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on view, as will the work of Emma Museum Amos. The visit to The Art Museum, -one of the finest Architecture university museums in this country­ will be hosted by its director; Allen Rosenbaum. This museum also has inNew recently reopened after having been Jersey CONTINUED ON PAGE 15 3 Artists n all-day tour of New Jersey museums is offered to Annual Selected for A Conference attendees on Sunday, February 18. The focus of the tour is contemporary museum architec­ Giverny ture. All three museums to be visited­ the Newark Museum, The Art Museum Residencies of Princeton University, and the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Museum at Rutgers The Newark Museum's University-have recently been new three-story North Wing expanded. Tour leader will be Judith K. Atrium, designed by architect Michael Graves Brodsky, CAA Board member, professor hree artists have been selected in the Rutgers Visual Arts Department, from over eight hundred longtime Princeton resident, and New T applicants to participate in the Jersey booster. properties adjacent to the museum and 1990 Reader's Digest Artists at Giverny Those who wish to go on the tour a successful capital campaign, an residency program, which is adminis­ should call Elizabeth Nesbitt at the CAA exciting and innovative design has been teredby the College Art Association. office (212/691-1051) immediately to realized, The Newark Museum re­ Painter Nancy Frieze and sculptors sign up. The cost for the day is $50.00, opened in November 1989, and Graves's Cathy Stone and Barbara Zucker will which includes round-trip bus transpor­ design, which unifies four very dispa­ live and work for six months, from tation and a gounnet box lunch. The bus rate buildings, has attracted national April to September, at Claude Monet's will leave New York at 8:30 a.m. and and international attention. home at Giverny. Each artist will be arrive back at the Hilton at 4:30 p.m. Mr. Miller himself will take the provided with a cash award for living The Newark Museum is the first CAA group through the galleries. On expenses, round-trip transportation to museum design by Michael Graves to view will be "Against the Odds: France, an apartment, and a car; they be executed. While the Whitney African-American Artists and the will share a studio, Museum has engaged Graves and the Harmon Foundation," a show of the Nancy Frieze, 41, of Danbury, plan is still undergoing revision, Samuel work of black American artists of the Conn" was second alternate for the 1989 Miller, director of the Newark Museum, 1930s and 1940s. Work by artists Artists at Giverny program, Frieze egan working with Graves twenty honored by the Women's Caucus for received an MFA from Yale in 1980 and . years ago, and through acquiring Art at their 1990 convention also will be is currently artist-in-residence at Trinity CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 active response soon from those most The exhibition is coordinated by GtVERNY RESIDENCtES art at the and affected, a precious legacy of art and Contents Annual Susan Edwards, curator of the Hunter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 lives in Burlington. She received a BS scholarship will disappear, forever. ... College Galleries. Work by MFA degree in design from the University of -by Larry Silver, CAA vice-president elect Volume 15, Number 1 candidates from the following institu­ Michigan and an MA in sculpture from and member of the Scholl1rly Advisory ( January/February 1990 Conference tions will be included: Brooklyn College in Hartford, Conn. She has . She has had a number of Committee on Art Histon) College/CUNY, City College/CUNY, participated in numerous one-person one-person shows, most recently at the Update Columbia University, Hunter College/ and group shows throughout the United Pam Adler Gallery and at the Sculpture Art Curricula CUNY, New York University, Parsons States, most recently at the North Center, both in New York She received To Be Examined MuseumArchitecture School of Design, Pratt Institute, Queens Dakota Museum of Art in Grand Forks. Yaddo awards in 1986 and 1989. Zucker's A roundtable discussion on IICurriculum in New Jersey College/CUNY, Rutgers University / Interested in the outdoor landscape, she sculpture consists of constructions of a 1 as a Deterrent to Growth in a Multicul­ Mason Gross School of the Arts, School finds inspiration in such painters as variety of simple forms. She tural Society" will take place on Thurs­ of VlSUal Arts, SUNY College at Pur­ Ralph Blakelock, J.M.W Turner, is interested in the color and scale that Three Artists Selected day, February 15,4:45-6:00 p.m. The he 78th Annual Conference of chase, SUNY College at Stony Brook, and Worthington Whittredge, and Jean­ confronted Monet at Givernyand hopes 1 for Giverny Residencies moderator will be James Melchert of the the College Art Association will . Baptiste Camille Corot. She is eager to to learn from the environment there. University of Callfornia, Berkeley, and be held in New York at the New Gallery hours are 10:00 a.m. to work in the outdoor environment that Runners up for the 1990 competition Annual Conjerellce T the panelists are Ed Levine, an artist and 6:00 p.m. daily. York Hilton, February 14-17, 1990. Over inspired Monet. include Robert Straight, first alternate; Updnte director of the Visual Arts Program at 2 100 sessions in art history and studio art will be offered. The preliminary pro­ MIT; Faith Ringgold, of the University of Drawing Center Notice of Annual CalifOrnia, San Diego, also an artist; and gram describing the sessions was mailed Activities Business Meeting Howard Rizatti, chair of the Art History 4 to members in December. For a copy of The Drawing Center at 35 Wooster Street Department at Virginia Commonwealth the preliminary program and a registra­ will host an artists symposium in con­ University. This session is sponsored by 5 CAANews tion form, please call the eAA office, junction with the exhibition Selections 49 Nonmembers are welcome to attend the the CAA Board. on Wednesday, February 14, at 7:00 p.m. conference, and single-session admis­ It is the view of the moderator that Admission is free and all CAA c;onfer­ One-Person Shows by the curricula of most art departments sion tickets are available. Payment for ence participants are invited to attend. Artist Members reflect indifference to dialogue across 6 new or renewed CAA memberships can Artists attending the CAA confer­ disciplinary lines, and that courses be made at the conference. CAA ence are invited to show their work to offered mirror those of the professional People in the News members are entitled to discounted Drawing Center curators on February 13, 7 art school and are for the most part conference registration. 14, or 17. To schedule an appointment, traceable to the classical academy. A Programs, New and call at least two weeks in advance, major part of the discussion will focus on 212/219-2166. 8 Revised A Problem That alternative models that might be more Will Not Go Away appropriate. Also to be discussed is the ( Grants, Awards I and Shifting Power "Brittle Books," the shorthand term used relation of art CUITlCUla to the multi- , The Women's Caucus for Art, an 9 Honors to signal the deterioration of all printed cultural society in which we live, where affiliated society of the CAA, will hold works on acid papet; threatens art histo­ investigation and synthesis should take Conferences and rians and collectors of works on paper precedence, but often don't, over its national conference at the New York Hilton, February B-15. The theme of the 11 Symposia with irretrievable loss of much nine­ doctrinaire training. teenth- and twentieth-century material. meeting will be "Shifting Power." Cathy Stone, 37, is a sculptor from BarbaraZucker Acid from the wood pulp used to make "Shifting Power" implies a number Opportunities CAA Publications to be Sacramento, Calif. She received an MFA Haskalak, Tanaka, Genesa, 1989 12 cheaper modern paper causes pages of new perspectives and raises many from the University of California at literally to dissolve from within. Exhibited at Meeting questions. What have women accom­ More than 125 exhibitors-including the Davis in 1987. Her public art commis­ Classified Ads Already, important resources of both plished in the twenty years that Women leading art book publishers and suppli­ sions include neon sculptures for the 16 Information Wanted text and pictures crumble in the hands artists have been organized, and how ers of artists' materials-will take part in Hyatt Regency in Sacramento and the Michelle Weinberg, second alternate; Datebook of current readers. What can the CAA and what is next? To whom is power the trade show at the Annual Confer­ Timberline High School in Lacey, Wash., and Katherine Kuharic, third alternate. do to help? An advisory committee for given and what are the forms this is ence. Among the exhibitors for the first commissioned by the Washington Honorable mention was awarded to art history already exists, helping to taking? What are the "shifts" that time will be the College Art Association, State Arts Commission. She has partici­ Ronald Barron, Rod Laursen, and Diane coordinate preservation efforts with the women are interested in making and eM News, a publication of the which will have a booth displaying CAA pated in a number of design collabora­ Levesque. College Art Association, is published clearing house for preservation in all whom do they inclUde? The conference publications. We invite you to come by tion projects in Sacramento as wen as The Artists at Givemy program, six times a year. Material for diSciplines, the Washington-based will address these questions. the booth. one-person and group exhibitions on the now in its third year, is jointly funded inclusion should be addressed to: Committee on Preservation and Access. Twenty-three panels will cover a West Coast. Stone creates large-scale, by Reader's Digest of Pleasantville, N.Y., Grant money is available for some wide range of topics, from feminist Managing Editor three-dimensional sculptures incorporat­ and Selection de Reader's Digest in projects, but priorities must be set. New York Area methedology to actiVism, survival eM News ing a variety of raw materials and neon. Interested CAA members should bring MFA Exhibition tactics, censorship, lesbian artists, Paris. The College Art Association 275 Seventh Avenue Her constructed wall surfaces with administers the program, from process­ suggestions-and lists of essential older Annual Conference attendees are women of color, and Asian, Native New York. New York 10001 cracks and imperfections are fortified ing applications and appointing the Telephone: 212/691-1051 periodicals, monographs, catalogues, invited to the opening of the New York American, and Latina artists. There will with neon light and precious metals. initial jury---one member of which and corpora in their fields-to the CAA Area MFA Exhibition, cosponsored by be two CAA-cosponsored sessions: For her, the flaws in an artwork serve as Editor Susan Ball Board-sponsored session at the annual the College Art Association, on Thurs­ fils Feminism an Issue for the Students of serves on the three-person final jury- metaphors for the imperfections and MallagiJlg Editor Virginia Wageman conference in New York: Friday, Febru­ day, February 15, 5:00-8:30 p.m., at the '80s and '90s?" chaired by artist Lorie to assisting the three artists with travel Assistant Editor Elizabeth Nesbitt chance happenings in life. At Giverny ary 16, 12:15 p.m. Or check in at the Hunter College Galleries, 450 West 41st Novak, and "Firing the Canon," chaired arrangements and visas. This year's Design Mentyka/Schlott Design she plans to focus on observations of CAA Information Booth at the exhibit Street (which is between Ninth and by Linda Nochlin of the Graduate preliminary jury was made up of three nature, an area integral to her work artists who are past and present CAA © 1990 College Art Association, Inc. area for further information. Without an Tenth Avenues). Center, CUNY. Barbara Zucker, 48, is professor of Board members-Pat Adams, Phyllis

CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 2 CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY \990 3 Bramson, and Cynthia Carlson. Together Cathy Stone binding ballot. Six candidates receiving president; Judith Brodsky, Rutgers Magazine, among others. She has they sifted through over 5,000 slides From, to, the (detail), 1987 Notice the greatest number of votes will be University, secretary. organized and curated numerous and 831 applications, narrowing the pool elected. The results of the election will exhibitions and has written on Miriam to nine finalists. A second jury-artist be announced at the Annual Business EgberlHaverkamp-Begemann, Schapiro, Faith Ringgold, Joyce Kozloff, Roy Lichtenstein, Metropolitan Museum of Annual ~ Meeting. secretary, declined to continue on the Michelle Stuart, and Athena Tacha, of Art associate curator Lowery Sims, " ladder of succession to vice-president. among others. Currently she is guest and Cynthia Carlson (from the first Following the resignation of Mary His term as secretary terminates curator for a retrospective exhibition of jury)-then made the final selection. Business Schmidt Campbell, the Board of following the Annual Business Meeting the work of Audrey Flack. The number of applicants for 1990 Directors, at its meeting held on April in 1990. Couma-Peterson has served on residencies exceeded last year's by 200. Meeting 29,1989, in accordance with Article V, several CAA committees, among them Administrators from Reader's Digest Section 5, elected Thalia Gouma­ By-Laws the Nominating Committee and the and the College Art Association were Peterson to fill out the remaining term of Mary Schmidt Campbell, which pleased with the number and diversity of Members will vote at the Annual expires after the Annual Business the applicants, who included painters, Business Meeting on the ratification of Meeting in February 1991. sculptors, photographers, video artists, atice is hereby given that a the By-laws adopted by the Board of and installation artists and represented meeting of the members of the Directors at its meeting of April 29, 1989, virtually every media and style. College Art Association, Inc., Nominating Committee and the proposed amendments to the Applications for the 1991 Artists N and Nominations By-laws adopted by the Board of will be held in the Trianon Ballroom, on at Givemy program will be sent to CAA the third floor of the New York Hilton, Directors at its meeting of October 14, members in early spring. Nonmembers on Thursday, February 15, 1990, at In accordance with the By-laws, Article 1989. The By-laws and amendments may request an application by 12:15 p.m. VII, Section 3, the Board of Directors were mailed with the Notice of Annual sending an SASE to the CAA office in elected the following members of the Meeting on December 15, 1989. March. The application deadline will be Notice of Meeting Nominating Committee for the year early summer 1990. 1991: Ed Colker. University of the Arts, For those who will be unable to attend Chair; Susan Barnes, Dallas Museum of the Annual Business Meeting, proxies In accordance with the revised By-laws, were included with the Notice of adopted by the Board of Directors at its Art; Natalie Kampen, Barnard College; Annual Meeting. meeting on April 29, 1989, Article IV, Joyce Kozloff, New York City; Section 1 (underlining represents , State University of New York, Stonybrook; Nancy Troy, changes to the By-laws): Northwestern University. The members Porter Prize Committee, and has been on the Governing Board of the Byzan­ "11le Annual Business Meeting of tile members oj the so elected will nominate the slate of tine Studies Conference, of which she Association for (a) theanlloullcewenl oUlie results of , candidates for the Board of Directors the election oj the Board of Directors, Nominating \ elected to serve as Directors unti11995. was president in 1987-88. She has Committee and Qffkers and (l1) the transaction of CAA served on the Board of Directors of the such other business as mlly properly come before the Suggestions for nominations to the Women's Caucus for Art, and she also is Meeting sl/all be held ill conjunction with the Annual Board of Directors shall be given to the a member of the National Committee for Conference at a place, and on a date and time, fixed members of the Nominating Committee News Byzantine Studies. She has been the by the Board oj Directors and, unless el.pressly no later than March 15, 1990, in suffi­ recipient of many grants and fellow­ waived, shall be set forth in a Notice o!the Annual cient time for consideration at a spring ships (ACLS, Fulbright, National Meeting whicll shall be sent to all members entitled to Enqowment for the Arts, Ohio Arts Notice at least sixty (60) days prior to the date desig­ meeting of the committee. Council) and, in 1987, of the Award for nated for the Meeting. TIte AlIlIunl Business Mid-Career Achievement of the Meetillg 6\1 a maimif}' vote 1/141/ adopt resolutiQns Nominations by petition that are in Gourna-Peterson is alld deal Witll propo$(lls o(alll/killd cOllcewjng tile addition to the slate of individuals Elected to Board Women's Caucus for Art. She a visit­ aJairs o(tlle Association, In order to illsurecoltsjd­ proposed by the Nominating Committee Thalia Couma-Peterson was elected to ing distinguished professor at Southern eration sucllresolutions must Cll be received in tile shall be in the hands of the chaIr of the the CAA Board of Directors in a special Methodist University, Dallas,Tex. office of tITe Executive Director no later titan 80 days Nominating Committee at least six election held in the fall of 1989 to fill a prior to the Annual Business Meeting' (2) be jn months before the Annual Business vacancy created by the resignation of CAA Receives propel' parliamentaQl (orm' (3) be signed ky at loost Meeting of February 1991 in order to be Mary Schmidt Campbell. 25 members Qjthe Association ill 'iOod standing or Humanities Grant placed on the ballot. Couma-Peterson, who received a The College Art Association was prqposed b1l Board o(Directors' resoluti011' (4) be no more than three llUndred words ill length' and (5) BA and MA from Mills College and a awarded a $1,500 mini-grant from the There will be an information Nancy Frieze, Fall Passing, 1988 deal witll matters relating to the purposes o(tlle Officers PhD from the University of Wisconsin, New York Council for the Humanities to session about the Artists at Giverny Association as set forth in Article II herrill The is professor of art history and museum support opening to the public three of program at the Annual Conference, Preside/lt slmll detennine tile order o(consicieratioll In accordance with By-laws Article VII, director at the College of Wooster, in the art history sessions during the Friday, February 16, 12:15-1:45 p.m. The ofreso{utiollS, Resolutions from the floor will be COll­ Section 4, the Board of Directors at its Wooster, Ohio. Her research and upcoming 78th Annual Conference. The session will be led by Frances Chavez, sidered as time and appropriateness allow, " meeting of April 29, 1989, elected the writing have been concentrated in two sessions, all of which are scheduled for curator of the Reader's Digest art following to serve as officers for the year distinct fields: Byzantine painting and Thursday evening, February 15, collection, who will be joined by past Board of Directors 1990. Their terms will commence contemporary art. She has presented 8:30-11:00 p.m., are "The Columbus jurors and artists who have participated following the Annual Business Meeting: numerous papers at national and Quincentenary and the Art of Latin in the Giverny program. A slate of candidates nominated to Ruth Weisberg, University of Southern international conferences and symposia, America: A Critical Evaluation," chaired serve as Directors until 1994 by the 1990 California, president; Larry Silve~ and her articles have appeared in the by Shifra Goldman and David Under­ Nominating Committee was presented Northwestern University, vice- Art Bulletin, Art Journal, Dll1llbarton Oaks wood; "Refractions of Revolution in to the membership for election by a Papers, Gesta, Storia del Arte, and Arts

eM NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 4 CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 5 French Art, 1775-1816," chaired by JanetSimpson.KansasCity ArtistsCoalition, RonMehlman.AndreZarreGallery,NewYork, He joined the board of the League in 1934 when Kansas City,. Mo., December 7, 1989-January Vivian Cameron and Dorothy Johnson; October 12--November 16, 1989. Recent it was at risk of disbanding. With his backH One-Person 6, 1990. Paintings. and "The World Wars and 20th-Century sculpture. ground in finance, he became treasurer and managed to balance the books. In 1932, with Sylvia Sleigh. Milwaukee Art Museum, Adrian Piper. WiJliams College Museum of Art, Art," chaired by Stephen Polcari. friend and artist Vernon Porter, Mr. Klonis March IS-May 13, 1990. "Invitation to a Williamstown, Mass., January 2O-March 25, The CAA is committed to fruitful Shows by helped to found the Washington Square Voyage," installation and paintings. 1990. "Artworks: Adrian Pipert interaction between scholars, repre­ Outdoor Art Exhibition. sented by the learned societies, and the JanetShafner. Yeshiva University Museum, SOUTH! New York, through February 1990. "Janet public, served by state humanities Artist George Levitine, distinguished scholar of 18th­ Virginia Derryberry. McIntosh Gallery, Shafner: Modem Interpretations of Biblical councils. It seeks to broaden the outlets century French art, professor emeritus and Atlanta, January 26-February 24, 1990. Themes," paintings. forme!;, chairman of the Art Department at the for its scholar-members and, at the same Paintings and works on paper. Members Paula Slark. Prince Street Gallery, New York, University of Maryland, Chevalier de I' ordre time, to build public interest in the December22, 1989-January 17, 1990. des arts et des letlres, member of the Institute humanities. With the support of the "Landscapes." for Advanced Study (1977-78), died in New York State Council for the Hu­ Only artists wllO are CAA memlJers are illcluded WEST! September. Despite treatment for cancer this Walter Askin. Art Gallery, Los Angeles Valley Robert Van Vranken. OK. Hanis, New York, manities/ the CAA is able to demon­ in this listing. When submittingillfonllatioll, past year, he continued to be active both within include /lame of artist, galien; or museum name, College, Van Nuys, Calif., November 29, December9,1989-January6,1990. strate its commitment to helping the department and university as well as on an city, dates of exhibitioll, medium. Please indicate 1989-January 18, 1990. Recent paintings, even more expansive professional scale, writing scholars find a more general audience CAA membership. drawings, and sculpture. articles, editing papers for a volume he was and also is able to demonstrate that a PllOtograplls are welcome lJut willlJe used only Les Barta. uap Gallery, University of the Scott Burton, 1939-1989 learned society of scholars in higher if space allows. PllOtogmplls callilot be retumed. Pacific, Stockton, Calif., February 19-March 9, PHOTO: JERRY L THOMPSON education not only sanctions but 1990. Photocollages. encourages public humanities pro­ Tom Fischer. Downstairs Gallery, University grams. of California, Berkeley, Extension Center, San The format of the three sessions Francisco, February 13-March 23,1990. of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, the