The complete list of winners
reads as follows: Erik Adigard, Design Ross Benjamin Altheimer, Landscape Architecture Polly Apfelbaum, Visual Arts Patrick Baker,
Renaissance and Early Modern
Studies Peter Jonathan Bell,
Renaissance and Early Modern
Studies Joshua Colin Birk, Medieval
Studies Emma Blake, Ancient
Studies Nicholas Blechman, Design Pablo Castro Estévez, Architecture Anthony Cheung, Musical Composition Lucy Corin, Literature Carl D'Alvia, Visual Arts Steven J.R. Ellis, Ancient
Studies Jessica Fisher, Literature Mari Yoko Hara,
Renaissance and Early Modern
Studies Thomas Hendrickson, Ancient
Studies Jesse Jones, Musical Composition Brenda Longfellow, Ancient
Studies Randall Mason, Historic Preservation and Conservation Camille S. Mathieu, Modern Italian
Studies Karen M'Closkey, Landscape Architecture Glendalys Medina, Visual Arts Claudia Moser, Ancient
Studies William O'Brien Jr., Architecture Dominique Kirchner Reill, Modern Italian
Studies Irene San Pietro, Ancient
Studies Beth Saunders, Modern Italian
Studies Elizabeth Kaiser Schulte, Historic Preservation and Conservation Denton Alexander Walthall, Ancient
Studies Nari Ward, Visual Arts
From the Harlem
Renaissance in the 1920s to the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s and the progressive transformation from «negro» to «black,» the French art historian and curator establishes a context of analysis based on historical
study (slavery, racial discrimination), enlightened with close
readings of many works by artists such as David Hammons, Adrian Piper and Renée Green.