Connecticut College Art History & Architectural Studies

Connecticut College Art History & Architectural Studies A FB page for current students, faculty, friends and graduates of the Connecticut College Department

Congratulations to all our graduates!! And nice pic Kathryn Suplee ‘25 (Art History and Museum Studies).
05/19/2025

Congratulations to all our graduates!! And nice pic Kathryn Suplee ‘25 (Art History and Museum Studies).

Another amazing cohort of Museum Studies Certificate students!! And a special thanks to Laura Nadelberg ‘08 for deliveri...
05/17/2025

Another amazing cohort of Museum Studies Certificate students!!

And a special thanks to Laura Nadelberg ‘08 for delivering an excellent keynote address that framed the current crisis in museum funding and real threats to freedom of speech, with some glimmers of hope that these young brilliant students can help chart a new course for the future of museums.

ANNOUNCING: The Krane Art History Guest Residency Program (Fall 2024) The Department of Art History and Architectural St...
05/20/2024

ANNOUNCING: The Krane Art History Guest Residency Program (Fall 2024)

The Department of Art History and Architectural Studies at Connecticut College is pleased to announce that Brian Wallis and Näkki Goranin have been selected for the Krane Art History Guest Residency Program in fall 2024. Supported with a generous gift from Connecticut College Trustee Jonathan Krane '90, this will be the second year of the Residency Program.

“We are excited to welcome Brian Wallis and Näkki Goranin as participants in the Krane Art History Guest Residency Program,” said Christopher Steiner, Lucy C. McDannel ‘22 Professor of Art History and Anthropology. “By introducing our students to such distinguished scholars and leaders in their field, it is our hope that students will recognize the importance of photography and photo-collecting in the study of art history, and in the social construction of contemporary identities.”

Both Brian Wallis (scholar-in-residence) and Näkki Goranin (collector-in-residence) will work with students in AHI 250: Perspectives on Photography (co-taught this fall by professors Karen Gonzalez Rice and Christopher Steiner) to interpret and curate an exhibition of photo booth portraits and associated ephemera from Goranin’s vast, private collection.*
___

Brian Wallis is Executive Director of The Center for Photography at Woodstock in Kingston, NY. Previously he served as curator for The Walther Collection, a museum of photography with galleries in New York and Germany, where he oversaw numerous exhibitions including "Imagining Everyday Life: Encounters with Vernacular Photography." From 2000 to 2015, Wallis was Deputy Director and Chief Curator at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York City. Under his leadership, ICP presented more than 150 exhibitions, and acquired more than 20,000 photographs for the collection. Wallis formerly worked at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, and the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and as a senior editor of Art in America.

Wallis’s long list of distinguished publications include, Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self; African American Vernacular Photography: Selections From the Daniel Cowin Collection; Weegee: Murder is My Business, and Imagining Everyday Life: Engagements with Vernacular Photography.

He has taught at Yale University, Williams College, New York University, City University of New York and Bard College.
___

Näkki Goranin is a Vermont photographer and writer. Since receiving her Master’s Degree in Photography and Folklore at Indiana University, she has pursued her interest in documentary and photo history. As a Vermont Artist-in Residence (administered by the Vermont Council on the Arts), Goranin received an NEA grant, numerous fellowships and participation in shows in major American and European museums. Her photographs and self-portraits are in the permanent collection of the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York City.

Goranin is the author of the landmark book American Photobooth (W.W. Norton, 2008) which documents the invention, technological evolution, and commercial history of the photobooth with extensive illustrations culled from twenty-five years of collecting. Her work has been featured in the Smithsonian Magazine, People Magazine, GEO, The New York Times, as well as PBS and the BBC.

Last year, works from her collection of vernacular photography were featured in the exhibition "Black Photobooth: From the Collections of Näkki Goranin and Oliver Wasow" at the Center for Photography at Woodstock in Kingston, NY.

===
*The exhibition is scheduled to open in the Charles E. Shain Library on Wednesday, November 13, with a public lecture by Brian Wallis in the Charles Chu Asian Art Reading Room.

For additional information or questions, contact Christopher Steiner ([email protected]).

Congratulations to the 2024 graduates of the Museum Studies Certificate Program!!And thank you to Tanya Pohrt, Curator a...
05/18/2024

Congratulations to the 2024 graduates of the Museum Studies Certificate Program!!

And thank you to Tanya Pohrt, Curator at the Lyman Allyn Art Museum and adjunct professor at Conn College, for delivering a fabulous and inspiring keynote address.

Lucy Sante (2023 Krane Guest Resident in Art History) worked with students today in Professor Steiner's "AHI 250: Perspe...
10/24/2023

Lucy Sante (2023 Krane Guest Resident in Art History) worked with students today in Professor Steiner's "AHI 250: Perspectives on Photography" class to help them interpret and curate American vernacular photographs from the collection of Natalie M. Curley.

The exhibit opens in just 2 weeks in Shain Library, when Lucy Sante will deliver the keynote address at the opening!