MIDWEST! Guggenheim Museum, and the Hirshhorn open to the general public has been "Baylands,1I photographs. Diane Canfield Bywaters. Jan Cicero Gallery, Museum and Sculpture Garden. He has had Buzz Spector. Newport Harbor Art Museum, modified so that each session chair will Chicago,February 16-March 17,1990. Paintings. one-person shows at the BaltimOl'e Museum of be asked to provide a five-minute Newport Beach, Calif., January 21-March 18, Art and the Tate Gallery, London. Last spring, at EUen Lanyon. Printworks Gallery, Chicago, 1990. "New California ArtistXVIl." the invitation of Kirk Varnedoe, director of the introduction to the session, explaining October20-November 25,1989. Monoprintsl, Patricia Tavenner. Davidson Galleries, Seattle, department of painting and sculpture at the the common thread in the individual collage. Julian PreUo/Beriand Hall, New York. December4-22, 1989. IINom de Plume" and Tom Fischer Museum of Modern Art, he curated an presentations, and a five-minute November 14-December 2,1989. "Saffron IIBallroom Dance" series, artistamps. Port of Redwood City, 1986 exhibition of Brancusi's works. This fall a Variations." conclusion discussing the significance of photograph retrospective of his work was organized jointly the panel, followed by a question-and­ Robert Lobe. Cleveland Museum of Art, by the Dusseldorf and Stuttgart museums in answer period. The three sessions will November 28, 1989-January 21,1990. Recent SOUTHWEST! West Germany. be among those audiotaped, with tapes sculpture. Paul SauL Laguna Gloria Art Museum, available for purchase immediately after Florence Putterman. Ruth Volid Gallery, Austin, Tex., January 27-March4, 1990. Louise Dahl-Wolfe, known for her fashion and the sessions. Chicago, September 8--0ctober 24, 1989. Polk Paintings. portrait photography, died on December 11 at Museum, Lakeland, Fla., December 8, 1989- the age of94 at the Allendale (N.J.) Nursing Home. She photographed celebrities and haute George Levitine, 1916-1989 February 25, 1990. MIDATLANTlC! People in couture, helping to shape the look of the Staff News Win Warren. The Castle Gallery, Hyattsville, postwar American woman. She studied at the Md., December 1989-January 1990. Suzanne Schanzer has been appointed San Francisco Institute of Art and took up "A Celebration of Color," paintings. the News photography in 1920. She was married to publishing on culture and the French Revolu­ conference coordinator, replacing Julie William Willis. The Phillips Collection, sculptor Meyer Wolfe, who died in 1985. Her tion, and lecturing at the Boston Museum of Silliman. Schanzer was previously Washington, D.C., December 16, 1989- photographs are in the collections of the Fashion Fine Arts, Columbia University, and the director of placement at the Juilliard Febmary 25,1990. "Contemporary Painting: Institute of Technology;. the Metropolitan University of Delaware. Hewas also organizing an exhibition on Giradet tor the Grand Palais in School. She has a master's degree in William Willis." Museum of Art, and the Museum of Contempo­ public administration from New York In Memoriam rary Photography in Chicago. 1992 and writing a book, Les Ecrits de Girodet~ University and a BA in music from Triosoll, to be published by Macula in Paris. In Lawrence Alloway, British~born art critic, July he delivered his last lecture, liThe Prophetic Juilliard. NORTHEAST! Hans Hartung, European abstract painter, died Rande Barke. E. M. Donahue Gallery, New historian, and curator, died in New York on at the age of 85 on December 7 at his home in Ruins and the French Revolution," with a York, February 1-28, 1990. Recent paintings. January 2 at the age of 63. He was curator at the Antibes, France. A significant figure in the triumphal success at the Sorbonne during the Guggenheim Museum from 1962 to 1966 and art Parisian art world since 1945, he was the Bicentennial commemoration of the French Stephanie Bernheim. A.I.R., New York. critic for TIle Nation from 1963 to 1971. The Revolution. Several of his important publica­ February 20-March to, 1990. Paintings and recipient of the grant prize at the Venice author of many books and articles on contempo­ Biennale in 1960. He studied art history and tions will soon appear in print. His place among small works. raryart, he is said to have coined the term "Pop philosophy at Leipzig University and later at art the major scholars of his generation is secure, Stephen Davis. Center for the Study of art./I At the time of his death, he was working schools in Germany. Before and after World and we will continue to be indebted to his Success, Boston, December9, 1989-February on the catalogue for a forthcoming show of the War II, when he lost a leg in aclion while example and leadership. 1990. Ariel Gallery, New York, December 23, work of his wife, the artist Sylvia Sleigh. fighting in the French Foreign Legion, he was a Born in Russia, he moved with his family 1989-January 13, 1990. student and advocate of abstract painting and to France when the Soviets came to power. After Scott Burton, a sculptor who made a major con­ Nicholas Hill. Greene Gallery, Guilford, ils spontaneous and gestural qualities. In graduating from the Lycee Louis-Ie Grand, he tribution to the development of public art, died Conn., February 3-March 2, 1990. Recent Europe, he was considered to be the counterpart attended the Ecole de Medecine in Paris until of AIDS on December 29 at the age of 50. He is World War II broke out. During the war, he paintings. of American abstract expressionists. best known for smoothly polished granite served first in the French army and then carne to structures that function as furniture as well as Stewart Klonis, executive director of the Art this country and served in the U.S. army and the sculpture. His work has appeared in public Students League from 1946 until his retirement Office of Strategic Services. After the war, he Adrian Piper spaces in a number of North American cities in 1980, died on December 16 at the age of 86. received a master's degree in art history from Vanilla Nightmares #18, 1987 and has been included in exhibitions at the He began studying painting at night at the Boston University and a doctorate from charcoal on newsprint Whitney Museum of American Art, the Institute Harvard lJniversity. He taught at Harvard and COURTESY JOHN WEBER GALLERY. NEW YORK League while working for the Guggenheim Brothers brokerage house in New York.

6 eM NEWS JANUARY iFEBRUARY 1990 CAA NEWS JANUARy/FEBRUARY 1990 7 at Boston University before moving to Organizations December 15, 1989. The ading diredor is of Artists and Artisans, 601 W. Baxter Ave., The Frick Art Reference Ubrary has added to Maryland Barbara Krulik Thirteen staff members were Knoxville, TN 37921; 6151 523-7823. its extensive holdings of 18th-20th century sales He joined the University of Maryland in NORTHEAST/ dismissed in December, including curator of catalogues research material that provides a Grants, 1964 as a full professor and head of the Art Virginia Dajani, formerly of the Municipal Arts painting and sculpture Abigail Gerdts. The Center for Policy and Evaluation Studies unique combination of three diverse sources of Department. Under Dr. Levitine's leadership, Society, has been appOinted executive director in the Arts has been established at Penn State's provenance information: the Art Sales Catalogues, the University of Maryland's art history Glyde Hart has been named public relations University Park campus. The center, housed in 1600-1825 microfiche (based on Lugt's Awards, & of the American Academy and Institute of Arts consultant for the Parrish Art Museum in department gained national recognition. and Letters. She replaces MaIgaret Mills, who is the College of Arts and Architecture, will Rtpertoire), the Witt Collection microfiche, and Retiring as head of the department in 1978 to retiring after 21 years of service to the Academy­ Southampton, N.Y. develop information through research and printouts from the Getty Provenance Index devote time to research and teaching, he taught Institute. analysis to help legislators, educators, and arts database, which includes over l/JOO Italian, Honors u!ttil being named professor emeritus in 1986. Trudy Victoria Hansen, formerly associate managers make policy decisions for the arts. Spanish, and Dutch inventories; largely diredor and curator at Tandem Press, has been At that time he was appointed by the university J. David Farmer, formerly director of the Brent Wilson, currently head of the art unpublished, of European paintings as well as appointed curator of prints and drawings for the or to serve as director of Academic Program University Art Museum, University of education program in Penn State's School of information not incorporated in vol. 1 of The Publication pOlicy: Only grants, awards, 1I0nors Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers received l'y individual or institutional members of Development with European Academic California, Santa Barbara, has been appointed Visual Arts, will head the new center: Index of Thintings Sold ill tile Britisl1 Isles during tile College Art Association are listed. TIle award! Institutions. In 1987 the university held a director of exhibitions for the American University. the 19t1l Centun) 1801-1805. The Frick is the only Columbia University's Research Center for grant/honor amount is not included. Please note symposium in his honor entitled "The Protean Federation of Arts. repository in the U.S. of the printouts from the Life of Emblems after the 16th Century." Papers SOUTHWEST/ Arts and Culture has made a survey of more Getty. Frick Art Reference Library, 10 E. 7Ist St., tIle following format: than 4l)l)O visual, literary, and performing Individual members: dte name, institutional from this symposium will appear soon in part of Margaret S. Moore, formerly assistant curator of Milan R. Hughston has been appointed New York, NY 10021; 212/288-8700. affiliatioll, and title of the grant, moard, or honor. an issue of Emblematica dedicated to him. decorative arts at the Clark Institute in librarian at the Amon Carter Museum in Fort artists as part of its Information on Artists Institutional members: dte name Of organization, In the College Art Association, Professor Williamstown, Mass., has been appointed Worth. He replaces Nancy Wynne, who retired Project. Artists from eight cities-Boston, The Northeast DocumentConseevation Center title Of the grallt, award, or honor, and (optional) Levitine served as chairman of the Porter Prize research coordinator of the John Singer Sargent after 23 years as librarian. Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Minneapolis/ (NEDCC) will move its headquarters to space in Committee in 1968 and as a member of the Catalogue Raisonne, which is being undertaken Saint Paul, New York, Philadelphia, and San Brickstone Square, Andover, Mass., in the use or purpose of grant. Please indicate that you CAA editorial board of the Art Bulletin through 1983. by the Coe Kerr Gallery in New York. MIDWEST/ Francisco---and two rural areas-Cape Cod and spring of 1990. NEDCC, a regional conservation are a member. He was also book review editor for Art Journal. Beverly Lamb, formerly director of the Harriet western Massachusettes-responded to 102 center, provides paper conservation services to Dr. Levitine's publications include Mary Prevo, formerly deputy director of the Beecher Stowe House, has joined the staff of the questions about the time and money they spent museums,libraries, and historical organizations numerous articles, some of which are as Percent for Art Program of the New York City Cincinnati Art Museum as coordinator of on their al"It their needs and resources in areas that lack in-house facilities and expertise. important as his books, on Goya, emblems, and Department of Cultural Affairs, has joined the programs for the Department of Museum such as health care and insurance, their Individuals French art from the 16th to the 19th century. He Art and Architecture Thesaurus of the J. Paul Education. Other Cincinnati Art Museum staff knowledge and use of legal and financial gained a reputation as an authority on 18th­ Getty Trust in Williamstown, Mass., as research appointments include Diane Butler, assistant services available to them, their living and work Charles M. Adelman received a grant from the century French art and wrote books on this coordinator for the Multi-Lingual Project. coordinator of public services; Margaret Sambi, space, and their age, sex, education, and income. American Philosophical Society toward comple­ subject, including TIle Sculpture of Falconet A report has been compiled for each of the ten Deborah Curtiss, assistant curator of museum education; and founder of Deep See tion and pUblication of Swedish Excavations (New York Graphic Society, 1972), Tile Dawn of locations. For information: Joan Jeffri, DirecloIi MIDWEST/ Diane Bachman, costumedepartment PHOTO: HUGH SUTHERLAND Conducted by Arne Furmnark at Simla, Cyprus, Bollemianism: The Barl'u Rebellioll and Primitivism Research Center for the Arts and Culture, 615 Mid-America Arts Alliance has named Mary preparator. Promotions at the museum include 1947-48. in Neo-Classical France (Penn State, 1978), Dodge Hall, Columbia University, New Yor~ Kennedy McCabe, formerly assistant director of Mark Buten to associate registrar, Cecie Girodet-Tn'oson: An Iconographical Study NY 10027; 212/ 854-4331. the Kansas Arts Commission, assistant direclor Chewning to associate curator of decorative Michael Aurbach, assistant professor of fine (Garland, 1978), and All 'Alba della Boheme for exhibit development of ExhibitsUSA. The arts, Elizabeth Coombs and Lucy Wolfgang­ arts at Vanderbilt University- was awarded an (Nova Italia Scientifica, 1985). The Curder Gallery of Art, Manchester, N.H., focus of the program is contemporary American Smith to associate conservators, and Jane Avril Art Matters Inc. grant for his work in sculpture. He was named a knight of France's Order has announced plans to open the Isadore J. and art, especially that of underserved and under­ to fund-raising event coordinator. of Arts and Letters for his contributions to Lucille Zimmerman House, designed in 1950by recognized cUltural groups including Native Annette Dixon was awarded a prize by the French culture. In July he Went to France at the Frank Lloyd Wright. The house, which is listed Americans, Hispanics, and Afro-Americans as Istituto per la Storia dell' Arte Lombarda and the invitation of Franliois Mitlerand to attend on the National Register for Historic Places, will well as a variety of folk cultures. Lions Club Milano al Cenacolo for one of the ceremonies for the 200th anniversary of the open to the public in October 1990 after com~ three best dissertations in the history of French Revolution. pletion of the first of a multiphase preservation Lombard art. The University of Maryland has estab­ and restoration program. Museums and Galleries lished the George Levitine Art History Irma B. Jaffe was awarded the Virgiliana Medal Endowment with the University of Maryland Programs, Deep See offers lectures, workshops, courses, by the Istituto della Enciclopedia ltaHana in Foundation (College Park, MD 20742). In honor MIDATLANTIC/ seminars, and consultation in the area of visual recognition of her scholarly contributions to of Professor Levitine, an anonymous gift of Christina Orr-Cahill resigned as director of the education. Presentations are from one hour to a Italian-American Culture. $50lKJO has been pledged in matching funds as New & semester, developed for specific audiences. The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, on an incentive toward the development of the December 18 after a six-month controversy over program was started by Deborah Curtiss, a Diane ChalmersJohnson, College ofCharles~ endowment, which will be used to support her decision to cancel an exhibition of photo­ painter, author, and art educator from ton, S.c., has been awarded the first Nathan and research and teaching in art history dear to graphs by Robert Mapplethorpe.ln late spring Revised Philadelphia. For information: Deep See Project, Marlene Addlestone Chair in Art History at the George Levitine's heart and vision.-by Doug she will assume the directorship of the Norton 2967 School House Lane #101, Philadelphia, PA college. The award supports her work on Farqullar, ellair, Department Of Art History, Gallery and School of Art in West Palm 19144;215/438-5759. TheSociety for Photographic Education (SPE) American Symbolist art and her design of a University of Marylal1d, College Park Beach,Fla. has moved form Albuquerque, N .M., to the study program at the college on the history of A new Smithsonian exhibition hall, called the The American Association of Artists and University of Colorado, Boulder. SPE is a art and culture of the Charleston area. British artist William Scott, acclaimed for his Experimental Gallery, is housed in the Arts and Claudine K. Brown, formerly assistant director Artisans (AAAA), founded in November 1989, national membership organization that provides still-life paintings and draWings, died at his Industries Building on the National Mall The for government and community relations at the is a nonprofit corporation with the mission of a forum for the discussion of photography as a New Jersey photographer Linda Troeller has home in Somerset, England, on December 28 at gallery presents exhibitions that" push the edges Brooklyn Museum, has been appointed interim improving, through the collective efforts of its means of creative expression and collural been named recipient of the 1989 Ferguson the age of 76. of our museum experience and take chances in director of the African American Presence on members, the climate in which artists and insight. The new address is Campus Box 318, Award, presented by the Friends of Photogra­ their choice of SUbject matter or viewpoint." The the Mall project, a new project at the Smith­ artisans exhibit and sell their work. The goals of University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309; phy to an artist who has demonstrated design and purpose of the gallery includes the sonian that will examine the nature of the the association are: (1) to establish an extensive 303/492-0588. excellence in and commitment to the field of ability to showcase and reinstall provocative Academe African American presence on the National Mall network in order to facilitate the compilation of creative photography. Troeller was selected for exhibitions that have been created in other in Washington, D.C. complete and meaningful data on shows, so that The Donald Robertson Chair of Latin her work TB-AlDS Dian), a series of 18 museums and nonprofit cultural organizations, NORTHEAST/ artists will be able to make informed application American Art has been established at Tulane photocollages focusing on the pUblic and as well as those created by individuals. The Francis V. O'Connor has been named the NORTHEAST/ decisions; (2) to increase sales and maintain high University. The first endowed chair anywhere private horrors of AIDS and its early 2Oth­ program is actively seeking exhibition ideas. For Robert Sterling Clark visiting professor of Edgar Peter Bowren has resigned as director of quality by reducing the number and size of dedicated to the SCholarly study of pre­ century counterpart, tuberculosis. information: Kimberly Camp, Director, art history at Williams College for the 1990 the Harvard University Art Museums, effective shows; (3) to improve terms and practices Columbian and Hispanic-American art, the Experimental Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, spring term. June I, 1990. through collective negotiations with promoters; chair honors the late Donald Robertson, a and (4) to obtain benefits, such as health 51302, Washington, DC 20560; 202/786-2850. distinguished scholar and recipient of the first John Dobkin resigned as director of the insurance, for members at group rates. For PhD ever awarded in Mesoamerican pre­ National Academy of Design, N.Y., effective membership information: American Association Columbian and early Colonial art (Yale, 1956).

8 CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 eM NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 9 I

Vienna, Vienna School of Applied Art, October Hindu Temples: Form and Context in Indian in society (including the church), and did the 1989-June 1990; Peter A. Mark, Middlesex To Attend Art"; Jill Lloyd, University College, London, holy image have a status of its own distinguish­ Community College, Middletown, Conn., for "Eva Hesse: A Critical Study"; David Lubin, Conferences able from religiOUS painting in general7 For research on Senegambian horned initiation Colby College, "Picturing a Nation: Art and Society for Photogra ph ic Education ann ual infonnation: The Byzantine Symposium, masks, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences conference, Santa Fe, N.M., March 15-18, 1990. Social Change in 19th-Century America";Jann Dumbarton Oaks, 1703 32nd SI. NW, Washing­ Sodales, Paris, October 1989-June 1990; Michael Matlock, Harvard University, "Desires to The theme of the confe['ence is "Enchanted & Symposia ton, DC 20007. D. Morris, Brooklyn, N.Y., to lecture on Censor: Female Spectacles, Aesthetics, and ( Lands/Contested Turfs: Photographic drawing and sculpture through bas-relief, Education and Imagemaking in the 19905." For Moral Vision in 19th-Century France"; Mary Conservation Grant Seminar, Chicago Bilkent University;. Ankara, September infonnation: SPE, Campus Box 318, University Pardo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Conservation Center, May 8, 1990, will focus on 1989-June 1990; Jeffrey M. Muller, Brown Repeat listings are indicated by all asterisk. of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309; 303/492·0588. Hill, "The Parts of Painting, 1400-1550: Cennini grant writing. fund raising. and management University;. for research on Van Dyck's history to Vasari"; Nancy Stieber, University of Reinventing the American Scene, a symposium strategy for conselVation programs. Registration paintings and the discourse of art, Western Massachusetts, Boston, "20th-Century Urban fee: $125.00. For intormation: Barry Bauman, at the Newark Museum, will be held March European Regional Research Program, Planning and the Pictorial Representation of the Director, Chicago Conservation Center, 730 N. 16-17 in conjunction with the exhibition September 1989-March 1990; Diane M. City in the Netherlands"; Joan Weinstein, Calls for Papers Franklin SI., Suite 701, Chicago, IL 60610; 312/ "Against the Odds: African-American Artists O'Donoghue, Swarthmore College, for research University of Pittsburgh, "A Social History of 944-5401. on the imagery on Indus seals, National Modern German Art, 1898--1937"; Jean C. 16th Annual Byzan tine Studies Conference and the Harmon Foundation." The symposium focuses on how artists who worked during the Museum and Archaeological Survey of India, Wilson, State University of New York, will be hosted by the Walters Art Gallery, • Art and Coercion is the topic of the first 19205 and 1930s defined national and racial New Delhi, th['ee months; David Alan Binghamton, "From Workshop to Marketplace: Baltimore, October 25-28, 1990. The conference conference of the Comite Mexicano de Historia character in the depiction of American types Robertson, Dickinson College, for research on Painting in Late Medieval Bruges." is an annual forum for the presentalion and del Arte, May 16-18, 1990, in Mexico City. The and themes. Registration fee: $15.00. For the altarpieces of Michael Pacher (fl. 1467-98), discussion of papers on every aspect of conference will explore the following