Articoli

Christia Mercer Presently Works on Platonisms in Early Modern Thought

Christia Mercer is an American Academy in Rome Scholar in Residence and the Gustave M. Berne Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University.

Jill Lepore Offers Historic Perspective on the Second Amendment

Last Tuesday evening at the Villa Aurelia, American Academy in Rome Director Christopher S. Celenza, FAAR’94, sat down with Harvard University Professor Jill Lepore and an international audience to consider “Arms in America: Gun Violence in the United States in Global Perspective” for the seventh installment of the Academy’s series of Conversations That Matter.

Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney Reads His Poetry in the Cortile

An enthusiastic crowd gathered last Thursday in the cortile of the American Academy in Rome to hear Irish Nobel Laureate and William B. Hart Poet-in-Residence Seamus Heaney read a selection of poems illuminating the wide span of his distinguished career.

Ovid Transformed: The Poet and the “Metamorphoses”

Last Thursday and Friday evenings saw the unfolding of a series of readings, conversations, and exchanges among scholars and writers of various disciplines who share a common interest in the Roman poet Ovid.

“Stone from Delphi” Exhibition Opens at AAR Gallery

Wednesday evening saw the opening of AAR Gallery’s new exhibition, Stone From Delphi, which features thirty-five watercolors by the American artist and AAR Arts Advisor Wendy Artin and poems by the Irish Nobel Laureate and William B. Hart Poet-in-Residence Seamus Heaney.

Jessica Fisher Writes Poetry Influenced by the Vagaries of Experience and by Serendipitous Encounters

Jessica Fisher is the winner of the Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize in Literature, a gift of the Drue Heinz Trust/American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a Holloway Postdoctoral Fellow in Poetry and Poetics at the University of California, Berkeley.

Michael Allen Finds Ancient Myth and Magic in the Quattrocento

Michael J.B. Allen studied at Wadham College Oxford and the University of Michigan before joining the faculty of the University of California, Los Angeles.

Steven Ellis Looks at the History of the Roman Retail Industry in Pompeii

Steven J. R. Ellis is the winner of the National Endowment for the Humanities/Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Post-Doctoral Rome Prize in Ancient Studies and an assistant professor in the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati.

Nari Ward Is Interested in the Arte Povera Movement and Artists That Use Quotidian Materials

Nari Ward is the winner of the Chuck Close Rome Prize in Visual Arts and an Artist in New York.

Elizabeth Schulte is Focused on the Technical Aspects of Printmaking and Papermaking

Elizabeth Kaiser Schulte is the winner of the Booth Family Rome Prize in Historic Preservation and Conservation and the Owner/Chief Conservator of Elizabeth Kaiser Schulte Conservation of Art and Historic Artifacts on Paper in Atlanta, GA.

Bruce Babbitt Searches for Meaning in the Aurelian Wall

Bruce Babbitt is the James Marston Fitch Historic Preservationist in Residence at the American Academy in Rome and a planning consultant in Washington, DC.

Camille Mathieu Investigates the Interdisciplinary Work of French Painters in Napoleonic Rome

Camille S. Mathieu is the winner of the Donald and Maria Cox/Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize (Year Two of a Two-Year Fellowship) in Modern Italian Studies and a PhD candidate in the Department of the History of Art at the University of California, Berkeley.

Adele Chatfield-Taylor and Diller Scofidio + Renfro Honored at AAR’s Annual Tribute Dinner

The American Academy in Rome’s Annual Tribute Dinner took place at The Plaza Hotel in New York City on Wednesday, 17 April 2013.

A Lecture by Barry Strauss on “Spartacus: The Man, the Myth, the Legacy”

Wednesday evening’s lecture by Barry Strauss, professor of history and classics at Cornell University (2013 Resident), took place in the elegant Palazzo Mattei di Giove, which is home to the Centro Studi Americani.

2013–14 Rome Prize Winners Announced

Beth Saunders Traces the Footsteps of Italian Photographers from the 1840s and 1850s

Beth Saunders is the winner of the Marian and Andrew Heiskell Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize in Modern Italian Studies and a PhD candidate in the Department of Art History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.

Stephen Greenblatt Contemplates the Enduring Power of Lucretius and his Dangerous Ideas

A lecture by Stephen Greenblatt, RAAR’10, took place Wednesday evening under an auspicious full moon at the Villa Aurelia.  

Lucy Corin Thinks Obsessively about Space and Narrative Time

Lucy Corin is the winner of the John Guare Writer’s Fund Rome Prize in Literature (a gift of Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman) and an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of California, Davis.

Abruzzo to Puglia: Fellows' Spring Trip 2013

This year the Trip’s aim was a deeper understanding of lesser-known parts of Italy and an appreciation of how culture and heritage fit – and clash – in a modern Italy.

The Found Object: Jason Dodge and Martino Gamper at the AAR

The most spare and conceptually elegant art show offered at the AAR in recent years was two installations by American artist Jason Dodge (in the Art Gallery) and Italian artist Martino Gamper (in the Cryptoporticus).