College and University Art Museums Reciprocal Program Participants

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

College and University Art Museums Reciprocal Program Participants College and University Art Museums Reciprocal Program Participants ALABAMA COLORADO Leepa-Rattner Museum of Art Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts Center for Visual Art St. Petersburg College (AEIVA) Metropolitan State University of Denver leeparattner.org University of Alabama at Birmingham msudenver.edu/cva uab.edu/cas/aeiva Ruth Funk Center for Textile Arts Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center Florida Institute of Technology ARIZONA at Colorado College textiles.fit.edu Arizona State University Art Museum Colorado College Arizona State University coloradocollege.edu/fac GEORGIA asuartmuseum.asu.edu Bernard A. Zuckerman Museum of Art CONNECTICUT Kennesaw State University Center for Creative Photography Fairfield University Museum of Art zuckerman.kennesaw.edu University of Arizona Fairfield University creativephotography.org fairfield.edu/museum Georgia Museum of Art University of Georgia University of Arizona Museum of Art Housatonic Museum of Art georgiamuseum.org University of Arizona Housatonic Community College artmuseum.arizona.edu hcc.commnet.edu/artmuseum Michael C. Carlos Museum Emory University CALIFORNIA William Benton Museum of Art carlos.emory.edu Anderson Collection at Stanford University University of Connecticut Stanford University benton.uconn.edu ILLINOIS anderson.stanford.edu DePaul Art Museum Yale Center for British Art DePaul University Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University Yale University museums.depaul.edu Stanford University britishart.yale.edu museum.stanford.edu Loyola University Museum of Art Yale University Art Gallery Loyola University Chicago Fowler Museum at UCLA Yale University luc.edu/luma University of California, Los Angeles artgallery.yale.edu fowler.ucla.edu Smart Museum of Art FLORIDA University of Chicago Hammer Museum Cornell Fine Arts Museum smartmuseum.uchicago.edu University of California, Los Angeles Rollins College hammer.ucla.edu rollins.edu/cfam INDIANA Snite Museum of Art University Art Museum Harn Museum of Art University of Notre Dame California State University, Long Beach University of Florida sniteartmuseum.nd.edu csulb.edu/org/uam harn.ufl.edu IOWA Mead Art Museum NEW HAMPSHIRE University of Iowa Museum of Art Amherst College Hood Museum of Art University of Iowa amherst.edu/mead Dartmouth College uima.uiowa.edu hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu Mount Holyoke College Art Museum KANSAS Mount Holyoke College NEW JERSEY Spencer Museum of Art mtholyoke.edu/artmuseum Princeton University Art Museum University of Kansas Princeton University spencerart.ku.edu Smith College Museum of Art artmuseum.princeton.edu Smith College LOUISIANA smith.edu/artmuseum Zimmerli Art Museum Newcomb Art Museum Rutgers, State University of New Jersey Tulane University Williams College Museum of Art zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu newcombartmuseum.tulane.edu Williams College wcma.williams.edu NEW MEXICO MAINE University of New Mexico Art Museum Bowdoin College Museum of Art MICHIGAN University of New Mexico Bowdoin College University of Michigan Museum of Art unmartmuseum.org bowdoin.edu/art-museum University of Michigan umma.umich.edu NEW YORK Colby Museum of Art Burchfield Penney Art Center Colby College MINNESOTA Buffalo State, State University of New York colby.edu/museum Goldstein Museum of Design burchfieldpenney.org University of Minnesota MARYLAND goldstein.design.umn.edu Grey Art Gallery Evergreen Museum and Library New York University Johns Hopkins University Weisman Art Museum nyu.edu/greyart