themes: University of Munich, October 1989-AprilI990; Senior Researc11 Grants: Mieke Bal, University of Byzantine history and culture and is open to all, information: Jane Rappaport, Newark Museum, 49 Washington St., Newark, 0710 1-0540; art as persuasive language; the conlrol of artistic Gil R. Smith, Ball State University, for research Rocheste~ "Reading Rembrandt"; Eve Blau, regardless of nationality or academic status. NJ 2011 596-6637. production by external agents; and the history on Rome as a center for the education of Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal, Send abstract to: Nancy Patterson Sevcenko, 6 of art as an exercise in power: For information: Europeanarchitects, 1675-1775, University of "The Architecture of 'Red Vienna,' 1919-34"; Follen St., Cambridge, MA 02138; 617/492-0643. Lericia L6pez Orozco, Instituto de Investiga­ Iconography at the Crossroads, a conference Rome, January-July 1990; Richard Tobin, Jeffrey Meikle, University of Texas, Austin, Deadline: postmllrkedby Milrch 16, 1990 (March 2 if ciones Esteticas, Centro Cultural Universitario, Denison University, for research on Alberti's de hosted by the Index of Christian Art, will be "An InterdiSciplinary History of Plastic in submitted from abroad). UNAM, Delegaci6 Cyoyoacan, Mexico, DF Pictura and Euclid;s optics, University of Rome, held at Princeton University, March 23--24. The American Culture"; Anthony Molho, Brown Mexico;5/548-4117. September 1989-June 1990. University. "Material Culture, Marriage, and 47th International Congress of Americanists, intention is to review the ways in which scholars of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Matthew Kangas Historical Memory in Late Medieval and Early Tulane University, New Orleans, July 7-11, ""The Structure of the Hagia from the Age of interpret the subject mailer of works of art. The Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation has awarded ModernFlorence"; NancySteinhardt, 1991. The ICA has since 1875 served as a forum Justinian to the Present, Princeton University, Participants will include both art histotians and grants to 22 organizations in support of 1989-90 University of Pennsylvania, "Liao: Imperial Art for scholars dedicated to the study of the May 18--19, 1990. The conference will bring scholars of other diSciplines, and the aim is to regional visual arts residencies. Projects and Architecture." Americas. Specialized symposia on recent and together scholal:'S and professionals from present a varied range of approaches to the involving 21 artists and 6 critics, sponsored by continuing research are presented at the different diSciplines to exchange ideas and new study of the direct and indirect meaning of Awards to Multiple nonprofit arts organizalions in the mid-Atlantic Publicatiolls: Norman Bryson, Michael Ann congress. Proposals for symposia are welcome. information pertaining to historical background, images. In addition, a number of papers will region, were selected by a panel of artists, Holly, and Keith Maxey, eds., Visual TIleory: For information: Sec['etariado leA 1991, Roger physical environment, design, and the state of Individuals examine some of the theoretical and methodo· curators and administrators. Recipients who are Pail/tillg alld Interpretation, Polity Press; Jerry Thayer Slone Center for Latin American Studies, building structure over time. The longer range CAA members are: Patricia Leighten, Newark, Grant and Douglas Anen, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118- logical issues pertaining to iconographic j' The Manufacturers Hanover Art/World Shaker Furniture goal of the colloquium is to provide a sound Del., for a critic residency in photography at the 5698; 504/865-5164. 1, research. For further information: Brendan Awards for Distinguished Newspaper Art lvIakers: TIle Life alld Work 0128 Craftsmen, Deadline: ApnJ 1990. basis for a study that will use data from on-site Print Club, Philadelphia; Patricia Malarcher, University Press of New England; David Grose, Cassidy, Index of Christian Art, Department ot Criticism is given to journalists for their dynamic-instmmenlation and archaeology to Englewood, N.J., for a multidisciplinary critic Art and Archaeology, Princeton University, perceptive analysis of issues pertaining to art, Early Ancient Glass: TIJeRod-Formed, Core-Formed, Symposium in conjunction with the exhibition guide the development of a comprehensive reSidency at the Torpedo Factory Art Centet:, and Cast Vessels and Olljects from tlte Lale Bronze Russian Painting 1965-1990 at the Columbus Princeton, NJ 08544-1 018; 609 /258-6363. photography, and architecture. CAA member numerical (computer) structural model. For Alexandria, Va.; Jerome Meadows, Hyattsville, Age to the Early Ronum Empire, 1600 B.C. to A.D. Matthew Kangas of the Seattle Weeklt/was Museum of Art, October 12-13, 1990. Included intormation on the program, registration, Md., for an artist residency in sculpture at the 50, Toledo Museum of Art; Hans-Erich Keller in the exhibition will be works by Tyshlet; • Annual Symposium on the History of Art, among the seven recipients. . April 6-7, 1990, held by the FrickColledion and publication, and lodging: R. Mark, School of Snug Harbor Cultural Center, Staten Island; Jan and Margret Alison Stones, Wace: La Vie de Bulatov, Infante, Nemukhin, Zhilinsky, and Architedure, Princeton University, Princeton, Mehn, Washington, D.C., for an artist reSidency Max Niemeyer Verlag; Jean­ Nazarenko. Proposals for papers on all aspects the Institute of Fine Arts of New York Univer­ Each year some 1,000 Americans are awarded sainte Marguerite, NJ08544. in printmaking at the School 33 Art Center, Claude Lebensztein, of Russian visual art, 1%5-90, will be consid­ sity. For information: Institute of Fine Arts, New Fulbright grants to leclure or conduct research U/le Estlletique de la tacite: Baltimore; Faith Ringgold, New York, for an 1lltrodll~tion ilIa ered. Presentations not to exceed 20 mins. Send York University, 1 E. 78th 51., New York, NY abroad. The following CAA members are nouvelle methode d'Alexandre 4oMargaretofYork,Simon Marmion,and the artist reSidency in fiber at the Fabric Workshop, Cozeus, Editions du Limon; John H. Oakley, one-page abstract to: Myroslava Ciszkewycz, 10021; 212/772-5800. among the 1989-90 recipients: Lynne A. AlJen­ Visions of Tondal, a symposium sponsored by Philadelphia. Philipp von Zabern; Michael History of Art Dept., Ohio State University, 100 Haberman, Mason Gross School of the Arts TI,e PIliale Ftiillter, the Department of ManUSCripts of the J. Paul O'Hanlon, Reading the Skill: Adornment alld Hayes Hall, 108 N. Oval Mall, Columbus, OH "Smithsonian Seminars: African Art,April Rutgers University, to lecture on the edUcational 24-27,1990; 150 Years of American Art, April Getty Museum, June 22-24, 1990. Speakers will The Getty Grant Program awarded the Display amollg tile Waghi People ill Higliland New 43210-1318;614/292-7481. Deadline: May 1, 1990. discuss aspects of the art of Mannion and of the exchange of graphic arts techniques and ideas, 24-27, 1990; 20th-Century Furniture, April following grants between July I, 1988, and Guinea, British Museum Publications; Mary illuminated books of Margaret of York, duchess Surikov Art Institute, Moscow, spring 1990; 3O-May4, 1990; French Impressionism,May June3O,1989: Sheriff,Fragollard: Artalld Eroticism, University 4oRomanHumanism,1471-1527:An of Burgundy, including the Visions of Tondal. Anthony M. Alofsin, University of Texas, 18-20, 1990. For information: Amy Warner or of Chicago Press; John Williams, TIle Illustrated Interdisciplinary Approach, June4-July 29, The symposium will be held in conjunction with Austin, tor research on Austrian art and MaryBethMullen,202!357-4700. Postdoctoral Fellowships: Hilary Bailon, Beatu~~ Harvey Miller Publishers; Robin K. 1990, at the American Academy in Rome. The architecture in America, 1876--1914, Academy of the exhibition The Visioll$" oj Tondal a"d Columbia Universit)'i "The Architecture of Wright, ed., seminarwilJ study Roman humanism in its Fine Arts, Vienna, March-June 1990; Sheila A Time of Gatherillg: Native Heritage MaJ/USt:ripts from tile Time Of Margaret Of )brk at Louis Le Vau"; S. Shelby Brown, Los Angeles, University of Washington heyday from the accession of Pope SOdus Great Power Ethnic Politics: TheHabsburg Bonde, Brown University, for research on the of Washington State, IV the Getty Museum. For information: Dept. of "The Art ofthe Arena"; Ren~e Burnam, Press. Empire and the Soviet Union is the theme of fortified churches of Languedoc, Western (1471) to the Sack of Rome (1527), focusing on Manuscripts, J. Paul Getty Museum, Box 2112, Springfield, Va., "The Stained Glass of the 12th annual symposium of the Center for European Regional Research Program, the literary and artistic (and archaeolOgical) Santa Monica, CA 90406. Tuscany";ElizabethChilds-Johnson,New interests of the humanists. Participants should Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota, April September 1989-March 1990; Frank Van Deren The symposium will follow immediately York, "Ritual Art of Ancient China: Imagery and TIle Getty Grallt PI'O;;"7amllas puNished a list of have a reading knowledge of Latin or Italian 26-28, 1990. For information: Center for Coke, Arizona State University, to lecture on the the 5th Interdisciplinary Conference on Function"; Helene Eristov, Centre National de grants awarded between October 1, 1984-June 3D, (preferably both). Candidates selected for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota, 712 history of 19th- and 20th-century photography;. Netherlandic Studies to be held aIVCLA, June la Recherche Scientifique, Paris, "La documenta­ participation in the seminar will receive a Social Science Bldg., 267 19th Ave. S., Minneapo­ University of Auckland, New Zealand, 1988. Contact Tile Getty Grant Program, 401 19-22, 1990, under the auspices of the American tion pompeienne a travers les gravures des Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1000, Santa MOllica, CA stipend of$3,SOO. For information: Phyllis Pray lis, MN 55455. June-September 1989; Dorothy R Glass, State Association tor Netherlandic Studies. For XVIII et XIX sieeles"; Maribeth Graybill, 90401-1455; 2131393-4244 for a copy. Bober, Dept. of the History of Art and Classical University of New York, Buffalo, for research on information: Ma['griet Lacy, Minard 221, North University of California, Berkele)'i "Narrative Archaeology, or Julia Gaisser, Dept. of Latin, ""Annual ByzantineSymposium, Dumbarton Romanesque sculpture of the pilgrimage roads Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 58105. Structure in 12th-Century Japanese Handscroll Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010. Oaks, April 27-29, 1990, will focus on the from France to Rome, Western European religious, political, and social context of the holy Paintings"; Susanne Kuechler, Johns Hopkins Access to the Arts, a conference sponsored by Regional Research Program, February -July image. 17 papers dealing with material ranging University;. "Memory and Imagery: Image­ NEH Summer Institutes. The National Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, will be held in 1990; Evelyn M. Kain, Ripon College, for from antiquity to the late Middle Ages and from Production and Social Exchange in the Endowment for the Humanities will be offering Washington, D.C., July 9-10, 1990. The aim of research on women artists in fin-de-siecle Syria to France will attempt to answer two basic Malangan Culture of New Ireland, Papua New 51 seminars for college teachers during the the conference is to educate participants in ways questions: What was the use of the holy image Guinea"; Mary Linda, JerseyCit)'i N.J., "Kalinga summer of 1990. For a complete list and general to make their organizations more accessible 10 information, ca1l202! 786-0463.

