2018 Contributors
WILLIAM ATKIN
ROBIN BLYN
ANNA COTTRELL
DOUGLAS CUSHING is a Ph.D. candidate in art history at the University of Texas at Austin. His dissertation, provisionally titled “Interwar Romanticism, Revolution, and Modernism on Display in transition,” treats Eugene Jolas’s little magazine, transition (1927–1938), as a virtual gallery space and meeting place. The project also explores the transatlantic transmission, circulation, and transformation of avant-garde ideas via the periodical, as well as transition's afterlives in the postwar art of the United States. Cushing’s past research includes work on Marcel Duchamp’s relationship with the writings of the Comte de LautrĂ©amont (Isidore Ducasse), beginning before the advent of Dada and Surrealism. Cushing was the 2013–14 Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Prints and Drawings and European Paintings at the Blanton Museum of Art, where he was subsequently curator for that museum’s exhibition Goya: Mad Reason (June 19 to September 25, 2016). Cushing’s most recent awards include the 2017–18 Houghton Mifflin Fellowship in Publishing History, from the Houghton Library at Harvard University, and a University Graduate Continuing Fellowship from the University of Texas at Austin. He is also the 2018–19 Vivian L. Smith Fellow at the Menil Collection in Houston, Texas. [return to article]
ANNE GOODYEAR
CATHERINE HOLLIS
JAMES HOUSEFIELD
JONATHAN JUDD
BETH SAMANTHA KAVKY
ELLIOTT H. KING
MARIANNE KINKEL
CATRIONA McARA
ERIN McCLENATHAN
JAMES W. McMANUS
JANINE MILEAF
FRANCIS M. NAUMANN
GAVIN PARKINSON
BERIT POTTER is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art at Humboldt State University, where she also oversees the Museum and Gallery Studies certificate program. She received her doctorate from New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts in 2015 as well as a M.A. from New York University’s Program in Museum Studies. Her research engages with issues including the display and reception of Latin American and US modern art on the West Coast as well as the use of exhibitions as propaganda during World War II. Her current book project examines the career of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s first director, Grace McCann Morley, and her pioneering advocacy for global perspectives in the study and exhibition of modern and contemporary art. She has held positions in several art institutions, including a research fellowship sponsored by the Terra Foundation for American Art at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Prior to joining HSU, she taught art history and museum studies at numerous institutions, among them Mills College, the San Francisco Art Institute, and University of San Francisco. [return to article]
ROBIN BLYN
ANNA COTTRELL
DOUGLAS CUSHING is a Ph.D. candidate in art history at the University of Texas at Austin. His dissertation, provisionally titled “Interwar Romanticism, Revolution, and Modernism on Display in transition,” treats Eugene Jolas’s little magazine, transition (1927–1938), as a virtual gallery space and meeting place. The project also explores the transatlantic transmission, circulation, and transformation of avant-garde ideas via the periodical, as well as transition's afterlives in the postwar art of the United States. Cushing’s past research includes work on Marcel Duchamp’s relationship with the writings of the Comte de LautrĂ©amont (Isidore Ducasse), beginning before the advent of Dada and Surrealism. Cushing was the 2013–14 Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Prints and Drawings and European Paintings at the Blanton Museum of Art, where he was subsequently curator for that museum’s exhibition Goya: Mad Reason (June 19 to September 25, 2016). Cushing’s most recent awards include the 2017–18 Houghton Mifflin Fellowship in Publishing History, from the Houghton Library at Harvard University, and a University Graduate Continuing Fellowship from the University of Texas at Austin. He is also the 2018–19 Vivian L. Smith Fellow at the Menil Collection in Houston, Texas. [return to article]
ANNE GOODYEAR
CATHERINE HOLLIS
JAMES HOUSEFIELD
JONATHAN JUDD
BETH SAMANTHA KAVKY
ELLIOTT H. KING
MARIANNE KINKEL
CATRIONA McARA
ERIN McCLENATHAN
JAMES W. McMANUS
JANINE MILEAF
FRANCIS M. NAUMANN
GAVIN PARKINSON
BERIT POTTER is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art at Humboldt State University, where she also oversees the Museum and Gallery Studies certificate program. She received her doctorate from New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts in 2015 as well as a M.A. from New York University’s Program in Museum Studies. Her research engages with issues including the display and reception of Latin American and US modern art on the West Coast as well as the use of exhibitions as propaganda during World War II. Her current book project examines the career of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s first director, Grace McCann Morley, and her pioneering advocacy for global perspectives in the study and exhibition of modern and contemporary art. She has held positions in several art institutions, including a research fellowship sponsored by the Terra Foundation for American Art at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Prior to joining HSU, she taught art history and museum studies at numerous institutions, among them Mills College, the San Francisco Art Institute, and University of San Francisco. [return to article]
JACQUELINE SHIN
AIMEE ARMANDE WILSON
SANDRA ZALMAN
AIMEE ARMANDE WILSON
SANDRA ZALMAN