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Telephone: 312.787.4071
info@grahamfoundation.org
Happy Holidays from the Graham Foundation. Please note that the galleries will be closed this Friday and Saturday, December 23–24.
The Graham Foundation is currently seeking students or recent graduates of architecture, art, art education, history, design, and related programs interested in gaining professional experience through active participation in tasks related to the foundation’s archive.
For more information, access the job description here.
Deadline: November 15, 2016
The Graham Foundation is now accepting applications for the 2017 Carter Manny Award. Ph.D. students must be nominated by their department to apply for the Carter Manny Award. The award is open to students officially enrolled in schools in the US and Canada, regardless of citizenship.
The Carter Manny Award supports dissertation research and writing by promising scholars whose projects have architecture as their primary concern and have the potential to shape contemporary discourse about architecture and impact the field. Projects may be drawn from the various fields of inquiry supported by the Graham Foundation: architectural history, theory, and criticism; design; engineering; landscape architecture; urban planning; urban studies; the visual arts; and other related fields. The award assists students enrolled in graduate programs in architecture, art history, the fine arts, humanities, and the social sciences working on architecture topics.
For the award guidelines, eligibility information, and application, click here.
Image: Peter Behrens, sketch of the Atlantropa Tower and North gate of the Gibraltar Dam, 1931, Munich, Germany. Courtesy of the Sörgel-Archiv, Das Deutsches Museum, Munich. From the 2016 Carter Manny Award to Hollyamber Kennedy (Columbia University) for Welt bildend: Architectures of Security and Infrastructural Modernism in Germany and Beyond, 1848–1952.
The Graham Foundation is currently seeking students or recent graduates of architecture, art, art education, history, design, and related programs interested in gaining professional experience through active participation in tasks related to the foundation’s exhibitions, public programs, and grantmaking.
This internship requires a flexible commitment of 2 days per week (Wed-Sat, 10am-6pm) and regular evening events, with an immediate start date.
Please email a resume and cover letter to Ava Barrett at abarrett[at]grahamfoundation.org. No phone calls, please.
For more information, access the job description here.
The Graham Foundation is pleased to announce $419,000 in new grants to organizations supporting 31 projects. The funded projects—including major museum retrospectives, site-specific commissions, art and architecture biennials, and provocative journals and publications—offer forums for new ideas with the potential to expand the field of architecture. Operating on a variety of scales, these grants give voice to innovative programs and scholarship, and create new platforms for engagement with architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society.
The awarded projects were selected from a competitive pool of over 230 submissions from organizations in 24 countries. The new grantees comprise a diverse group of national and international organizations in cities across North America and the world, including Chicago, Los Angeles, Mexico City, Johannesburg, London, and Istanbul. These new award recipients join the expanding network of individuals and institutions that the Graham Foundation has supported over the past 60 years in its role as one of the most significant funders in the field of architecture.
The full list of the 2016 grants to organizations follow below. To learn more about the new grants, click here.
2016 GRANTS TO ORGANIZATIONS
EXHIBITION (16 awards)
Anyone Corporation
The Bronx Museum of the Arts
California State University Long Beach-University Art Museum
Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis
Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts
The Jewish Museum
LIGA-Space for Architecture
Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art
Los Angeles Forum for Architecture and Urban Design
Madison Square Park Conservancy
Museum of Contemporary Art Tucson
Museum of Modern Art
National Building Museum
Serpentine Gallery
Swiss Institute
University of Chicago-Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society & Smart Museum of Art
FILM/VIDEO/NEW MEDIA (1 award)
Monoambiente
PUBLIC PROGRAM (3 awards)
CAMPO
Lampo
Society of Architectural Historians
PUBLICATION (11 awards)
Arab Image Foundation
Architectural Association
Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago Architecture Biennial
Guayaba Press
MAS Context
Places Journal
Project: A Journal for Architecture
Terreform
University of Johannesburg
Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König
Image: Chinese public health poster depicting the human body as a factory, 1933. Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine. From the 2016 Organizational Grant to Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts for Are We Human?, 3rd Istanbul Design Biennial.