10 CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1m CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 11 disabled and older people. For information: Mid or allied professional, such as a curato~ life of the University and the Henry Moore Atlantic Arts Foundation, 11 E. Chase St., Suile scientist, or art historian, to spend four to eleven Centre for the Study of Sculpture, to use the The Council for International Exchange of The Nantucket Island School of Design and ""Vermont Studio Colony offers four- and eight­ 2A, Baltimore, MD 21202; 301/539-6656. months in residence in the Art Conservation Centre's research facilities, and to read at least Scholars has announced the opening of the Artsoffersan artists' interdiSciplinary week residencies for visual artists and writers in Department to commence after August 1, 1990, one paper a year connected with his or her competition for 1991-92 Fulbright Grants in residency program from September through November and January through April. For '-MicrocomputersinSlideandPhotograph and end by June 30, 1991. The stipend is $2,500 research. Send the following: (1) name, address, research and university lecturing abroad, About June. The program is designed to provide artists application: Vermont Studio Colony, P.O. Box Collectio05, a workshop sponsored by Fine Arts per month The fellow VI.'illundertake, alone or phone number; (2) cv listing educational 1,000 grants are available for periods ranging in the fields of photography, painting, sculpture, 613, Johnson, VT05656; 802/635-2727. Continuing Education at the University of with faculty colleagues, a publishable study or background, profeSSional experience, and from three months to a yeat:. There are openings ceramics, textiles, multimedia, new media, A pplications reviewed monthly. Deadline: open, Texas, Austin, July 11-14, 1990, for professionals research project of significance in the conserva­ publications; (3) brief outline of research in over 100 countries, and, in many regions, the writing, music, and performance with a setting in visual resource management. The workshop tion field and will be required to interacl wilh proposal, not to exceed two pages; (4) two opportunity exists for multicountry research. to work undisturbed at their own pace using will address such areas as potential automation the department faculty and students in a way confidential letters of recommendation to Head Fulbright awards are granted in virtually all NISDA's facilities, Residents are provided with Awards in visual resource collections; introduction to that benefits the instructional program, For of the Dept. of Fine Art, The University, Leeds diSCiplines, and scholars in all academic ranks a private housekeeping cottage in Nantucket hardware and software; demonstrations of infonnation: Director, Art Conservation Dept., LS2 9n: England. are eligible to apply. Applications are encour­ and studio space at NISDA's Bam in Wauwinel. Deadline: .March 20,1990, The Manufacturers Hanover Art/World software programs; and preparing and writing Rockwell Hall 230, Buffalo State College, 1300 aged from retired faculty and independent Residencies are from one to eight months. Fee Awards for Distinguished Newspaper Art proposals. Registration is limited. For Elmwood Ave., Buffalo, l\i'Y 14222. Deadline for Arts Midwest will award $125,000 in fellow­ scholars. Application materials will be available ranges from $650-$750, depending on length of Criticism recognize newspaper art and architec~ information: Fine Arts Continuing Education, initial application: Mflrc111, 1990. ships to eligible painting and works on paper in March 1990 from Council for International stay. Financial assistance is available. For University of Texas, FAB 2.4, Austin, TX 78712; Exchange of Scholars, 3400 International Drive, ture critics. Submissions of articles published in artist<; through the 1990-91 Arts Midwest/NEA application: NISDA Artists' InterdiSciplinary 1989 are being accepted. For entry form: Jane 512/471-8862, TheSouthern ArtsFoundation sponsors Regional Visual Arts Fellowship Program. This Suite M-500, Washington, DC 20008-3097; 202/ Residency Program, P.O. Box 1848, Nantucket, Wesman Public Relations, 928 Broadway, New regional visual arts fellowships for artists who program gives recognition to artists of 686-7866,DeadIilles: June 15, 1990-Jalluary 1, MA 02554; 508/228-9248. Deadline for June York. NY 10010. Deadline: March 31, 1990. '-The NortheastDocumentConservation are residents of Ala., Fla., Ga., Ky., La., Miss., exceptional merit and helps to promote 1991, depending on country. residency: March 1, 1990. Center! a nonprofit regional conservation cente~ N.C., S.c., or Tenn.; have created a substantial midwestern artists throughout the country, The Ferguson Award is a $2,000 award given invites applications for its newly expanded body of work; have established a solid Twenty-five awards of $5,000 each will be made The Getty Grant Program offers a wide variety The Ucross Foundation Residency Program annually by the Friends of Photography to a training program in preservation microfilming. reputation; and are holding other jobs but to professional visual artists living and working of grants to institutions and individuals in art provides individual work space and living photographer who has demonstrated excellence Participants will learn how to plan microfilm pursuing a serious artistic commitment to in II!., Ind., Iowa, Mich., Minn., N.D., Ohio, S.D., history and the humanities for research, archival accommodations to artists and scholars to and a commitment to the field of creative projects, develop speCifications, and write painting and works on paper (this year's or Wis. who have not received a fellowship from projects, publications, cataloguing of collections, concentrate on theirideas, theories, and works. photography. For guidelines for the 1990 award, contracts with vendors; they will obtain hands­ media). For application and information: the NEA.In addition to the award, fellowship conservation, and other areas. Specific Residencies range from two weeks to four send #10 SASE: Grants, The Friends of on experience in operating a camera and Southern Arts Federation, 1293 Peachtree SI. artists will participate in a special program infonnation about the types of grants offered months. For information: SASE to ReSidency Photography, Ansel Adams Center; 250 Fourth inspecting completed film. Five-day intensive NE, Suite 500, Atlanta, GA 30309; 404/874-7244. designed to encourage exhibitions and and eligibility requirements is available in the Program, Up, Ucross Route, Box 19, Clearmont, St., San Francisco, CA 94103. Applications, microfilm training workshops will be held in Deadline: Marcil 1,1990, purchases of their work. For application: Arts Grant Program's brochure, which is available in WY.82835. Deadline: March 1, 1990,forspling consisting of a slide portfolio and appropriate Andover, Mass., in March and August 1990. A Midwes~ 528 Hennepin Ave., Suite 310, English, French, Italian, German,and Spanish. seSSlOn, support materials will be accepted from three-day workshop will be held at the The Walter Read Hovey Memorial Fund Write: The Getty Grant Program, 401 Wilshire Minneapolis, MN 55403; 612/341-0901 (after April 2-\3, 1990, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Award of the Pittsburgh Foundation, estab­ 6:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. or weekends to leave your Blvd., Suite 1000, Santa Monica, CA 90401. '-The MacDoweU Colony offers residencies to January 23-25, 1990. Registration: $250 for lished to help advance the professional careers name and address). Deadline: .Marc1130, 1990, European applicants: Getty European Office, 13 professional and emerging artists (composers, Andover; $150 for Philadelphia. For informa_ of graduate students in the visual arts, offers a rue Casimir Peder, 75007, Paris, France. writers, visual artists, film/video artists, tion: Mary Elizabeth Ruwell, Northeast graduate-level fellOWShip in art history or a Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral interdisciplinary). Colony fellows receive room, Calls for Entries Document Conservation Center, 24 School St., related field. The award is approximately Fellowships in the History of Art. Dissertation ThePrintmaking Workshop, an artist-run board, and the exclusive use of a studio. The Andover, MA 01810; 508/470-1010. $2,500. The awardee may choose to study at the fellowships are offered to predoctoral candi­ cooperative and printmaking studio, is seeking average length of a residency is six weeks. For Listillgs 1/ave lIot been screened, so artists should school in which he or she is currently enrolled dates at American universities. Applicants must interns and monitors for the program. The information: Admissions Coordinator, The cOllsider making inquiries llefore submitting or at another qualified institution. For applica­ be nominated by their art history departments, intern/monitor program provides young people MacDowell Colony, 100 High St., Peterborough, materinls, partit.-uZarly wilen a large fee is required. lion and information: The Pittsburgh Founda­ limited to one applicant per department Ten with an interest in the visual arts and arts NH 03458; 603/924-38860r 212/966-4860, Due to limited space, the names of jurors have not tion, 30 CNG Tower, 625 Liberty Ave., stipends of $10,000 each will be awarded, management with hands-on experience. Interns Dendlines: April 15, 1990, forfall-willtel~ Sepletuller been listed. Pittsburgh, PA 15222; 412/338-2661. Deadline: Consult your art history department advisor for are given assignments that encompass artistic 15,1990,forwillter-sprillg. MarcIl 1,1990. infonnation. Deadline: March31, 1990. and administrative duties varying according to American Institute of Architects Architectural the interests, aplitudes, skills, and work ""The Millay Colony for the Arts,located on a Photography Competition. Top 54 entries will Summary of Upcoming National Endowment Women's Studio Workshop is looking for experiences. Monitors work directly with the 600-acre National Historic Landmark site in be exhibited at the 1990 AlA National Conven­ Opportunities printers, serve as assistants in printmaking tion in Houstonrand images for the 1992 AlA for the Humanities deadlines: Faculty Graduate interns to work as studio assistants during its Austerlitz, N.Y., offers one-month residencies Study Program for Historically Black'Colleges Summer Arts Institute consisting of nine weeks classes, and supervise the general operations. for artists. The 400-sq-ft artist's studio has a 12- calender will be selected from all submitted and Universities, Marc1115, 1990. Summer of intensive workshops in papermaking, book Interns are offered classes in exchange for the foot ceiling and a porch W/ view of a stream and entries. Four cash prizes ($1,000; $700; $500; services they provide and monitors are allowed $300) will be awarded, For eligibility require­ Repeat listings are indicated by an asterisk. Seminars for College Teachers, .Marc111, 1990. arts, silkscreen, and printmaking. Women's woods. No fee. For application and brochure: Summer Seminars for School Teachers, Studio Workshop, P.O. Box 489, Rosendale, NY access to the workshop's facilities. Printmaking The Millay Colony for the Arts, Steepletop, ments and entry fonn: Saint Louis Chapter, Participants, March 1, 1990; Directors, Aplil1, 12472; 914/658-9133. Deadline: April15,1990. Workshop, 55 W. 17th SI., New York,. NY 10011; Austerlitz, NY 12017; 518/392-3103. Next AlA, 911 Washington Ave., #225, Saint Louis, 1990. Office of Challenge Grants, May 1, 