Features

Catherine Chin Focuses on How Late Antique Christian Writers Consider the Past and Future

Catherine Chin Focuses on How Late Antique Christian Writers Consider the Past and Future

Catherine M. Chin is the ACLS/Frederick Burkhardt Residential Fellow in Ancient Studies and an Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of California in Davis.

Maya Maskarinec Considers How Christian Sanctity Transformed Early Medieval Rome

Maya Maskarinec Considers How Christian Sanctity Transformed Early Medieval Rome

Maya Maskarinec is the winner of the Phyllis G. Gordan Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize in Medieval Studies and a Ph.D candidate in the Department of History at the University of California in Los Angeles.

Celebrating the Centennial: Finding the Janus View

Celebrating the Centennial: Finding the Janus View

This year marks a century of the American Academy’s presence on Rome’s Janiculum Hill and by now it gives an impression of organic belonging here.

Launching the Centenary from the Capitoline with Ignazio Marino, Mayor of Rome

Launching the Centenary from the Capitoline with Ignazio Marino, Mayor of Rome

Last Tuesday the American Academy in Rome launched a centenary year from the Sala della Protomoteca on the Campidoglio with an event to commemorate the past hundred years of collaboration between the American Academy and Roma Capitale.

Stephanie Frampton Studies Authors and Inscription in Ancient Rome

Stephanie Frampton Studies Authors and Inscription in Ancient Rome

Stephanie Frampton is the winner of the Andrew Heiskell Post-Doctoral Rome Prize in Ancient Studies and an assistant professor of classical literature in the Department of Literature at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Thomas Leslie Pursues His Long-Standing Interest in Architect Pier Luigi Nervi’s Work

Thomas Leslie Pursues His Long-Standing Interest in Architect Pier Luigi Nervi’s Work

Thomas Leslie is the winner of the Booth Family Rome Prize in Historic Preservation and Conservation and the Pickard Chilton Professor in Architecture in the Department of Architecture at Iowa State University.

A Conversation on Philosophy and a Conference on Libraries

A Conversation on Philosophy and a Conference on Libraries

Last week the Academy brought a reflective close to the year 2013 with a final string of events.

Peter Brown Considers Constantine, Eusebius and the Future of Christianity

Peter Brown Considers Constantine, Eusebius, and the Future of Christianity

The Patricia H. Labalme Friends of the Library lecture was delivered on Thursday evening to a full house at the Villa Aurelia.

An Evening to Remember: AAR 2013 Cabaret

An Evening to Remember: AAR 2013 Cabaret

Fellows, Affiliated Fellows, Residents, Trustees, and friends of the American Academy in Rome gathered on Manhattan’s Lower East Side at the Angel Orensanz Foundation for Contemporary Art on Friday, November 22, for the 2013 Cabaret.

Togli il Fermo Opening at the AAR Gallery

Togli il Fermo Opening at the AAR Gallery

Last Monday evening was chilly, but the “Togli il Fermo/Let it go” exhibition received a warm welcome at the AAR Gallery.

Thompson Mayes Writes About the Relationship Between Old Places, Memory and Beauty

Thompson Mayes Writes about the Relationship between Old Places, Memory, and Beauty

Thompson M. Mayes is the winner of the National Endowment for the Arts Rome Prize in Historic Preservation and Conservation and the deputy general counsel in the Law Department at the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Juhani Pallasmaa on the Look of Silence

Juhani Pallasmaa on the Look of Silence

Last Monday an audience of over 200 gathered at the Villa Aurelia to hear William A. Bernoudy Architect in Residence, Juhani Pallasmaa, speak about “Voices of Tranquility. Silence in Art and Architecture.”

Ruth Noyes Thrives on the Hunt for Printed Images in Rome

Ruth Noyes Thrives on the Hunt for Printed Images in Rome

Ruth Noyes is the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Post-Doctoral Rome Prize winner in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies and a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Art History Program at the Department of Art, Architecture and Art History at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

Stephen J. Kieran, FAAR’81, FAIA On Carrying Rome

Stephen J. Kieran on Carrying Rome

It was 1980, Stephen J. Kieran, FAAR’81, FAIA, now principal in the architectural firm KieranTimberlake, had recently been named a Rome Prize winner of the American Academy in Rome.

Dan Visconti is Inspired by ‘The Pines of Rome’ Atop the Gianicolo

Dan Visconti Is Inspired by “The Pines of Rome” atop the Gianicolo

Dan Visconti is the winner of the Samuel Barber Rome Prize in Musical Composition and a composer based in Arlington, Virginia.

Arthur & Janet C. Ross Library Launches Open Source Integrated Library System

Arthur and Janet C. Ross Library Launches Open Source Integrated Library System

The Arthur and Janet C. Ross Library recently completed its first step toward a more advanced search experience and to initiating a circulation system by launching its new catalog at library.aarome.org.  

Rita Volpe and Sovrintendenza Present New Discoveries Under Trajan’s Baths

Rita Volpe and Sovrintendenza Present New Discoveries Under Trajan’s Baths

Last Wednesday the American Academy welcomed Professor Rita Volpe and the Sovrintendenza Capitolina ai Beni Culturali to discuss some extraordinary recent discoveries beneath the Baths of Trajan.

Catherine Wagner Investigates Reconstruction Through Materials in Various States of Reparation

Catherine Wagner Investigates Reconstruction Through Materials in Various States of Reparation

Catherine Wagner is the winner of the Abigail Cohen Rome Prize in Design, a Professor in the Department of Art at Mills College, and a Visual Artist who resides in San Francisco.

AAR Launches Summer Skills Courses in Archaeology

AAR Launches Summer Skills Courses in Archaeology

The American Academy in Rome will restart its summer archaeology program this summer with new courses designed to train students in twenty-first-century skills.

Having the Conversations That Matter

Having the Conversations That Matter

In 2010 Academy Director Christopher S. Celenza, FAAR’94, began the “Conversations That Matter” series with the aim of fostering discussions on mainstream issues in the public eye that affect society as whole, both inside and outside academia.