Deadline: September 15, 2016
Since 1956, the Graham Foundation has provided direct funding to individuals for projects that foster the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society. As one of the few funders of individuals in the field of architecture, the foundation's grants provide important support for the work of emerging and established architects, scholars, writers, artists, designers, curators, filmmakers, and other individuals.
To apply for an individual grant, applicants must submit an Inquiry Form—the first stage of a two-stage application process. The online Inquiry Form will be available on our website until the deadline on September 15, 2016.
For more information about the Graham Foundation's grants and to learn if your project is eligible for funding, please see our grant guidelines.
Image: Masha Panteleyeva, Svetlana Strelnikova, and Nazli Kaya, animation still from Paper Cities (Utopia Under Construction), 2016. Courtesy of the artists. From the 2016 Individual Grant to Masha Panteleyeva, Svetlana Strelnikova, and Nazli Kaya for the film Paper Cities.
The Graham Foundation is pleased to announce over $490,000 in new grants to individuals around the world to support 59 innovative projects engaging original ideas in architecture. Among the funded projects are exhibitions, publications, films, live performances, and site-specific installations. These diverse projects advance new scholarship, fuel creative experimentation and critical dialogue, and expand opportunities for public engagement with architecture and its role in contemporary society.
This year’s awarded projects were selected from a competitive pool of 640 submissions from individuals representing 42 countries. The funded projects are being undertaken by individuals and collaborative teams—94 individuals in total—who include architects, designers, curators, filmmakers, visual artists, musicians, and writers from around the world in cities such as Mexico City, Montreal, Athens, Brussels, Stockholm, Cape Town, and Chicago, where the Graham Foundation is based. They join an international network of over 4,000 individuals and institutions that the Graham Foundation has supported over the past 60 years in its role as one of the most significant funders in the field of architecture.
The full list of the 2016 grants to individuals follow below. To learn more about the new grants, click here.
2016 GRANTS TO INDIVIDUALS
EXHIBITION (9 awards)
Chelsea Culprit, Ben Foch, Jaffer Kolb, Ian Quate & Colleen Tuite
François Dallegret
Rear View (Projects): Jennifer L. Davis & Su-Ying Lee
José Esparza Chong Cuy & Guillermo Ruiz De Teresa
Adelita Husni-Bey
Farzin Lotfi-Jam & V. Mitch McEwen
Anders Ruhwald
Quynh Vantu
Fo (Folayemi) Wilson
FILM/VIDEO/NEW MEDIA (8 awards)
Sebastian Alvarez, Andrew Benz, Yoni Goldstein & Meredith Zielke
Esther Figueroa & Mimi Sheller
LoVid: Tali Hinkis & Kyle Lapidus
Prudence Katze & William Lehman
Andrea Lewis & Maura Lucking
Rob Mazurek & Lee Anne Schmitt
Masha Panteleyeva, Svetlana Strelnikova & Nazli Kaya
Juan Alfonso Zapata
PUBLIC PROGRAM (2 awards)
Joshua Frankel
Aaron Landsman, Mallory Catlett & Jim Findlay
PUBLICATION (27 awards)
Michael Abel & Mina Hanna
Mai Abu ElDahab & Benjamin Seror
Zeynep Çelik Alexander
Daniel A. Barber
Pierre Bélanger & Nina-Marie Lister
Michael Boyd
Neil Brenner & Nikos Katsikis
Maristella Casciato
Benedict Clouette & Marlisa Wise
Beatriz Colomina
John Comazzi
Dale Allen Gyure
Leslie Hewitt & Bradford Young
Sean Keller
Léopold Lambert
Alexandra Lange
Amanda Reeser Lawrence & Ana Miljački
Jennifer Mack
Julian Raxworthy
Gabriel Ruiz-Larrea
Martino Stierli
James Trainor
Lori Waxman
Allan Wexler
Mary N. Woods
De Peter Yi
Jon Yoder
RESEARCH (13 awards)
Tatiana Bilbao Estudio: Tatiana Bilbao, Gabriela Álvarez, Nuria Benítez & Alba Cortés
Isabelle Doucet
Charlie Hailey & Donovan Wylie
Simon Herron & Mark Morris
Heinrich Jaeger & Dan Peterman
Parsa Khalili & Shima Mohajeri
Azadeh Mashayekhi
Mariana Mogilevich
Yasufumi Nakamori
Point Supreme: Konstantinos Pantazis & Marianna Rentzou
Damon Rich & Jae Shin
Anooradha Iyer Siddiqi
Filip Tejchman
Image: Allan Wexler, Hat Roof, 1994. Courtesy of the artist. From the 2016 Individual Grant to Allan Wexler for Absurd Thinking: Between Art and Design.