museums.jhu.edu/evergreen.php University of Minnesota weisman.umn.edu Johnson Museum of Art Homewood Museum Cornell University Johns Hopkins University MISSISSIPPI museum.cornell.edu museums.jhu.edu/homewood.php University of Mississippi Museum University of Mississippi Neuberger Museum of Art MASSACHUSETTS museum.olemiss.edu Purchase College, State University of New York Addison Gallery of American Art www.neuberger.org Phillips Academy MISSOURI addisongallery.org Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art Washington University in St. Louis State University of New York at New Paltz Davis Museum at Wellesley College kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu newpaltz.edu/museum Wellesley College wellesley.edu/davismuseum NEBRASKA NORTH CAROLINA Sheldon Museum of Art Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University McMullen Museum of Art University of Nebraska Duke University Boston College sheldonartgallery.org nasher.duke.edu bc.edu/mcmullenmuseum OHIO UTAH Allen Memorial Art Museum Brigham Young University Museum of Art Oberlin College Brigham Young University oberlin.edu/amam moa.byu.edu Gund Gallery VERMONT Kenyon College Fleming Museum of Art thegundgallery.org University of Vermont flemingmuseum.org OKLAHOMA Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art Middlebury College Museum of Art University of Oklahoma Middlebury College ou.edu/fjjma museum.middlebury.edu OREGON VIRGINIA The Center for Contemporary Art and Culture Muscarelle Museum of Art Pacific Northwest College of Art College of William and Mary ccac.pna.edu wm.edu/muscarelle PENNSYLVANIA WASHINGTON La Salle University Art Museum Henry Art Gallery La Salle University University of Washington lasalle.edu/museum henryart.org Palmer Museum of Art WISCONSIN Pennsylvania State University Chazen Museum of Art palmermuseum.psu.edu University of Wisconsin-Madison chazen.wisc.edu RHODE ISLAND RISD Museum Rhode Island School of Design risdmuseum.org TEXAS Blaffer Art Museum University of Houston blafferartmuseum.org Blanton Museum of Art University of Texas at Austin blantonmuseum.org .
Recommended publications
  • Arizona State University Washington Center Event Guide
    Arizona State University Washington Center Event Guide ASU Washington Center 1834 Connecticut Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20009 Main: (202) 446-0380 Fax: (202) 446-0390 https://washingtoncenter.asu.edu welcome On behalf of Arizona State University, welcome to the Washington Center. We are pleased you are considering hosting your program with us. The Washington Center has been home to ASU in Washington, DC since March of 2010. Located north of Dupont Circle, the 108 year-old four-story townhome has been retrofitted to offer intimate event space to accommodate meetings, events, receptions and classes. The below information has been compiled as a resource to help in your planning. Our staff will also gladly assist you with your planning needs. Please don’t hesitate to ask. reserving the ASU Washington Center When booking a room at the Washington Center, we will request the following information. For your convenience, the below questions are also available as a Google form that may be submitted online. • What is the date/time you are seeking to host your function? • How much time will you need for set-up and breakdown? • How many people do you expect to attend? • What type of function is it? (Standing reception, seated presentation, class, etc.) • What is the topic of your discussion or the purpose for your function? • What audio/visual equipment will you need? The ASU Washington Center has many built-in audio/visual capabilities. We will also be happy to help you contract with a local AV provider should we not be able to accommodate all your needs.
