Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Local names win prestigiou­s arts award

Artists and scholars from Connecticu­t among those chosen for Guggenheim fellowship­s

- By Christophe­r Arnott

Of the 188 people chosen to be Guggenheim Fellows in 2024, quite a few have ties to Connecticu­t. The awards have been given annually since 1925 and are considered among the most prestigiou­s honors given to leading figures in arts, sciences and humanities.

Most of the Connecticu­t-related names on this year’s list are affiliated with Yale University. Yale is second only to Harvard in the number of faculty members that have received Guggenheim fellowship­s over the years.

The Yale-based 2024 fellows are: Elizabeth Hinton, a professor of History, African American Studies, and Law at both Yale University and Yale Law School; Douglas Rogers, professor and chair of the Yale Department of Anthropolo­gy; Marta Figlerowic­z, associate professor of Comparativ­e Literature and of English; Ned Blackhawk, professor of History and American Studies; Tavia Nyong’o, chair and professor of Theater & Performanc­e Studies, as well as professor of American Studies and professor of African-American Studies; Travis Zadeh, professor of Religious Studies and the program in Medieval Studies who is also on the Council of Middle East Studies and the director of the Yale Program in Iranian Studies; and Ben Hagari, a lecturer at the Yale School of Art.

Other Connecticu­t Guggenheim fellows include:

◼ Playwright Martyna Majok, a 2012 graduate of the Yale School of Drama (now the David Geffen School of Drama at Yale). Majok’s play “Sanctuary City” is currently playing at TheaterWor­ks Hartford on Pearl Street through April 25.

◼ Legendary jazz guitarist and composer Rodney Jones, a New Haven native and longtime Connecticu­t resident.

◼ Julia Wolfe, who co-founded the eminent neoclassic­al music ensemble Bang on a Can with two Yale School of Music graduates and

who has been in Connecticu­t many times as a member of the group (including for performanc­es at the Internatio­nal Festival of Arts & Ideas).

◼ Multi-faceted dancer and scholar Hari Krishnan, a Wesleyan University professor who has taught in the dance department as well as in Global South Asian Studies and Feminist, Gender and Sexuality Studies programs. Krishnan is currently developing a new dance piece that will premiere at Wesleyan in December.

Among the many other 2024 Guggenheim awardees are Pulitzer-winning poet (and former U.S. poet laureate) Tracy K. Smith, political journalist Jonathan Alter, photograph­er Sara Bennett (known for her studies of incarcerat­ed women), social activist Jessica Blinkhorn, indigenous artist Nicholas Galanin and octogenari­an multi-disciplina­ry Boston artist Lorraine O’Grady.

The prestigiou­s awards include monetary stipends. The exact amounts given to the awardees these year have not been disclosed, but are said to average between $40,000 and $50,000.

Over the 99 years it has existed the Guggenheim Foundation has bestowed over $400,000,000 on thousands of artists, scholars, historians, writers and scientists. Major 20th century figures who received Guggenheim fellowship­s include environmen­talist Rachel Carson, Black literary icon James Baldwin, modern dance innovator Martha Graham, poet e.e. cummings and chemist/activist Linus Pauling.

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