Assistant Professor in Art History, received funding from the UChicago Arts Council Course Arts Resource Fund and a grant from the UChicago Committee on Japanese Studies.
Assistant Professor in Art History, received the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board’s Fulbright Scholar Award to conduct research in Brazil. She was also awarded the Yale Institute of Sacred Music Fellowship in Music, Religion, and the Arts. She received the College Art Association’s Millard Meiss Publication Grant, as well as grants from UChicago’s Franke Institute for the Humanities and France Chicago Center to organize a conference with Emily Osborn (Associate Professor of African History).
Associate Professor in Art History and Visual Arts, received a grant from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Study in Fine Arts for a series of events concerning art and the civil rights movement in Selma, Alabama. He exhibited Our Literal Speed at the Bergen Triennial in Bergen, Norway, and collaborated with Yuri Albert on What Did the Artist Mean By That? at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art.
the William B. Ogden Distinguished Service Professor in Art History and Cinema and Media Studies, was awarded a grant from the Mellon Foundation for the Chicago Objects Study Initiative, a collaboration between UChicago, the Art Institute of Chicago, and Northwestern University; Art History colleague Christine Mehring was the joint principal investigator on the project.
Assistant Professor in Art History, published The Spectacle of the Late Maya Court: Reflections on the Murals of Bonampak (University of Texas Press, 2013), which she coauthored with Mary Miller.
Professor in Art History, was awarded a grant from the Mellon Foundation for the Chicago Objects Study Initiative, a collaboration between UChicago, the Art Institute of Chicago, and Northwestern University; Art History colleague Richard Neer was the joint principal investigator on the project.
Neubauer Family Assistant Professor in Art History, was awarded a fellowship from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation to participate in the Kress Summer Institute on Digital Mapping and Art History. He received funding from the UChicago Arts Council and Franke Institute for the Humanities to organize the symposium Florentia Illustrata: Video Games, Mobile Apps, Pub Crawls, and the Florentine Renaissance with Lawrence Rothfield (Associate Professor in English Language and Literature and Comparative Literature).