    [Show full text]
  • Murillo Campello
    MurilloCampello December 2020 Samuel Curtis JohnsonGraduateSchoo lofManagementPho ne:(607) 255-1282 CornellUniversityE-mail:[email protected] 381SageHall Ithaca,NY14853-6201 CurrentAppointments 2011—:LewisH.DurlandProfessorofFinance,JohnsonSchool,CornellUniversity 2010—:ResearchAssociate,NationalBureau ofEconomicResearch(CorporateFinance) 2018—2020:AcademicDirector,FinancialManagementAssociation PastAppointmentsandVisits 2019,2020(SpringSemester):VisitingProfessorofFinance,UniversityNovadeLisboa 2017 (SpringSemester):VisitingProfessorofFinance,UniversityofCambridge 2014(March), 2016(FallSemester):Visitin gProfessorofFinance,ColumbiaUniversity 2009—2011, 2013—2015, 2019(May/June):VisitingProfessorofFinance,UniversityofAmsterdam 2013,2014(July):VisitingProfessorofFinance,ChineseUniversityofHongKong 2013,2015(September):VisitingScholar,FederalReserveBank ofNewYork 2016 (September):VisitingScholar,FederalReserveBankBoardofGovernors(D.C.) 2014,2015(July):VisitingProfessorofFinance,University ofQueensland 2015,2016, 2017,2018, 2019(November):Visitin gProfessorofFinance,University ofManchester 2006—2010:FacultyResearchFellow,NationalBureauofEconomicResearch(CorporateFinance) 2009—2011:Alan andJoyceBaltzProfessorofFinance,UniversityofIllinois 2008—2009: I.B.E.ProfessorofFinance,University of Illinois 2006—2008:AssociateProfessorofFinance,University of Illinois 2002—2006:AssistantProfessorofFinance,UniversityofIllinois 2001—2002:AssistantProfessorofFinance,MichiganStateUniversity 2000—2001:AssistantProfessorofFinance,ArizonaStateUniversity
    [Show full text]
  • A CSU-UC Phd Bridge Program to Increase Diversity in STEM the Cal
    Cal-Bridge: a CSU-UC PhD Bridge Program to Increase Diversity in STEM The Cal-Bridge program has the mission of creating opportunities for traditionally underrepresented groups to participate and advance in physics, astronomy, computer science, and computer engineering and to increase their numbers in PhD programs in those fields. Cal-Bridge consists of two programs: a CSU-UC PhD Bridge program and a summer research program (also known as CAMPARE). The main Cal-Bridge program is a partnership between 9 University of California (UC), 16 California State University (CSU), and over 30 community college campuses in California, with over 200 faculty from the two systems participating. Scholars are recruited from the CSU and community college campuses in our network, with the help of local faculty and/or staff liaisons at each campus. Community college students transfer to a participating CSU to join the program. Additional community colleges are joining the network as we find faculty and/or staff at those campuses to act as liaisons. The program uses research-validated selection methods to identify “diamonds-in-the-rough”, students from underrepresented groups who display strong socioemotional competencies, along with academic potential, and provides them with the support necessary to successfully matriculate to a PhD program, targeted at the UC campuses in the Cal-Bridge network. Once selected, Cal-Bridge Scholars benefit from financial support, intensive, joint mentoring by CSU and UC faculty, professional development workshops, and exposure to a wide variety of research opportunities, including at the participating UC campuses. Since its inception in 2014, the Cal-Bridge program has selected 127 scholars in 7 cohorts, including 69 Latinx, 14 Black/African American, and 57 women scholars (30 of the 57 women are from underrepresented minority groups).
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    Curriculum Vitae Jolyana Begay-Kroupa [email protected] Education 2009 M.A. - Social & Philosophical Foundations of Indian Education Thesis: “Through the Eyes of Navajo Students: Understanding the Impacts and Effects of the Fort Defiance Navajo Immersion Program” Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ Advisor: Dr. Mary Eunice Romero-Little 2004 B.A. - Multicultural / Multilingual Elementary Education Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ Professional Employment - Post Secondary Teaching Experience 2005 to Present Director of Development – Navajo Language & Culture Phoenix Indian Center, Phoenix, AZ Provide oversight of educational language and culture revitalization programs and Coalition driven activity, assuring all project deliverables are met and well coordinated with existing center-wide activity including staff supervision. Additionally, I teach Navajo language and culture courses including: Beginning Navajo Intermediate Navajo Navajo Weaving Navajo Singing Navajo Literacy 2008 to Present Navajo Language Instructor – American Indian Studies Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ Teach four levels of Navajo language courses including: Beginning Navajo I – AIS 194 (equivalent to NAV 101) Beginning Navajo II – AIS 194 (equivalent to NAV 102) Intermediate Navajo I – AIS 394 (equivalent to NAV 201) Intermediate Navajo II – AIS 394 (equivalent to NAV 202) 2014 to Present Navajo Language Instructor – Stanford Language Center Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA Teach First Year Navajo language courses via distance learning: First Year Navajo I First
