List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1994. [1]
Fellow | Category | Field of Study |
---|---|---|
Carolyn Abbate | Humanities | Music Research |
Yolanda Andrade | Creative Arts | Photography |
Joyce Appleby | Humanities | U.S. History |
Carol Armstrong | Humanities | Photography Studies |
Patricia Aufderheide | Humanities | Film, Video, & Radio Studies |
Thomas Banks | Natural Sciences | Physics |
Robert L. Belknap | Literary Criticism | |
Sven Birkerts | General Nonfiction | |
Joan S. Birman | Mathematics | |
David Blackbourn | German & East European History | |
Edward J. Blakely | Architecture, Planning, & Design | |
Richard K. Bloes | Video & Audio | |
Michael Book | Creative Arts | Photography |
Richard D. Bosman | Fine Arts | |
Constance Brittain Bouchard | Medieval History | |
Michael T. Bowers | Chemistry | |
Simon Brailowsky | Neuroscience | |
Emily Breer | Creative Arts | Film |
Charles L. Briggs | Folklore & Popular Culture | |
Kevin Bubriski | Creative Arts | Photography |
Giorgio Buccellati | Near Eastern Studies | |
Martín Caparrós | Fiction | |
Charles Capper | American Literature | |
Peter Carafiol | American Literature | |
Squeak Carnwath | Fine Arts | |
Joseph C. Carter | Classics | |
Donald L. D. Caspar | Molecular & Cellular Biology | |
Moses V. Chao | Molecular & Cellular Biology | |
Bernard Chazelle | Computer Science | |
Mark A. Cheetham | Fine Arts Research | |
Carmen Clapp | Medicine & Health | |
William A. V. Clark | Geography & Environmental Studies | |
Lawrence M. Clopper | Medieval Literature | |
Tony Cokes | Video & Audio | |
Corrine Colarusso | Fine Arts | |
Eleanor Cook | Literary Criticism | |
Meg Cranston | Fine Arts | |
William Cronon | U.S. History | |
Pamela Kyle Crossley | East Asian Studies | |
Paul D\'Amato | Creative Arts | Photography |
Lorraine Daston | History of Science & Technology | |
Margreta de Grazia | English Literature | |
Guillermo de la Peña | Anthropology & Cultural Studies | |
Diego de Mendoza | Molecular & Cellular Biology | |
Cesáreo A. Dominguez | Physics | |
Mark Doty | Poetry | |
Ann duCille | American Literature | |
Adam M. Dziewonski | Earth Science | |
Antonia Eiriz | Fine Arts | |
Veit Elser | Natural Sciences | Physics |
Geraldine Erman | Creative Arts | Fine Arts |
William N. Eskridge | Social Sciences | Law |
Jeffrey Eugenides | Creative Arts | Fiction |
Johanna Filp-Hanke | Social Sciences | Education |
Michael H. Freedman | Natural Sciences | Mathematics |
Paul H. Freedman | Humanities | Medieval History |
Guido Garay | Astronomy—Astrophysics | |
Cristina García | Fiction | |
Leon Glass | Applied Mathematics | |
Benny Golson | Music Composition | |
Ron Gorchov | Fine Arts | |
Claudia Gordillo Castellon | Creative Arts | Photography |
Eamon Grennan | Poetry | |
Bruce G. Harmon | Drama & Performance Art | |
John B. Haviland | Linguistics | |
Daniel R. Headrick | Intellectual & Cultural History | |
Brenda Hillman | Poetry | |
Tony Hiss | General Nonfiction | |
Irene Hultman | Creative Arts | Choreography |
Michael Hurson | Fine Arts | |
Javier Iguiñiz Echeverria | Social Sciences | Economics |
David Isay | Creative Arts | Video & Audio |
Laurence A. Jacobs | Medicine & Health | |
Pierre Jalbert | Music Composition | |
Clive G. Jones | Plant Sciences | |
Thom Jones | Fiction | |
Alice Kaplan | French Literature | |
Randall Kenan | Fiction | |
Alexander Keyssar | U.S. History | |
Gary King | Political Science | |
Karl Kirchwey | Poetry | |
Nancy S. Kollmann | Russian History | |
David Konstan | Classics | |
Beryl Korot | Video & Audio | |
Guto Lacaz | Fine Arts | |
Cathy C. Laurie | Organismic Biology & Ecology | |
Lawrence W. Levine | U.S. History | |
Margrit Lewczuk | Fine Arts | |
Elizabeth Macklin | Poetry | |
Nelson Manrique | Iberian & Latin American History | |
Maria Luiza Marcílio | Iberian & Latin American History | |
Robert D. Mare | Education | |
Mary Ellen Mark | Creative Arts | Photography |
Sarah Maza | French History | |
Christopher Münch | Creative Arts | Film |
James McManus | Poetry | |
Patrick McNaughton | African Studies | |
Dante Medina | Fiction | |
Bruce A. Menge | Organismic Biology & Ecology | |
David Lee Miller | Literary Criticism | |
Anthony Molho | Renaissance History | |
Carlos Monge C. | Medicine & Health | |
Sally Falk Moore | Anthropology & Cultural Studies | |
Kathy Muehlemann | Fine Arts | |
James Naremore | Humanities | Film, Video, & Radio Studies |
María Negroni | Creative Arts | Poetry |
Dona Nelson | Fine Arts | |
Jon C. Nelson | Music Composition | |
Jeff W. Nichols | Music Composition | |
Robert E. Oswald | Natural Sciences | Molecular & Cellular Biology |
Tina Packer | Drama & Performance Art | |
Euzhan Palcy | Creative Arts | Film |
Gustavo M. Pastor | Physics | |
Douglas Lane Patey | English Literature | |
Jim Paul | Creative Arts | Biography |
Dale Peck | Fiction | |
Linda Levy Peck | British History | |
Cristina Peri Rossi | Fiction | |
Elizabeth J. Perry | Political Science | |
Michael Pirrung | Chemistry | |
Elena Poniatowska | Fiction | |
Lourdes Portillo | Creative Arts | Film |