The Graham Foundation is pleased to announce the winners of the 2016 Carter Manny Award. Since the establishment of this award in 1996, the Graham Foundation has awarded over $740,000 in recognition of promising doctoral students whose dissertation projects represent original and advanced scholarship in architecture and have the exciting potential to move the field in new directions. Two Carter Manny Awards are given each year, one for dissertation research and one for dissertation writing.
The winner of the 2016 Carter Manny Award for writing and a $20,000 award is Hollyamber Kennedy, a PhD candidate at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Kennedy’s dissertation, Welt bildend: Architectures of Security and Infrastructural Modernism in Germany and Beyond, 1848–1952, examines German architects, engineers, planners, and scientists across Central Europe and Africa, whose work on colonization projects, housing programs, and energy infrastructures gave rise to new forms of technical expertise and helped shape a modern image of the architect as an intervention-oriented planner.
The winner of the 2016 Carter Manny Award for research and a $15,000 award is Elisabeth Narkin, a PhD candidate in the Department of Art, Art History and Visual Studies at Duke University, for her dissertation Rearing the Royals: Architecture and the Spatialization of Royal Childhood in France, 1499–1610. Narkin’s dissertation explores architecture’s relationship to conceptions of childhood and its role in the monarchy’s symbolic self-representation and evolving political strategies.
Additionally, eight students have been awarded Citations of Special Recognition for their dissertation projects. The list of citation winners follows below.
The award and citation winners were selected by an external panel after a competitive review of forty-eight applications from doctoral students throughout the U.S. and Canada who were nominated by their departments to apply for the award. This year’s review panelists were Daniel Abramson (Associate Professor of Art History and Director of Architectural Studies, Tufts University); Niall Atkinson (Assistant Professor of Art History, University of Chicago); and Alison Hirsch (Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, University of Southern California).
The Graham Foundation offers this annual award in honor of Carter H. Manny and his long and distinguished service to the foundation since its inception in 1956, first as a Trustee, then as the Director from 1971, and since his retirement in 1993, as Director Emeritus.
Applications for the 2017 Carter Manny Award are due November 15, 2016. To learn more, see the award guidelines here.
