2012 Getty Research Exchange Fellowship Program for the Mediterranean Basin and Middle East
9 June – 16 July 2012
The Council of American Overseas Research Centers (CAORC) is pleased to announce the Getty Research Exchange Fellowship Program
The fellowship program is open to scholars in participating countries* who have already obtained a Ph.D. or have professional experience in the field of art history and who wish to undertake a specific research project in Algeria or Turkey related to the seminar theme: Art and Archaeology of the Sacred (Algeria) or Vision and Visual Culture in Byzantium (Turkey). Funded by the Getty Foundation, the fellowship includes a travel and living expense stipend of $7,500. The fellowship tenure will be June 9 to July 16, 2012, including an opening and closing
seminar. Fellows will be required to conduct their research during this time period. Turkish scholars must apply through American Research Institute in Turkey (ARIT). Final award selection
will be conducted by CAORC. Notification of fellowship status will be made available to each applicant via email by April 16, 2012
* Participating countries include: Afghanistan, Algeria, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Italy, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Morocco, Palestine, Tunisia, Turkey, and Yemen.
Please note: Algerian scholars may apply only for the fellowship in Turkey and Turkish scholars may apply only for the fellowship in Algeria.
Deadline: January 6, 2012
For details and application, please see
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/ARIT/Getty or caorc.org/programs
Art and Archaeology of the Sacred | Oran, Algeria | 9 June – 16 July 2012
Fellows should plan to arrive in Oran no later than 9 June 2012 and depart no earlier than 16 July 2012.
The fellowship tenure is comprised of three sections:
Opening Seminar, 10‐11 June 2012: Fellows will gather with scholars from the Algerian academic community at an opening seminar.
Independent Research, 12 June – 14 July 2012: Fellows will conduct independent research as described in their application.
Research projects should relate to the seminar theme of Art and Archaeology of the Sacred.
Closing Seminar: 15 July 2012: Fellows will reconvene to share the preliminary findings from their research.
Vision and Visual Culture in Byzantium | Istanbul, Turkey | 9 June – 16 July 2012
directed by Prof. Robert Ousterhout, University of Pennsylvania
Byzantium was a profoundly visual culture, which has left us some of the singular monuments from the history of art and architecture, such as Hagia Sophia or the Chora Monastery.
The purpose of the seminar is to investigate ways of looking and ways of seeing Byzantine art and architecture – that is, learning to “read” the monuments with the same nuance and
insight a philologist would apply to a text. This may encompass several approaches, such as recreating the cultural context in which the monument or image was constructed or
experienced; understanding the dynamic relationship of a painted or mosaic program and its architectural setting; interrogating the science of vision itself, as the Byzantines understood it;
or contemplating the relationship of the cognitive visual process to spiritual understanding.
Fellows should plan to arrive in Istanbul no later than 9 June 2012 and depart no earlier than 16 July 2012. The fellowship tenure is comprised of three sections:
Opening Seminar, 10‐11 June 2012: Fellows will gather with scholars from the Turkish academic community at an opening seminar.
Independent Research, 12 June – 14 July 2012: Fellows will conduct independent research as described in their application. Research projects should relate to the seminar theme of Vision
and Visual Culture in Byzantium.
Closing Seminar: 15 July 2012: Fellows will reconvene to share the preliminary findings from their research.
The Council of American Overseas Research Centers (CAORC) is pleased to announce the Getty Research Exchange Fellowship Program. The fellowship program is open to scholars in
participating countries* who have already obtained a Ph.D. or have professional experience in the field of art history and who wish to undertake a specific research project in Algeria or Turkey
related to the seminar theme: Art and Archaeology of the Sacred (Algeria) or Vision and Visual Culture in Byzantium (Turkey).
Funded by the Getty Foundation, the fellowship includes a travel and living expense stipend of $7,500. The fellowship tenure will be June 9 to July 16, 2012, including an opening and closing
seminar. Fellows will be required to conduct their research during this time period.
Turkish scholars must apply through American Research Institute in Turkey (ARIT). Final award selection will be conducted by CAORC. Notification of fellowship status will be made available
to each applicant via email by April 16, 2012.
* Participating countries include: Afghanistan, Algeria, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Italy, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Morocco, Palestine, Tunisia, Turkey, and Yemen. Please note: Algerian
scholars may apply only for the fellowship in Turkey and Turkish scholars may apply only for the fellowship in Algeria.
Deadline: January 6, 2012
For details and application, please see
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/ARIT/Getty or caorc.org/programs
Art and Archaeology of the Sacred | Oran, Algeria | 9 June – 16 July 2012
Fellows should plan to arrive in Oran no later than 9 June 2012 and depart no earlier than 16 July 2012.
The fellowship tenure is comprised of three sections:
Opening Seminar, 10‐11 June 2012: Fellows will gather with scholars from the Algerian academic community at an opening seminar.
Independent Research, 12 June – 14 July 2012: Fellows will conduct independent research as described in their application. Research projects should relate to the seminar theme of
Art and Archaeology of the Sacred.
Closing Seminar: 15 July 2012: Fellows will reconvene to share the preliminary findings from their research.
Vision and Visual Culture in Byzantium | Istanbul, Turkey | 9 June – 16 July 2012
directed by Prof. Robert Ousterhout, University of Pennsylvania
Byzantium was a profoundly visual culture, which has left us some of the singular monuments from the history of art and architecture, such as Hagia Sophia or the Chora Monastery.
The purpose of the seminar is to investigate ways of looking and ways of seeing Byzantine art and architecture – that is, learning to “read” the monuments with the same nuance and insight
a philologist would apply to a text. This may encompass several approaches, such as recreating the cultural context in which the monument or image was constructed or experienced;
understanding the dynamic relationship of a painted or mosaic program and its architectural setting; interrogating the science of vision itself, as the Byzantines understood it; or contemplating
the relationship of the cognitive visual process to spiritual understanding.
Fellows should plan to arrive in Istanbul no later than 9 June 2012 and depart no earlier than 16 July 2012. The fellowship tenure is comprised of three sections:
Opening Seminar, 10‐11 June 2012: Fellows will gather with scholars from the Turkish academic community at an opening seminar.
Independent Research, 12 June – 14 July 2012: Fellows will conduct independent research as described in their application. Research projects should relate to the seminar theme of
Vision and Visual Culture in Byzantium.
Closing Seminar: 15 July 2012: Fellows will reconvene to share the preliminary findings from their research.