Giving her heart and soul to TU

Susan Isaacs has been awarded the 2018 TU Distinguished Faculty Service Award

Professor Susan Isaacs, Ph.D. is not only a professor at Towson University, she is also curator to the university’s two art galleries. This year she has been selected to receive the 2018 TU Distinguished Faculty Award.

For the past 25 years, Susan Isaacs, Ph.D., has dedicated her considerable talents to art history at Towson University.

Because of her tireless work and commitment to the university, Isaacs has been selected to receive the 2018 TU Distinguished Faculty Service Award.

Isaacs was nominated by her colleague Karl Fugelso, Ph.D. In his nomination letter, Fugelso credited Isaacs for growing TU’s art history department, which included lobbying to have an art history major and minor, a museum studies minor, and an M.A. in professional studies/art history, none of which existed when she started in 1993.

Read more about Susan Isaacs: Giving her heart and soul to TU by Kyle Hobstetter, December 15, 2018

Kudos to Nancy Siegel

We have exciting news to share on behalf of Nancy Siegel, Ph.D., Professor from the Department of Art + Design, Art History, Art Education at Towson University. Dr. Siegel has been elected as a member to the American Antiquarian Society (Worcester, MA)—a learned society and major research institution founded in 1812. This is an honor bestowed upon scholars in the humanities for distinguished contributions in research.

In addition, she was recently awarded a grant from the TU Faculty Development and Research Committee (FDRC) to further support her research. Congratulations! We wish you all the best! – COFAC Dean’s Office

* Since this was written, Dr. Siegel was awarded a 2019 Georgian Papers Programme Fellowship from the Royal Collection Trust, London and Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture to conduct research at the Royal Archives at Windsor Castle!

Read more about Nancy Siegel, Ph.D.

siegel-nancy-op-sq.jpgBio: Dr. Nancy Siegel is Professor of Art History at Towson University and specializes in American landscape studies, print culture, and culinary history of the 18th and 19th centuries. Her current project, Political Appetites: Revolution, Taste, and Culinary Activism in the Early Republic, investigates the intersection among American art and political, horticultural, culinary histories. Most recently, she led the seminar, “Culinary Culture: The Politics of American Foodways, 1765-1900,” for the Center for Historic American Visual Culture at the American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, MA. She has authored/edited The Cultured Canvas: New Perspectives on American Landscape Painting (2012); River Views of the Hudson River School (2009); Within the Landscape: Essays on Nineteenth-Century American Art and Culture (2005); Along the Juniata: Thomas Cole and the Dissemination of American Landscape Imagery (2003); and The Morans: The Artistry of a Nineteenth-Century Family of Painter-Etchers (2001). Her work has appeared in Gastronomica, The Burlington Magazine, Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide, and she has been the recipient of research grants and fellowships from the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the American Antiquarian Society, Yale University, Winterthur Museum & Country Estate, the Massachusetts Historical Society, the Culinary Historians of Chicago, the New York Public Library, and the State of New York.