    [Show full text]
  • Arizona State University
    Arizona State University Website:www.asu.edu Arizona State University (ASU) is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. ASU serves more than 64,000 students in metropolitan Phoenix, Arizona, the nation's fifth largest city. ASU champions intellectual and cultural diversity, and welcomes students from all fifty states and more than one hundred nations across the globe. ASU is coeducational and operates on a semester calendar. WUE programs are limited to ASU’s New College of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences (West Campus) and to select majors in the College of Technology and Innovation (Polytechnic Campus). See the complete list of participating programs for the 2009 – 2010 academic year below. New College of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, Degree Type West Campus American Studies BA Applied Computing BS Applied Mathematics BS Applied Science BAS Communication Studies BA/BS English BA Ethnicity, Race, First Nation Studies BA History BA Integrative Studies BA Interdisciplinary Arts & Performance BA Life Sciences BS Political Science BA/BS Psychology BA/BS Religion & Applied Ethics Studies BA Social &
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    6/14/21 CURRICULUM VITAE Edward Hance Shortliffe, MD, PhD, MACP, FACMI, FIAHSI [work] Chair Emeritus and Adjunct Professor, Department of Biomedical Informatics Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University in the City of New York [email protected] – https://www.dbmi.columbia.edu/people/edward-shortliffe/ Adjunct Professor of Biomedical Informatics College of Health Solutions Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ [email protected] – https://isearch.asu.edu/profile/1098580 Adjunct Professor, Department of Healthcare Policy and Research (Health Informatics) Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY http://hpr.weill.cornell.edu/divisions/health_informatics/ [home] 272 W 107th St #5B, New York, NY 10025-7833 Phone: 212-666-8440 — Mobile: 917-640-0933 [email protected] – http://www.shortliffe.net Born: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Date of birth: 28 August 1947 Citizenship: U.S.A. (naturalized - 1962) Spouse: Vimla L. Patel, PhD Education From To School/Institution Major Subject, Degree, and Date 9/62 6/65 The Loomis School, Windsor, CT. High School 9/65 7/66 Gresham's School, Holt, Norfolk, U.K. Foreign Exchange Student 9/66 6/70 Harvard College, Cambridge, MA. Applied Math and Computer Science, A.B., June 1970 9/70 1/75 Stanford University, Stanford, CA PhD, Medical Information Sciences, January 1975 9/70 6/76 Stanford University School of Medicine MD, June 1976. 7/76 6/77 Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA Internship in Internal Medicine 7/77 6/79 Stanford University Hospital, Stanford, CA Residency in Internal Medicine Honors Graduation Magna Cum Laude, Harvard College, June 1970 Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP), NIH-funded Stanford Traineeship, September 1971 - June 1976 Grace Murray Hopper Award (Distinguished computer scientist under age 30), Association for Computing Machinery, October 1976 Research Career Development Award, National Library of Medicine, July 1979—June 1984 Henry J.
    [Show full text]
  • A Conversation with Sr. Elizabeth Carey
    September 2019 A Conversation with Sr. Elizabeth Carey You’ve heard of the FIVE brave nuns who came from Ireland to begin our school in 1954, but who was the SIXTH? by Debra LaPlante & Mary Jo Wahlers The following is our conversation with Sr. Elizabeth, the 6th nun to arrive, about her memories of the beginning years at SS. Simon & Jude School. How did it come about that you would be sent to Arizona? I had already made my final profession and knew the other Loreto Sisters who were here in Arizona as they were from County Westmeath, so I was sent to replace Sr. Carmel in 1955. (Sr. Maria Sheerin who is also currently living at the convent was also sent with Sr. Elizabeth to Arizona at that time, but she only stayed one year as she was called to do further studies.) Did you have any reservations about coming to Arizona? Like the original five, I thought I may not return to Ireland again, but five years later, I was lucky enough to be able to travel to see my family! As the Loreto Sisters grew in numbers throughout the United States, we often traveled to attend meetings in other cities in the U.S, or other countries, and were given the opportunity to visit our families in Ireland. Did you live in the convent here on campus? No, the convent wasn’t built yet, so we lived in a house on 27th Drive in the beginning years. We burned our garbage right at the house in those days, and never crossed the irrigation ditch.