2016 CARTER MANNY AWARD WINNERS
WRITING AWARD
Welt bildend: Architectures of Security and Infrastructural Modernism in Germany and Beyond, 1848–1952
HOLLYAMBER KENNEDY
Columbia University, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation
RESEARCH AWARD
Rearing the Royals: Architecture and the Spatialization of Royal Childhood in France, 1499–1610
ELISABETH NARKIN
Duke University, Department of Art, Art History and Visual Studies
2016 CITATIONS OF SPECIAL RECOGNITION
WRITING
At the Threshold of the Mediterranean: Architecture, Urbanism, and Identity in Early Modern Sicily
ELIZABETH KASSLER-TAUB
Harvard University, Department of History of Art and Architecture
Komp'iuter Architecture(s), 195X–198X
EVANGELOS KOTSIORIS
Princeton University, School of Architecture
Novel Buildings: Architectural and Narrative Form in Victorian Fiction
ASHLEY NADEAU
University of Massachusetts Amherst, Department of English
All Streets Lead to Temples: Mapping Monumental Histories in Kanchipuram, ca. 690–1199 CE
EMMA STEIN
Yale University, Department of the History of Art
RESEARCH
Circles of Artifice: Semi-public Interiors of Spectacle in Late Nineteenth-Century Paris
CRISTOBAL AMUNATEGUI
Princeton University, School of Architecture
Restoration, Displacement, Appropriation: Negotiating the Baroque Legacy in the National Fascist Party's Redesign of Rome
ANNA MASCORELLA
Cornell University, Department of Architecture
Agritectures of the Green Revolution: Art, Architecture and the Agrilogistics of Transnational Aid from the United States to the Caribbean Region, 1930–1978
NIKKI MOORE
Rice University, Department of Art History
The Architect's Knowledge: Images of History in American Architectural Education, 1800–1925
BRYAN NORWOOD
Harvard University, Graduate School of Design
Image: Jacques Androuet du Cerceau, Château of Blois, exterior façade of Louis XII wing and interior façade of Francis I wing, 1570. Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum.From the Graham Foundation's 2016 Carter Manny Award for doctoral dissertation research to Elisabeth Narkin for Rearing the Royals: Architecture and the Spatialization of Royal Childhood in France, 1499–1610.
On April 13, we will announce the winners of the 2016 Carter Manny Award. This annual award supports doctoral dissertation work by promising scholars whose projects have architecture as their primary focus and have the potential to shape contemporary discourse in the field of architecture. Two winners will be named, one for dissertation writing and one for dissertation research.
To be sure not to miss this announcement, and to receive other Graham Foundation news, sign up for our email list or follow us on Twitter (@GrahamFound) and Facebook.
You can also explore the projects supported through the foundation's 2015 Carter Manny Award and prior years.
The Graham Foundation is currently seeking undergraduate and graduate students of architecture, art, art education, history, design, and related programs interested in gaining experience at a non-profit arts organization, foundation, and/or cultural institution. Interns will learn through active participation in tasks related to the foundation’s exhibitions, public programs, and grant programs.
This internship requires a flexible commitment of 2 days per week (Mon-Sat, 10am-6pm) and regular evening events, with an immediate start date.
Please email a resume and cover letter to Meg Onli at monli[at]grahamfoundation.org. No phone calls please.
For more information, click here.
Application Deadline: February 25, 2016
The Graham Foundation is now accepting applications for the 2016 Grants to Organizations. For sixty years, the Graham Foundation has provided project-based funding to individuals and organizations to foster the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society.
The application for the organizational grant cycle is available online. Organizations with eligible projects are invited to apply for a Production and Presentation Grant for projects that begin after September 15, 2016.
For more information about our grant programs, to learn if a project is eligible for funding, and to access the application, please see our grant guidelines.
In 2015, the Graham Foundation awarded more than $495,000 to 49 organizations around the world. These grants provided direct support for the development and presentation of publications, exhibitions, films, and other public programs. You can browse these and other recently funded projects here.
Image: Superonda Sofa, Archizoom Associati, 1966 – Archive Centro Studi Poltronova. Courtesy Dario Bartolini (Archizoom Associati). From the 2015 Organizational Grant to the Walker Art Center for Hippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia, on view through February 28, 2016.
The Graham Foundation galleries and bookshop will be closed Thursday, December 24, 2015 through January 2, 2016. Regular gallery and bookshop hours will resume the week of January 4, 2016 (Wed-Sat, 11am-6pm). Make sure to stop by and see our current exhibtion, Barbara Kasten: Stages, before it closes on Saturday, Jan. 9.
The Graham Foundation offices will be closed: December 24, 25, 31, and Jan. 1, 2016.
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