Jill Quadagno | Social Sciences | Sociology |
Alan Rath | Fine Arts | |
Abraham Ravett | Creative Arts | Film |
Edward S. Reed | Psychology | |
Thomas Richards | English Literature | |
Charles H. Robert | Molecular & Cellular Biology | |
John W. Roberts | Folklore & Popular Culture | |
Henry L. Roediger III | Psychology | |
Nelbia Romero Cabrera | Fine Arts | |
Michael Rose | Education | |
Mary Ames Rouse | Bibliography | |
Karl Rubin | Mathematics | |
Daniel L. Rubinfeld | Economics | |
Conrad Rudolph | Fine Arts Research | |
Martin J. S. Rudwick | Humanities | History of Science & Technology |
Peter Sahlins | French History | |
Beatriz Sarlo | Latin American Literature | |
Matilde Sánchez | Fiction | |
Daniel Schavelzon | Architecture, Planning, & Design | |
Richard B. Sher | Bibliography | |
Ed Smith | Fine Arts | |
Doris Sommer | Latin American Literature | |
Andrew Spence | Creative Arts | Fine Arts |
Willard Spiegelman | American Literature | |
Leo Spitzer | Iberian & Latin American History | |
Lisa Stancati | Creative Arts | Photography |
Christine Stansell | U.S. History | |
Paul J. Steinhardt | Astronomy—Astrophysics | |
Mark Steinmetz | Creative Arts | Photography |
Andrew Stewart | Classics | |
Paul A. Stoller | African Studies | |
Nicholas J. Strausfeld | Neuroscience | |
Paul Strohm | Medieval Literature | |
Fernando Daniel Suárez | Mathematics | |
Cyrus C. Taylor | Natural Sciences | Physics |
Talbot J. Taylor | Humanities | Intellectual & Cultural History |
Blake Temple | Natural Sciences | Applied Mathematics |
Robert Tibshirani | Natural Sciences | Statistics |
Sidney Tillim | Creative Arts | Fine Arts |
George W. S. Trow | Creative Arts | General Nonfiction |
Robert-Jan van Pelt | Humanities | German & East European History |
Alejandro Viñao | Creative Arts | Music Composition |
Lawrence Weiner | Creative Arts | Fine Arts |
Jessica Williams | Creative Arts | Music Composition |
Sue Williams | Creative Arts | Fine Arts |
Edwin N. Wilmsen | Social Sciences | Anthropology & Cultural Studies |
Jonathan Wilson | Creative Arts | Fiction |
Thongchai Winichakul | Humanities | South Asian Studies |
Jay Alan Yim | Creative Arts | Music Composition |
Peter Y. Yu | Natural Sciences | Physics |
Jonathan Zeitlin | Humanities | Economic History |
Barbie Zelizer | Humanities | Intellectual & Cultural History |
Ziony Zevit | Humanities | Religion |
Long Zhou | Creative Arts | Music Composition |
Guggenheim may refer to:
The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation is a private foundation formed in 1925 by Olga and Simon Guggenheim in memory of their son, who died on April 26, 1922. The organization awards Guggenheim Fellowships to professionals who have demonstrated exceptional ability by publishing a significant body of work in the fields of natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, and the creative arts, excluding the performing arts.
Guggenheim Fellowships are grants that have been awarded annually since 1925 by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, endowed by the late Simon and Olga Hirsh Guggenheim. These awards are bestowed upon individuals who have demonstrated distinguished accomplishment in the past and potential for future achievement. The recipients exhibit outstanding aptitude for prolific scholarship or exceptional talent in the arts.
Patricia Barber is an American songwriter, composer, singer, and pianist.
Christopher Theofanidis is an American composer whose works have been performed by leading orchestras from around the world, including the London Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Moscow Soloists, the National, Atlanta, Baltimore, St. Louis, Detroit, and many others. He participated in the Young American Composer-in-Residence Program with Barry Jekowsky and the California Symphony from 1994 to 1996 and, more recently, served as Composer of the Year for the Pittsburgh Symphony during their 2006–2007 Season, for which he wrote a violin concerto for Sarah Chang.
Mauricio Leib Lasansky was an Argentine artist and educator known both for his advanced techniques in intaglio printmaking and for a series of 33 pencil drawings from the 1960s titled "The Nazi Drawings." Lasansky, who migrated to and became a citizen of the United States, established the school of printmaking at the University of Iowa, which offered the first Master of Fine Arts program in the field in the United States. Sotheby's identifies him as one of the fathers of modern printmaking.
Earl Randall Parker was an American engineer and professor. Parker began his metallurgy career in the mid 1930s as a researcher for the General Electric Research Laboratory. In the mid 1940s, Parker began teaching metallurgy at the University of California, Berkeley and remained in his teaching position until 1978. While at Berkeley, Parker was chair of the material sciences department and director of engineering research between the 1950s and 1960s. For awards, Parker received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1960 and was named a National Medal of Science recipient in 1979.