    [Show full text]
  • Arizona State University Military Activation Form
    Arizona State University Military Activation Form ______________________ ________________________ _____________________ Date Student’s Name (Printed) Phone Number ___________________________ _____________________________________________________ ASU ID Number Military Unit I, the above named student enrolled at Arizona State University for the _____________ semester, have been ordered to active duty to participate in “___________________________________.” Concurrent with my enrollment this semester, I have utilized the following services at the University and wish these commitments to be withdrawn with the appropriate refund, if any mailed to the individual and address listed below. I grant permission to the ASU Veteran Benefits & Certifications Office to work with the ASU offices listed below to facilitate the processing of any appropriate refunds. □ A copy of my orders is attached. As of this date, I would like the following action taken on my academic record for the time period indicated above. (Choose one) □ Incomplete (I have spoken with my instructor and am eligible to receive an incomplete grade.) □ Letter grade(s) (I am eligible to receive a letter grade for each of my classes.) □ I would like a complete withdrawal for the semester. □ I would like a combination of the above options. Please explain why and specify which option(s) for which courses.______________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________
    [Show full text]
  • James M. Strickland
    James M. Strickland CONTACT School of Politics and Global Studies Arizona State University P.O. Box 873902 Tempe AZ 85287-3902 POSITION Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona Assistant Professor, School of Politics and Global Studies, 2019-present EDUCATION University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan Ph.D., Political Science, 2019 Major: American Politics Minor: Methodology University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia M.A., Political Science and International Affairs, 2014 University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina B.A., History and Political Science, 2012 Magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa ARTICLES Strickland, James and Jesse Crosson. \K Street on Main: Legislative Turnover and Multi-client Lobbying." Political Science Research and Methods (condi- tionally accepted). Strickland, James and Katelyn Stauffer. \Legislative Diversity and the Rise of Women Lobbyists." Political Research Quarterly. Strickland, James. \A Quiet Revolution in State Lobbying: Government Growth and Interest Populations." Political Research Quarterly. Strickland, James. 2020. \Bifurcated Lobbying in America: Group Benefits and Lobbyist Selection." Interest Groups and Advocacy 9, no. 2: 131 - 58. Strickland, James. 2020. \The Declining Value of Revolving-Door Lobbyists: Evidence from the American States." American Journal of Political Science 64, no. 1: 67 - 81. Strickland, James. 2019. \America's Crowded Statehouses: Measuring and Ex- plaining Lobbying in the U.S. States." State Politics and Policy Quarterly 19, no. 3: 351 - 74. Strickland, James. 2019. \A Paradox of Political Reform: Shadow Interests in the U.S. States." American Politics Research 47, no. 4: 887 - 914. BOOK The Institutional Development of American State Lobbying, 1890-2020 (proposal PROJECT available; manuscript in progress). BOOK Strickland, James. 2021. \Nudging Lobbyists to Register with Online Registra- CHAPTERS tion and Grace Periods." In Nudging Public Policy: Examining the Benefits and Limitations of Paternalistic Public Policies, eds.
