecture Studies), Brett Leondhart (SCPS), and Stephanie Morales (Urban Design & Architecture Studies/Environmental Studies Class) were awarded an NYU Green Grant in May of 2012 to investigate: Can NYU Go Net Zero? “With the collaboration of Chambers Design, we were able to deconstruct a 1,918,000 gsf building design to see where we can reduce its energy use and make it energy neutral, writes Stephanie. “Together, we examined the energy use, created energy models, and suggested renewable energy systems for our baseline building; more information on the project can be found hereOur results yielded a fifty-page document explaining step-by-step how to make a Net Zero building, which will consequently influence future construction at NYU.”

Katherine French (Art History) is the recipient of the Jane Costello Memorial Award, presented to a graduating senior for excellence in the study of the history of art.

Emma Gagnon (Art History) is the recipient of the Douglas F. Maxwell Award in Art History, presented to a graduating senior for excellence in the study of art history. The award is for travel outside of the U.S.A. to see and study original works of art.

Natalia Garcia (Urban Design & Architecture Studies/Studio Art minor) has been admitted to a post-graduate teacher-training course called PGCE Primary at London South Bank University, for Primary Education.

Teny Geragos (Art History/Media, Culture & Communications) has been admitted to Loyola Law School beginning in fall.

Rachel High (Art History) is one of three co-editors of Ink & Image 5. She presented a paper on The Writing of Allan Kaprow as a Curation of Identity and Historical Presence” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference in April and was awarded first in her panel. Rachel is the recipient of a Faculty Choice Award from the Department of Art History.

Hsiang-Yi (Melody) Ho (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) has been admitted to the three-year Master of Architecture program at GSAPP, Columbia University, beginning this fall.

In-Sung Kim (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) presented a paper onSeoul Greenbelt Development and the Necessity of Preservation” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference in April.

Denia Lara (Art History) has an internship at the Whitney Museum of American Art this summer.

Elizabeth Lorenz (Art History) is the co-recipient of the H. W. Janson Scholarship, presented to a junior major for excellence in the study of the history of art.

Amber Lynn (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) presented a paper on “Urban Renewal Without Gentrification: The City of New York and Charlotte Street” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April.

Ariel Menche (Art History) was one of only twenty-two students accepted to NYU’s Undergraduate Honors Leaders Course. She also was admitted to the B.S./M.S. program of NYU’s Stern School of Business to pursue an M.S. in Accounting.

Nasim Mirzai (Art History) is the co-recipient of the H. W. Janson Scholarship, presented to a junior major for excellence in the study of the history of art.

Alessandro Olson (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) presented a paper on “The Private as Partner: A Study of New York’s Privately Funded Public Waterfront Spaces” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April.  Alessandro is the co-recipient of the Ada Louise Huxtable Award, presented to an outstanding graduating senior with the highest grade point average and most promise for future success in the field of Urban Design and Architecture.

Ariane Prache (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) was the recipient of a DURF grant. She presented a paper on Adaptive Reuse in France: Public vs. Private Through the Lens of the Abbaye des Vaux de Cernay” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April, and completed an honors thesis on adaptive reuse of cultural patrimony in France. Ariane is the co-recipient of the Ada Louise Huxtable Prize, presented to an outstanding graduating senior with the highest grade point average and most promise for future success in the field of Urban Design and Architecture.

Thor Shannon (Art History) has just begun a position at Gavin Brown’s enterprise as a gallery assistant and will continue to work there after graduation. He presented a paper on Contemporary Art in the Post-Internet Age” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April. Thor is one of three co-editors of Ink & Image 5. He is the recipient of a Faculty Choice Award from the Department of Art History.

Michael Storm (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) presented a paper on How to Define Social Architecture: Reinterpreting the Modernist and Postmodernist Divide Through the Work of Candilis-Josic-Woods” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April and received an award for his presentation. In September 2012, he began an internship with CIVITAS, a community organization working on quality of life issues in the Upper East Side and East Harlem. With CIVITAS he has been developing a report on the 2003 Rezoning of East Harlem as well as writing articles on neighborhood issues for their newsletter.