The Department of Art History & Architectural Studies is thrilled to announce this upcoming event!"The Working Class Sit...
10/05/2023

The Department of Art History & Architectural Studies is thrilled to announce this upcoming event!

"The Working Class Sits for Its Portrait"
Lucy Sante

Distinguished lecture held in conjunction with the opening of an exhibition of American vernacular photographs from the collection of Natalie M. Curley, curated by students in AHI 250: Perspectives on Photography.

Wednesday, November 8 at 4:30pm
Charles E. Shain Library, Connecticut College

Last week, students in Professor Steiner's   Perspectives on Photography had an opportunity to experiment with a "multig...
09/30/2023

Last week, students in Professor Steiner's Perspectives on Photography had an opportunity to experiment with a "multigraph" trick mirror.

The five-way mirror studio prop was first introduced in the United States in the 1890s. It was a very popular novelty at photo postal portrait studios during the first few decades of the 20th century.

Before using the "multigraph" students read about Marcel Duchamp's fascination with the trick-mirrors from when he first encountered the effect at New York's Broadway Photo Shop in 1917. Students in Professor Steiner's class then had the unique opportunity to experience the trick mirrors themselves.

Students in Professor Steiner's AHI 250 "Perspectives on Photography" class had an opportunity today to learn about "str...
08/31/2023

Students in Professor Steiner's AHI 250 "Perspectives on Photography" class had an opportunity today to learn about "string selfies" - an old method for taking a selfie (popular from about 1900 to 1940) whereby a string is attached to a camera's shutter release and pulled downward to take the photo.

The Krane Art History Guest Residency Program (Fall 2023)The Department of Art History and Architectural Studies at Conn...
06/15/2023

The Krane Art History Guest Residency Program (Fall 2023)

The Department of Art History and Architectural Studies at Connecticut College is pleased to announce that Lucy Sante and Natalie M. Curley have been selected for the Krane Art History Guest Residency Program in fall 2023. Supported with a generous gift from Connecticut College Trustee Jonathan Krane '90, this will be the inaugural year of the Residency Program.

“We are excited to welcome Lucy Sante and Natalie Curley as the first participants in the Krane Art History Guest Residency Program,” said Christopher Steiner, Lucy C. McDannel ‘22 Professor of Art History and Anthropology. “By introducing our students to such innovative scholars and experts in their field, it is our hope that students will recognize the importance of interdisciplinary approaches to learning, and especially the significance of material culture and inherited artifacts in the social construction of knowledge and history.”

Lucy Sante is an award-winning author, a chronicler of early twentieth-century America, a historian of photography, and a peerless critic of visual culture. Her book Folk Photography, a landmark study of American photo postcards, established the importance of vernacular photography “as a significant and underrecognized body of amateur folk art.” Sante has been acclaimed as one of the “handful of living masters of the American language, as well as a singular historian and philosopher of the American experience.” Natalie Curley is an internationally-recognized collector of vintage amateur photography and Americana. Her collection focuses on the themes of identity, dignity, freedom, integration, isolation, community and safety in the earliest decades of the 20th century. Both Sante and Curley will work with students in Professor Steiner’s "AHI 250: Perspectives on Photography" to interpret and curate an exhibition of 19th- and early 20th-century photographs and associated ephemera.*

Lucy Sante was born in Verviers, Belgium, in 1954. Her books include Low Life, Evidence, The Factory of Facts, Kill All Your Darlings, The Other Paris, Folk Photography, Maybe the People Would Be the Times, and Nineteen Reservoirs. She is the recipient of a Whiting Award, Guggenheim and Cullman fellowships, an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Grammy (for album notes), and an Infinity Award for Writing from the International Center of Photography. Sante has contributed to the New York Review of Books
since 1981 and to many other publications. She is recently retired from teaching the history of photography and writing at Bard College, and lives in Ulster County, New York.

Natalie M. Curley is an independent social historian and photo reference dealer based in a historic coal valley outside of Pittsburgh. Trained in the folk art and antique markets she treats images as primary source material, prizing ethnographic insights and poignancy above more traditional art-historical aesthetics. For the past two decades, Curley has aided archives in (re)writing a more inclusive American history by consulting and supplying images that document the experiences of the working poor, female, migrant, immigrant and minority labor populations from the alternative vantage point of their unique lived experience.

*The exhibition is scheduled to open in the Charles E. Shain Library on Wednesday, November 8, with a public lecture by Lucy Sante at 4:30pm in the Charles Chu Asian Art Reading Room. The exhibition closes on Friday, December 15, 2023.

For additional information or questions, please contact Christopher Steiner ([email protected]).

Students in Art History and Museum Studies had an opportunity today to meet with 5 Conn alums working in the museum/art ...
02/10/2023

Students in Art History and Museum Studies had an opportunity today to meet with 5 Conn alums working in the museum/art world. Terrific conversations and great questions!

Address

Connecticut College 270 Mohegan Avenue
New London, CT
06320

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Connecticut College Art History & Architectural Studies posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The University

Send a message to Connecticut College Art History & Architectural Studies:

Share