Alice T. Friedman | |
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Born | Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. | September 28, 1950
Known for | Art history, architectural history |
Alice T. Friedman is an American architectural historian and the Grace Slack McNeil Professor Emerita of American Art and Professor Emerita of Art at Wellesley College. [1] She specializes in modern architecture and the history of American design, concentrating on the issues of gender and sexuality in architectural patronage.
Friedman graduated with a B.A. from Radcliffe College in 1972; an M.Phil. from the Warburg Institute, University of London, in 1974; an M.A. from Harvard University in 1975; as well as a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1980.
Friedman taught at Wellesley College from 1979 to 2023. [1] She served as the Co-Director of the Architecture Program from 1983 to 2022 and the Director of the McNeil Program for Studies in American Art and Architecture from 2005 to 2022. [1] She has also taught in a visiting capacity for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University (at the Graduate School of Design), and the Modern Interiors Research Centre at Kingston University in London.
While at Wellesley College, Friedman was awarded the 2021 Pinanski Teaching Prize. [2] She was named a Fellow of the Society of Architectural Historians in 2020. [3]
In addition to teaching, Friedman has served as an advisor to museums, including the Frank Lloyd Wright Usonian Houses Project at the Currier Museum of Art (2020–21) and “Floating Palaces” at the National Building Museum (2013–15). She also curated two exhibitions at the Davis Museum at Wellesley College: “Consuming Passions: Photography and the Object” (1998) and “Home is Where” (1996).
Friedman has written four books: House and Household in Elizabethan England: Wollaton Hall and the Willoughby Family (University of Chicago Press, 1989), Women and the Making of the Modern House: A Social and Architectural History (Harry N. Abrams, 1998, and re-published in paperback by Yale University Press, 2007), [4] American Glamour and the Evolution of Modern Architecture (Yale University Press, 2010), [5] and Queer Moderns: Max Ewing's Jazz Age New York (Princeton University Press, 2025). [6]
Friedman’s work has influenced the study of architectural history in significant ways, as recognized by The American Academy in Rome, [7] [8] The New York Times, [9] Women Writing Architecture, [10] and the European Iconic Houses Network. [11] For over forty years, Friedman has served as a lecturer and critic in the United States and Europe, including, most recently, at Princeton University School of Architecture, [12] the Fay Jones School of Architecture at the University of Arkansas, [13] and University of Toronto. [14]