All posts by Elizabeth McCormack

Johanna Gosse, History of Art Ph.D. candidate

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Johanna’s area of scholarship is modern and contemporary art, with an emphasis on postwar experimental film. Johanna is writing her dissertation on artist and experimental filmmaker Bruce Conner. She presented a paper, and portion of her dissertation, Locating Marilyn: Andy Warhol, Bruce Conner and the Serial Star, at the University of California, Santa Barbara, in May 2010.

Her Bryn Mawr experience has been one of immersion in the College’s deeply intellectual environment.  Indeed, Johanna has held an internship in Bryn Mawr’s Department of Special Collections, done curatorial work, worked as a teaching assistant and served as steering committee co-chair of the Graduate Group Symposium.

For Johanna, curatorial work is an important intellectual practice in the field of art history, and curatorial internships provide a solid foundation for her future career. Curatorial internships enabled Johanna to work with prominent American artist Red Grooms on an exhibition of his drawings, prints, paintings and sculptures at Bryn Mawr, and to work on Dance with Camera, an exhibition that opened at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia.

OUTSIDE AWARDS 2009-2010

Mrs. Giles Whiting Fellowships in the Humanities

Marie Gasper-Hulvan (History of Art)

Andrea Guzzetti (Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology)

Catherine Person (Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology)

Lesley Shipley (History of Art)

David E. Finley Fellow, 2009-2012; Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts

Benjamin Anderson (History of Art)

2010 Helena Wylde Swiny and Stuart Swiny Fellowship; Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute

Stella Diakou (Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology)

Virginia Grace Fellowship; American School of Classical Studies in Athens

Emily Stevens (Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology)

Berthe-Marti Award; American Academy in Rome

Jessica Sisk (Greek, Latin and Classical Studies)

Don Fahey, Physics PhD candidate

Don Fahey, PhD candidate in Physics

Meet Don Fahey, Physics Ph.D. candidate

Don uses radiation pressure and the Doppler Effect to cool a gas of atoms and slow the atoms’ movement. Then, with lasers, he excites the atoms to high-energy states and observes how they interact with each other.  The applications of Don’s research are broad and include the research and development of a quantum computer and a greater understanding of low-temperature plasmas.

Don is using his Bryn Mawr experience to develop the skills to reach his goal of teaching and researching at a liberal arts college. In Bryn Mawr’s small graduate program in Physics, Don is able to build close relationships with faculty and work one-on-one with them in the lab. These experiences help him learn how to build and maintain a lab of his own, define research goals, fund a lab, write grants and direct undergraduate students in research.