1990, 212/989-6125. Deadline: open. deadline: Mily I, 1990, for October-January M063101-1203; 314/ 621-3484, DiviSion of Research Programs, Regrants for Advanced Research Fellowships in India, residencies. Deadline: Milrch 1,1990. Grants and Fellowships International Research,lvfarcll 15, 1990. sponsored by the Indo-U.S. Subcommission on '-ThePoliock-Krasner Foundation awards Guidelines and applications are available from Education and Culture, are offered in all grants to professional artists for their personal, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation Visual Arts The 65th Annual Crocker KingsleyOpen Art The United States Capitol Historical Society either the program or the Office of Publications academic disciplines, except clinical medicine. professional, and medical needs. The amount of Residency Program grants support to organiza­ Exhibition is open to artists residing in invites applications for a fellowship designed to and Public Affairs, NEH, 1100 Pennsylvania Twelve long-tenn (6--12 months) and nine the grant depends on the artist's situation. Equal tions that host residencies of two weeks to three Northern California. The exhibition will be on support research and publication on the history Ave. NW, WaShington, DC 20506; 202/786-0438. short-term (2-3 months) awards for 1991-92 weight is given to the merit and financial need months by indiVidual artists and art critics. Any view at the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, of art and architecture of the United States will be given. Applicants must be U.S. citizens at of the applicant. Grants range from $2,000 to not-for-profit organization in Del., D.C., Md., April21-June 7,1990. Each artist may submit Capitol and related bUildings. Graduate The Henry Moore Bursary in SCUlpture the postdoctoral or equivalent professional $20,000. For an application: Pollock--Krasner N.J., N.Y., Pa., Va., w.v., and the U.S. Virgin one entry, which must be an original work not students and scholars may apply for periods of Studies, sponsored by the Department of Fine level. Awards include $1,500 per month, an Foundation, P.D. Box 4957, New York,. NY Islands may apply to host a resident from the previously shown at the Crocker Art Museum. one month to a full year for a stipend of $1,500 Art at the University of Leeds, offers a resident allowance for books and study/travel in India, 10185; 2121517-5400. Deadline: open. region, but outside the host organization's state. No crafts accepted. Entry fee: $10.00. For entry per month, For information: Dr. Barbara Bursary to scholars in doctoral or postdoctoral and international travel for the grantee. Applications must be made by the host fonn: Crocker Art Museum, 216 "0" St., Wolanin, Curator; Architect of the Capitol, research related to the study of sculpture. Long-term fellows receive international travel organization on behalf of specific residents. Sacramento,CA 95814;916/449-5423. Washington, DC 20515; 2021225-2700. Deadline: Applications are also welcome from museum for dependents; a dependent allowance of Residencies Residencies must take place between November Deadline: Milrch 5,1990. February 15,1990. professionals whose responsibilities and $100-$250 per month; and a supplementary 1, 1990, and December 31, 1991. The program research interests include sculpture. The research allowance. For application: Council for Women's Studio Workshop offers one-week to will fund $2,000 per month for residency fees; Aging: The Process! the Perception. The Forum The State University College at Buffalo Art purpose of the Bursary is to provide a young International Exchange of Scholars, two-month residencies during which perform­ $300 toward project documentation and Gallery is seeking artworks and proposals for an Conservation Department is accepting scholar with a stipend and a travel grant, for up Attn: Indo-American Fellowship Program, ance artists can create and present new work. administration; and cost of one round trip exhibition dealing with aging and the social, applications for its first Getty Senior Fellowship. to three years, to enable research and writing to 3400 International Drive, Suite M-500, Women's Studio'Workshop, P.O. Box 489, between the resident's home and the residency politica~ and philosophical issues that surround The fellowship enables a midcareer conservator be carried out with a view to publication. The Washington, DC 20008-3097; 202/686-4013. Rosendale, NY 12472; 914/658-9133. site. For application: Visual Arts ReSidency the subject. It will have strong educational recipient will be expected to participate in the Deadline: June15, 1990. Deadline: FeL1ruary 15,1990. Program, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, 11 E. components, including lectures, seminars, and Chase SI., Suile 2A, Baltimore, MD 21202; 301/ related events. It will be multidisciplinary in 539-6656. DeadlilJe:July 13, 1990.

12 CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 eM NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 13 scope, including work in all media. Site~specific Northeast and Southeast. The listings include MUSEUM ARCHITECTURE Red Spot Outdoor Slide Theater, a nonprofit *Fifth Centenary ofPiero Della Francesca. Workshops and indoor and outdoor pieces as well as perform­ dates, application deadlines, contact persons, an CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 visual arts organization, organizes four shows a In 1992, on the occasion of the fifth centenary of Schools ance proposals are encouraged. A comprehen~ index of events by state, and listings through year to be projected outdoors. Artists and Piero's death, an exhibition and catalogue are sive document will be published to accompany March 1991. Send $8.50 for each or$15.oo for organizations who are interested in making planned, 1945 closed for several years for expansion the project; articles and papers from all An American Homage to Piero: to both plus $2.00 postage per book to the Arts U niveISity of Kan5as-Brighton Polytechnic complete shows of artist-made slides should the Prese/lt. The exhibition is curated by James and renovation. Mr: Rosenbaum will disciplines (both fiction and nonfiction) are Extension Service, DiviSion of Continuing study abroad program offers an opportunity to write: Red Spot Outdoor Slide Theater;. Inc., 535 Rosen, Terence Dempsey, and Rosemary De talk about the collections and give the welcome. Send no more than 20 35mm slides Education, UniversityofMassachusetls, spend an academic year studying art and design Broadway, New York, NY 10012. Paolo. Send inquiries to: James Rosen, Augusta (film, video, audio tape, or abstracts where Amherst, MA 01003; or call with VISA or at one of England's most respected centers of group a preview of parts of the museum Deadline: open until JUlie 1990. College, Augusta, GA 30910. appropriate), a resume, related support Mastercard numbet;. 413/545-2360. excellence in this field. Brighton is a seaside scheduled to reopen in March. The resort less than an hour from London. Courses material, and SASE: The Forum Gallery. Museum of American Folk ArlAmerica's architectural firm that designed the new An anthology on Japane5e and Chinese Art and in fine art, graphic design, textile and three­ Jamestown Community College, 525 Falconer FlowerGarden Quilt Contest Open to living The Material Culture of American Homes is a addition, Mitchelll GUirgola, has also Cinema will focus on the interaction between dimensional design, visual and perfonning arts, St., Jamestown, NY 14701;716/665~5220, ext. artists worldwide. For information and entry series of ten programs that examine the done an as yet unbuilt addition for the the visual arts and the cinema of Japan and and history of design are offered. Open to 478. Deadlil,e: Milrc1123, 1990. form: America's Flower Garden Quilt Contest, decorative arts and material culture of American Louis Kahn-designed Kimbell Art China. There will be three subsections: (1) the homes, 1650-1920. "Why Things Matter" students from accredited U.S. universities who Museum of American Folk Art, 61 W. 62 St., use of light in the visual arts and cinema; (2) the 14th San Franci5CO International Le5bian and introduces the viewer to the study of material have completed two years of course work in Museum in Fort Worth. The special New York, NY 10023. Den.dlille: January 2, 1991, relative values, and contrasts, between black­ Gay Film Fe5tival, June 15-24, 1990. Held each culture. "Visions of the Orient" discusses the their major with a cumulative 3.0 gpa. For exhibi tion on view at the time of the and-white and color; and (3) the role of year during San Francisco's Lesbian/Gay impact of Asian design on Western goods. "The application: Office of Study Abroad, University CAA visit to Princeton will be "Winslow composition and sculptural form. A wide Freedom Celebration, the festival brings Veneer of Nationhood" shows how material of Kansas, 203 Lippincott Hall, Lawrence, KS Homer in the 1870s," curated by John Calls for variety of topics is possible within each subsec­ together the best in feature, documentary, and culture united a politically and culturally 66045-1731; 913/864-3742. Deadline: February 15, tion, including a concentration on a particular Wilmerding. short films and videos by and about lesbians Manuscripts diverse young nation. Other titles examine the 1990. director's work or an examination of a wider Dennis Cate, director of the and gay men. The festival seeks to develop and refined world of the wealthy in the 18th century, cross-section of films on a particular director's Zirnmerli Museum, will welcome the promote the production, exhibition, and Hendrick Goitzius Studies, Netherlands reason and rationalism in 18th-century British Picture Frames Conservation Workshop work,. or an examination of a wider cross-section appreciation of lesbian and gay films and Yearbook for History of Art, vol. 43, 1992, will America,19th-century America's fascination at Intermuseum Conservation Association, group to Rutgers. The collection of the of films of a particular genre or period. David videos. Awards wiJI be presented to outstand~ focus on Hendrick Goltzius, with Lucus Van with time and memory, ceremonies of domestic Oberlin, Ohio. Instructor Jonathan Thorton, Zimrnerli Museum is especially strong Dresser, University of Illinois, Unit for Cinema ing works in several categories. Formats Leyden Studies (NKJ, vol. 29, 1978) as a modeL It life, and the early 20th-century nostalgia for associate professor, Art Conservation Program, in prints. Its spectacular print galleries Studies, 2090 Foreign Language Bldg., 707 South Buffalo State College, will present a range of accepted include 35mm, 16mm, and super~8 may also be possible to find room for articles on America's colonial past. The programs may be have on pennanent display a renowned Mathews Ave., Urbana, IL 61801; 217 /333~3356' films; NTSC 3/4" and 1/2" VHS video cassettes. the life and work of artists directly associated purchased individually or as a set. Each 30- materials and treatment techniques for the or Linda Ehrlich, University of Tennessee, 501 ' collection of 19th-century French prints with him (e.g., Jacques de Gheyn IT, Jacob minute program consists of over 150 slides, a conservation of picture frames. The workshop is McClung Tower, Knoxville, 1N 37996; 615/974- as well as contemporary prints from the ~;::~!