Michael Leja

Michael Leja

Fellow: Awarded 2008
Field of Study: Fine Arts Research

Competition: US & Canada

University of Pennsylvania

Michael Leja (Ph.D., Harvard) studies the visual arts in various media (painting, sculpture, film, photography, prints, illustrations) in the 19th and 20th centuries, primarily in the United States. His work is interdisciplinary and strives to understand visual artifacts in relation to contemporary cultural, social, political, and intellectual developments. He is especially interested in examining the interactions between works of art and particular audiences. His book Looking Askance: Skepticism and American Art from Eakins to Duchamp (2004) traces the interactions between the visual arts and the skeptical forms of seeing engendered in modern life in northeastern American cities between 1869 and 1917. It won the Modernist Studies Association Book Prize in 2005. An earlier book, Reframing Abstract Expressionism: Subjectivity and Painting in the 1940s (1993), situates the paintings of Jackson Pollock, Barnett Newman, Willem de Kooning, and others in a culture-wide initiative to re-imagine the self in the midst of a traumatic history. It won the Charles Eldredge Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in American Art from the Smithsonian American Art Museum. During his Fellowship term, he is working on a book exploring changes in pictorial forms and in social relations associated with the industrialization of picture production and the development of a mass market for images in the mid-nineteenth century.

Mr. Leja teaches in the History of Art Department at the University of Pennsylvania. His work has been supported by fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Clark Art Institute, Getty Foundation, and the Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts.

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