    [Show full text]
  • Arizona Board of Regents Past President, Navajo Nation Olympian, Track & Field Security and Non-Proliferation, U.S
    ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Arizona State University is one of the premier metro- politan public research universities in the nation. Enrolling more than 64,000 undergraduate, graduate, and profes- sional students on four campuses in metropolitan Phoenix, ASU maintains a tradition of academic excellence in core disciplines, and has become an important global center for innovative interdisciplinary teaching and research. Arizona State offers outstanding resources for study and research, including libraries and museums with important collections, studios and performing arts spaces for creative endeavor, and unsurpassed state-of-the-art scientific and technological laboratories and research facilities. ASU’s historic campus in Tempe, which serves more than 51,000 students, offers the feel of a college town in the midst of a dynamic metropolitan region. The West campus, in northwest Phoenix, and Polytechnic campus, in Mesa, which each serve more than 8,500 students, offer more specialized missions. The Downtown Phoenix campus opened in fall 2006 as part of a larger plan to revitalize the city’s urban core. Nestled in the heart of downtown Phoenix, the campus provides an academically rigorous university experience in a modern, urban atmosphere. The campus serves more than 6,500 students and is expected to ultimately grow to 15,000 by 2020. ASU is research-driven but focused on learning – the United States. ASU has the most undergraduates (11) The university is international in scope, welcoming teaching is carried out in a context that encourages the named to USA Today’s Academic First Team of any public students from all 50 states and nations across the globe, creation of new knowledge.
    [Show full text]
  • Zhi Li Argyros School of Business & Economics Chapman University [email protected]
    Zhi Li Argyros School of Business & Economics Chapman University [email protected] PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Chapman University 2017-present Assistant Professor of Finance Fisher College of Business, The Ohio State University 2015-2017 Visiting Assistant Professor of Finance Freeman School of Business, Tulane University 2008-2015 Assistant Professor of Finance Academic Background Ph.D, Finance, Arizona State University , Tempe AZ M.S., Finance, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA B.A, Finance, Northwest University, P.R. China Publications “Accounting-based compensation plans and corporate debt contracts” with Lingling Wang, and Karen H. Wruck, forthcoming, Contemporary Accounting Research, 2019. “Executive Compensation Incentives Contingent on Long-term Accounting Performance”, with Lingling Wang, 2016. Review of Financial Studies, Volume 29, Page 1586-1633. Reprinted in the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation, June 2016. “Behavioral and rational explanations of stock price performance around SEOs: Evidence from a decomposition of market-to-book ratios”, with Michael G. Hertzel, 2010. Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Volume 45, Page 935-958. “Inter-firm linkages and the wealth effects of financial distress along the supply chain”, with Michael G. Hertzel, Micah S. Officer and Kimberly J. Rodgers, 2008. Journal of Financial Economics, Issue 2, pages 374-387. First Prize, Fama/DFA Prizes for Capital Markets and Asset Pricing in the 2008 Journal of Financial Economics Best Paper Contests. WORKING PAPERS “The Dark Side of Executive Compensation Duration: Evidence from Mergers and Acquisitions”, R&R request, 2020, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, with R. Peng. “Pay for outsiders: Compensation incentives for nonfamily executives in family firms” with Harley Ryan, and Lingling Wang, R&R request, Contemporary Accounting Research, 2019.
    [Show full text]
  • Arizona State University (Tempe, AZ)
    P A U L M Q UINN ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE LECTURER 975 S. M Y R T L E A VE.| T EMPE , AZ 85287 COLLEGE OF HEALTH SOLUTIONS (480) 965-9356 | [email protected] EDUCATION Northern Arizona University (Flagstaff, AZ) ..................................................................... 2018 - Present Educational Technology (M.Ed. program) Projected graduation: December 2019 The focus of the EDT program is on design, development, and evaluation of instructional systems and on educational technology applications to support learning. California State University Northridge (Northridge, CA) .................................................. 1991 - 1994 Bachelor of Arts: Deaf Studies Degree awarded with honors: May 1994 Degree requirements are comprised of courses in sign language, linguistics, and a variety of other disciplines designed to convey knowledge and understanding of the language and culture of Deaf people, including their history and social experiences. Arizona State University (Tempe, AZ) ......................................................... 2002 - 2003, 2009 - 2010 Courses completed: Educational Technology (M.Ed. program) Arizona State University (Tempe, AZ) ................................................................................... 1995 - 1999 Courses completed: Communicative Disorders (MS program) University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) ......................................................................................... 1994 - 1995 Courses completed: Rehabilitation Counseling: Deafness / Audiology (MA
    [Show full text]