~,f~~~~r;::~~;8:;~5~~~ 14792, San Matham, or Jan Saenredam). The editors are cassette tape, written texts, and a detailed slide deSigned forconservalors, technicians, and 5406. Deadline: Milrc1131, 1990. seeking proposals for contributions, accompa­ list. For infonnation: Office of Advanced museum profeSSionals responsihle for the Rutgers Archives for Printmaking nied by a brief outline and an estimate of Studies, Winterthur Museum and Gardens, conservation of pictures frame. Previous Studios, which was established by Cate National Open Design Competition: Minnesota number of words and illustrations. Send to: Winterthur, DE 19735; 302/888-4649. experience with traditional gilding methods is several years ago to document the Vi~tnam Veterans Memorial. Sponsored by the Editorial Office NKJ, H. Leefland, Rijkspren­ Publications desirable. For application: leA Frames innovative print publication taking place Workshop, Allen Art Building, Oberlin, OH Minnesota Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Inc., tenkahinet, Rijksmuseum, Postbus 50673, 1007 MU5€um Education: History, Theory,and in smaller American shops. Also on 44074; 215/775-7331. and the Minnesota Capitol Area Architectural DD Amsterdam. Deadline for proposals: Artlink, an electronic information center for the Practice, a new anthology of articles on art view will be a show of the work of the and Planning Board, the memorial for those Milrch 1, 1990. visual arts, has expanded its gallery/exhibition museum education, has been published by the who died in the Vietnam conflict will be built on guide to include nonsubscribers and is National Art Education Association. Chapters, Photo Focus III will be held on Whidbey Island, American Impressionist Walter Elmer the grounds of the Minnesota State Capitol in ... Art Journal, CAA. Articles are heing sought requesting press releases from visual arts each by a different expert in the field and Wash., April7-June 7. WorkshOps will cover Schofield and "1990 Masters of Fine Arts Saint Paul. The memorial will include the names from artists and art historians on the general exhibitors worldwide. Three separate guides are; previously unpublished, cover specific areas of such topics as black-and-white photography, Exhibition," which will include some editorial and stock photography, hand~coloring of those killed and missing in action in Vietnam. subject of constructed and multidimensional published: The Americas Guide, covering North, I significance in art museum education: strategic forty works by recipients of the MFA Total budget is approx. $500,000. For informa­ painting. Pertinent articles can examine any Central, and South America; one for Europe and planning for art museum educators; a model for photographs, photography as a business, nature degree from Rutgers University's Mason photography, and color processing. Dennis tion: Minnesota Vietnam Veterans Memorial, aspect of the objectification of painting in this the Mediterranean; and one for Asia and teaching in art museums; educating the art Gross School of the Arts. (Several of the Professional AdvisOli Capitol Area Architec­ century, the exploitation of its shape and surface everyv.'here else. The guides can be searched on­ museum educator; docents; participatory Dimick, National Geographic editot;. will lead a participating artists will be included in tural and Planning Board, Room B-46, State from Cubism to shaped canvas to Neo­ line using a multiple~choice questionnaire that teaching methods; teaching criticism in art workshop on editing your own work and photo Capitol, Saint Paul, MN 55155; 612/296-7138. expressionist relief painting. Particular artists or asks about the location of the exhibit, period of museums; the art museum's role as a teaching editing as a career. For a brochure: Coupeville the New York Area MFA Exhibition, Deadlille: lateAprll1990. movements are pOSSible subjects; thematic the work, types of art shown, and handicapped resourcei the use of video, computers, and other Arts Center, P.O. Box 171PM, Coupeville, WA cosponsored by CAA; see Annual aspects, such as the dynamics of iIIusion/ anti~ accessibility. Send news releases to: Artlink, P.O. technology in museum education; and 98239; 2fJ6/ 678-3396. Conference Update in this newsletter.) Drive Smart, Drive Sober is the theme for the illusion, contradiction/ synthesis, or abstrac­ Box 5595, Station E, Atlanta, GA 30307-0595; evaluation in art museum education. $14.00 for If a minimum of twenty-five people 404/377-2210. Gothic Architecture: A Survey ofMelz 6th annual Herb Lubalin International Student tion/figuration can he investigated. Subject can NAEA members, $19.00 for nonmembers, from: do not sign up for the New Jersey Design Competition, sponsored by International range somewhat beyond painting, e.g., the National Art Education Association, 1916 Cathedral. Summer workshop, May 26-July 14, museum tour, it will be canceled. Typeface Corporation. Students throughout the pictorial aspects of wall sculpture or constructed ART today, the first monthly art magazine on Association Dr., Reston, VA 22091i 1990. The workshop focuses on an ongoing world are invited to submit their visual photography. Artists who work in this area are video cassette that reports on contemporary art 703/86(}.8000. comprehensive survey of Metz cathedral, in interpretations of the theme, which will be invited to contrihute articles based on their in New York museums and galleries, has Lorraine, France. Metz, begun ca. 1215, is among evaluated for quality of the concept as well as authOrity as artists. Contributors have published its premiere issue, an hour-long video The National Directory of Corporate Giving the tallest and lightest Gothic churches in for excellence in design and the use of considerable latitude in the form of their that reports on thirteen museum and gallery profiles over 1,500 companies thai contribute to Europe. Participants will be trained in surveying typography. For a call for entries: lTC, 2 suhmissions, from scholarly articles to personal exhibitions on view in October and November nonprofit organizations. The volume details all methods and receive a comprehensive Hammarskjold Plaza, New York, NY 10017; reflections, pastiches, annotated graphics, etc. 1989 and includes a visit to the studio of giving programs of the companies profiled, introduction to Metz cathedral and to French 212/371-0699.DeadIine: Mlly 18,1990. For information: Curt Barnes, Visiting Artist, William Wegman. Each monthly issue of the including direct giving, foundations, and in­ Gothic architecture from 1140 to ca, 1350. They School of Art, Jenkins Fine Art Center, East video periodical will feature the most significant kind contributions. The directory is available for will help with the detailed measurement and 36th Annual Drawingand Small Sculpture Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858. gallery and museum exhibitions taking place $175.00 plus $2,00 for shipping and handling for analysis of the nave. The workshop includes five Show, October 7-November 4, 1990. All Deadline: Milrch 1, 1990. that month. Visits to artists' studios and homes the first copy ordered and 50¢ for each field trips in northern France and the Rhineland, drawing and sculpture media; no prints; ten of prominent collectors will be included. A one­ additional copy from: Foundation Center, 79 and participants earn six credit hours. For information: Sergio Sanabria, Dept. of Architec­ works max. per personi one slide per drawing, Scotia: American-Canadian Journal 0 f Scottish year subscription, for ten tapes, is $495. Arts Fifth Ave., New Yor~ NY 10003; or call with two slides per sculpture. Entry fee: $10. For Studies is an annual journal of scholarly articles Video News Service Inc., 444 E. 57th St., New VISA or Mastercard number, 1-800/424-983~. ture, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056; prospectus (sent March 1990) and entry form: in all periods and areas of Scottish studies, York, NY 10022; 1-800/B42~2671 or 513/529-6426. Ball State University Art Gallery, 2000 W. including art and architecture. Manuscripts for 212/59~9044. Report on Architectural History Education in University Ave., Muncie, IL47306; 317/285- consideration should conform to guidelines of Art History Departments, prepared by Leon 5242. No SASE, please. Deadliue: May 25,1990. the Chicago Manual of Style. Send submissions FaiIS and Festivals in the Northeast and FaiIS Satkowski of the Department of Architecture, to: J. S. Hamilton, Ed., Scotia, Dept. of History, and Festivals in the Southeast provide University of Minnesota, is available for $3.00 Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA 23529- infonnation to artists and craftspeople seeking from Society of Architectural Historians, 1232 0091; 804/683-3942. Deadlille for submission of direct marketing opportunities throughout the Pine St., Philadelphia, PA 19107-5944. manuscripts for vol. 14 (1990): May IS, 1990.

eM NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 14 CAA NEWS JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1990 15 Classified Ads Studies, CalArts, Valencia, CA 91355; or call: 805/253-7804. Deadline for receipt of applica­ Datebook tions: March I, 1990. The CAA newsletter accepts classified ads of a February 14-17 profes~iol1al or semiprojessiollalllature (sales of libranes, summer relltal or exchange of homes, etc.): Full-Color Exhibition CAA Annual Conference, New York 75¢/word ($l.25/word for nonmembers); $15.00 Announcements--postcards, posters, minimum. catalogue sheets. Outstanding quality. February 28 Samples: Images for Artists, 2543 Deadline for Positions Listing submissions The National Coalition of Indepen­ Cleinview, Cincinnati, OH 45206. dent Scholars seeks members. For a bro­ MarchI chure and application write NelS, 6425 Deadline for submitting material for the Muirlands, La Jolla, CA 92037. Information Marchi April newsletter

Sorceress the medieval drama directed by l Wanted MarchI Suzanne Schiffman and produced by Pamela Deadline for Millard Meiss Publication Berger, is now available on video in both English and French: $29.95 for individuals; Professor Dieter Wuttke, Universitiit Bamberg, Fund applications $49.95 for groups and institutions. Add $2.45 for has undertaken a projecl to edit and publish a postage; Massachusetts residents add $1.50 sales selection of letters by Erwin Panofsky tax. Make check payable to Lara Classics and (1892-1968). In addition to those deposited at send to: Lara Classics, attn Pamela Berger, 9 the Archives of American Art, Professor Wuttke Merrill St., Cambridge, MA 02139. The film is seeks other letters by Panofsky in order to also available farrenlal. Call 6171491-7387. assure the best pOSSible selection in the published edition. Institutions and individuals owning Panofsky letters are kindly asked to California Institute of the Arts, Division contact him directly at the Universitat Bamberg, of Critical Studies, is now accepting applications Postfach 1549, D-8600 Bamberg, FRG; or for postgraduate Mellon Fellowships in through the Center for Advanced Study in the contemporary arts criticism. Stipends are Visual Arts, Washington, DC 20565. $25,000 for the academic year 1990-91. FOI~ info write: Martin Van Buren, Division of Critical

N E w s

College Art Association 275 Seventh Avenue New York. New York 10001

College Art Association Board of Directors

Phyllis Pray Bober; President Ruth Weisberg, Vice-Presidellt Egbert Haverkamp-Begemann, Secretary John W. Hyland, Jr., Honorary Treasurer Barbara Hoffman, HOllomryCoullsel

Pat Adams MarciaHali Elizabeth Boone Elizabeth Johns Phyllis Bramson Samella Lewis Richard Breitell Catherine Lord Judith K. Brodsky James Melchert WallerCahn Debra Pincus Whitney Chadwick DanielleRke Van Deren Coke Faith Ringgold Ruth Fine Linda Seidel Audrey Flack Yoshiaki Shimizu Ofelia Garcia LarrySilver Thalia Gouma- Irene Winter Peterson