Nicole Sutton (French/Urban Design & Architecture Studies minor) has been accepted to the M.A. Program for Historical and Sustainable Architecture at NYU in London for this fall.

James Walsh (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) presented a paper onSelling a Community: Shopping Centers and the Suburbs” at the CAS Undergraduate Research Conference this April.  His honors thesis, “Selling a Community: Shopping Centers and the Suburbs,” has been nominated for the Albert S. Borgman Memorial Prize, awarded to the candidates for honors who submit the best honors theses in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences.

Maggie Wong (Art History) has a freelance position writing for a new art blog called NYC Art Parasites, an online magazine based in Berlin that now has a New York branch. Here’s a link to her recent article.

Emily Young (Art History/Urban Design & Architecture Studies) recently was hired by the Center for Active Design as their marketing/graphic design intern. The Center is a non-profit organization founded as a multi-agency task force under Mayor Michael Bloomberg to recommend solutions to solving the City’s obesity crisis. More information can be found here.

Karen Zabarsky (Urban Design & Architecture Studies) attended Columbia University’s Introduction to Architecture Summer Program in July 2012. She was awarded a DURF Grant in November 2012 to research her senior honors thesis research on “The Role of Design Intent in the Preservation of Modern Architecture.” In March 2013, she gave a paper entitled “The Role of Design Intent in the Preservation of Modern Architecture: The Aluminaire House” at the Case Western 10th Annual Undergraduate Art History Symposium at Case Western Reserve University. She also was invited to present her research at a Symposium in Cleveland and received a DURF Conference grant to support her attendance. Her article of the same title will be published in Ink&Image this spring. She has worked both part- and full-time as Marketing Coordinator at STUDIO V Architecture. She is the recipient of a Faculty Choice Award from the Program for Urban Design & Architecture Studies.

 

 

The Excellent Joshua Kwassman

13 May

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Please join the Department of Art History in congratulating our Administrative Secretary, Joshua Kwassman, on winning one of four Arts & Science Excellence Awards.  Josh was acknowledged at the service award ceremony on May 8th in Hemmerdinger Hall.  As most of you know, Josh truly deserves this recognition.  Thanks to everyone who took a few minutes to nominate Josh for this award.

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The Fight for the Soul of JFK International, Tuesday, May 14

13 May

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Larger than Love & Abravana Nova Yorkque at TEMP

13 May

This Friday @ TEMP: ABRAVANA NOVA YORKQUE & LARGER THAN LOVE

Tenth Annual Graduate Student Symposium in Nineteenth-Century Art

1 May

Spring Break is usually a quiet time in the department, since faculty and students are mostly absent. This year, however, on Friday, March 22 the department was alive with an event that brought over a hundred art historians to Silver Center. The department hosted the annual symposium of the Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art (AHNCA), where graduate students writing dissertations on subjects in the “long nineteenth-century” (the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century) present and discuss their work. The event has achieved a broad following, not limited to art historians, because the papers are lively and engaging and the projects of young scholars will shape our future understanding of nineteenth-century art . The symposium is widely publicized and so proposals come in from several continents; some years half the presenters come from outside the United States, though this year the US predominated. The symposium is underwritten by AHNCA and the Dahesh Museum of Art, which provides travel funding and a cash prize of $1000 for the best paper. The resultant article is published in the on-line peer-refereed journal Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide , and its author is invited to give a presentation at the Dahesh Museum’s Salon Thursday series of lectures. This year, Sarah Schaefer of Columbia University was awarded the “best paper” prize for  “‘With the Smallest Fragment’: The Archeology of the Doré Bible,” where she examined the ways in which the new understanding of the archeological  past influenced depictions of biblical scenes, particularly those of Gustave Doré whose bible was a nineteenth-century “best-seller.” Other papers examined the works of familiar artists such as Gauguin and Renoir, and less familiar subjects such as Chinese photography and Victorian architecture; the complete program is available here. The symposium was arranged by Visiting Professor Patricia Mainardi, who is program coordinator of AHNCA, and NYU was well represented: two current IFA students, Nina E. Harkrader and Rashmi Viswanatan, presented their dissertation research and an IFA alum, Margaret Samu, PhD 2010, served on the symposium committee.