BLOOMINGTON, IND.- The Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University has hired Lauren Richman as its Assistant Curator of Photography thanks to a generous grant from the Henry Luce Foundation. Richmans three-year term position will focus on researching the archive of Henry Holmes Smith.
Lauren Richman is an art historian and curator specializing in the history of photography and twentieth-century art. She received her PhD and MA in art history from Southern Methodist University and holds a BA in the same subject from Vanderbilt University. Her research centers on the relations between art and politics, images of conflict and documentary practice, and the intersections between art and visual mass culture. Richmans dissertation analyzes how lens-based mediathrough U.S. government-sponsored photography exhibitions, film initiatives, and mass-media image circulationbecame entangled with and impacted divided Germanys redeveloping visual arts communities during the early Cold War period.
Richman has previously held curatorial and research positions at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Art Institute of Chicago, and New Orleans Museum of Art. She has held academic residencies at Londons Courtauld Institute of Art and Berlins Freie and Humboldt Universities. Most recently, Richman was awarded a Terra Foundation for American Art Predoctoral Fellowship at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. She has contributed to Art Journal, as well as publications produced by the Dallas Museum of Art, Stedelijk Museum, and Centre Georges Pompidou.
As Assistant Curator of Photography at the Eskenazi Museum, Richman will focus on the archive of Henry Holmes Smith, an American photographer and leader in photographic theory and education. Smith was one of the first professors in the United States to conceptualize a History of Photography course and MFA program in photography. Long recognized for his influence on photo education and the achievements of his students (Jerry Uelsmann, Betty Hahn, and Robert Fichter, among others), Smiths personal practice has largely been overlooked. He began his teaching career at the invitation of László Moholy-Nagy at the New Bauhaus in Chicago, after which he began to experiment with camera-less photography and alternative processes. As early as 1948, Smith produced color dye transfer prints, achieving multi-sensory images that straddle the line between figuration and abstraction. A multi-venue retrospective exhibition and accompanying catalogue based on Richmans research are planned.
The Eskenazi Museum of Art has a long-standing commitment to the display and collection of photography and other works on paper. In 2019, it completed a $30 million renovation that created expanded spaces for learning and engagement with original works of art. The new Center for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs is an essential component of the museums mission as a teaching museum that reaches learners across the lifespan. With a new 1,500-square-foot gallerythe museums first space devoted to the exhibition of works on paperstate-of-the-art compact storage, and a new, expanded study room, the center is poised to be a primary site in the Midwest for the study of prints, drawings, and photographs.
Nanette Esseck Brewer, the Eskenazi Museum of Arts Lucienne M. Glaubinger Curator of Works on Paper said, With her research interests and museum experience, Lauren Richman will bring new light to the work of Henry Holmes Smith, one of Americas most innovative modernist photographers and thinkers, as well as to Indiana Universitys seminal role in the field of photographic education.
We are thrilled to welcome Lauren Richman to our curatorial staff, and we are grateful to the Henry Luce Foundation for their support of this important effort. The museum has a longstanding tradition of researching and exhibiting photography. Henry Holmes Smiths archive contains countless treasures that warrant careful study, and we look forward to the results of Laurens research, said David A. Brenneman, Wilma E. Kelley Director at the Eskenazi Museum of Art.