ANNOUNCING THE 2022 GUGGENHEIM FELLOWS; 180 scientists, writers, scholars, and artists honored across 51 fields

New York:On April 7, 2022, the Board of Trustees of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation approved the awarding of Guggenheim Fellowships to a diverse group of 180 exceptional individuals. Chosen from a rigorous application and peer review process out of almost 2500 applicants, these successful applicants were appointed on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise. To see the full list of new Fellows, please visit www.gf.org.

“Now that the past two years are hopefully behind all of us, it is a special joy to celebrate the Guggenheim Foundation’s new class of Fellows,” said Edward Hirsch, President of the Guggenheim Foundation and 1985 Fellow in Poetry. “This year marks the Foundation’s 97th annual Fellowship competition. Our long experience tells us what an impact these annual grants will have to change people’s lives. The work supported by the Foundation will aid in our collective effort to better understand the new world we’re in, where we’ve come from, and where we’re going. It is an honor for the Foundation to help the Fellows carry out their visionary work.”

In all, 51 scholarly disciplines and artistic fields, 81 different academic institutions, 31 states and the District of Columbia, and four Canadian provinces are represented in this year’s class of Fellows, who range in age from 33 to 75. Close to 60 Fellows have no full-time college or university affiliation. Many Fellows’ projects directly respond to issues like climate change, pandemics, Russia, feminism, identity, and racism.

Generous gifts from friends and previous Fellows have helped support this year’s Fellows.

  • The actor and director Robert De Niro has underwritten Mark Thomas Gibson’s Fellowship in Fine Arts in honor of his father, the painter Robert De Niro Sr., a 1968 Guggenheim Fellow. Gibson’s paintings, inspired by comics, provide commentary on American history and explore Black representation.
  • The Dorothy Tapper Goldman Foundation continues its support of the Fellowship in Constitutional Studies, awarded this year to Kimberly Yuracko of Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law. Yuracko is an expert in antidiscrimination law, currently focusing on Title IX and the athletic participation of transgender girls.
  • Wendy Belzberg and Strauss Zelnick have underwritten a Fellowship in General Nonfiction awarded to Thomas Chatterton Williams in honor of the writer Stacy Schiff, a Guggenheim Fellow and Foundation Trustee. Williams is a cultural critic and author whose 2019 memoir, Self-Portrait in Black and White: Family, Fatherhood, and Rethinking Race was a TIME Magazine “Must Read” book of the year.
  • Anthony Roberts has underwritten a Fellowship in Geography & Environmental Studies awarded to environmental scientist Elena Bennett of McGill University.
  • Park S. Nobel, a 1973 Guggenheim Fellow, has partially underwritten a Fellowship in Biology for John Wallingford, a developmental biologist from the University of Texas, Austin who studies the genetic development of embryos, with an emphasis on lethal birth defects.
  • Together, four Guggenheim Fellows have funded a Fellowship in the study of the Early Modern World: this year, its recipient is Valerie Kivelson. Kivelson is a professor at the University of Michigan, specializing in early modern Russian history.
  • An exceptionally generous bequest in 2019 from the estate of the great American novelist Philip Roth, a 1959 Guggenheim Fellow, provides partial support for a wide variety of writers.
  • Fellows in the creative arts are partially supported by the Joel Conarroe Fund, named for the former President of the Foundation who was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1977.

Cindy Sherman, a current Trustee of the Guggenheim Foundation who was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1983, said, “Becoming a Guggenheim Fellow offered me the time and space to focus solely on the work that was the most important to me. I was free to think and create in a way that opened myriad opportunities for me and my art. I know this years’ Fellows will experience this honor as the greatest gift, as I did.”

 

About the Guggenheim Foundation

Created and initially funded in 1925 by Senator Simon and Olga Guggenheim in memory of their son John Simon Guggenheim, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation has sought since its inception to “further the development of scholars and artists by assisting them to engage in research in any field of knowledge and creation in any of the arts, under the freest possible conditions.”

Since its establishment, the Foundation has granted nearly $400 million in Fellowships to over 18,000 individuals, among whom are more than 125 Nobel laureates, members of all the national academies, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, Fields Medal, Turing Award, Bancroft Prize, National Book Award, and other internationally recognized honors. The great range of fields of study is a unique characteristic of the Fellowship program.

The Foundation centers the talents and instincts of the Fellows, whose passions often have broad and immediate impact. For example, Zora Neale Hurston wrote Their Eyes Were Watching God in 1936 with the support of a Guggenheim Fellowship and dedicated it to the Foundation’s first president, Henry Allen Moe. Photographer Robert Frank’s seminal book, The Americans, was the product of a cross-country tour supported by two Guggenheim Fellowships. The accomplishments of other early Fellows like Jacob Lawrence, Rachel Carson, James Baldwin, Martha Graham, and Linus Pauling also demonstrate the strength of the Foundation’s core values and the power and impact of its approach.

JOHN SIMON GUGGENHEIM MEMORIAL FOUNDATION

2022 Fellows – United States and Canada

 

NATURAL SCIENCES

Applied Mathematics

Lek-Heng Lim

Astronomy–Astrophysics

Emily Levesque

Krzysztof Z. Stanek

Yanqin Wu

Biology

Manyuan Long

Anne Stone

John Wallingford

Chemistry

So Hirata

Prashant K. Jain

Shana Kelley

Computer Science

Shrikanth Narayanan

Cynthia Rudin

Earth Science

Toshiro Tanimoto

Engineering

Marco Amabili

Alexandra Boltasseva

Xin Zhang

Mathematics

Manjul Bhargava

Lauren K. Williams

Medicine & Health

Jodi Halpern

Physics

Yong Baek Kim

 

SOCIAL SCIENCES

Anthropology & Cultural Studies

Michael J. Hathaway

Rosalind C. Morris

Constitutional Studies

Kimberly Yuracko

Economics

Nicholas Bloom

Stefanie Stantcheva

Geography & Environmental Studies

Karen Bakker

Elena Bennett

Geoff Mann

Law

Robert F. Barsky

Osagie K. Obasogie

Political Science

Brendan Nyhan

Milan Svolik

Psychology

Suparna Rajaram

Sociology

Jyoti Puri

 

HUMANITIES

African Studies

Olufemi O. Vaughan

American Literature

Heather Clark

Architecture, Planning, & Design

Daniel A. Barber

Mario Carpo

Classics

Kim Bowes

Dance Studies

Anthea Kraut

Early Modern Studies

Valerie Ann Kivelson

East Asian Studies

Jordan Sand

English Literature

Jeffrey Masten

 

European & Latin American History

Jordanna Bailkin

Paul W. Werth

Film, Video, & New Media Studies

Giorgio Bertellini

Fred Turner

Fine Arts Research

Jennifer DeVere Brody

Sylvester Okwunodu Ogbechie

Shawn Michelle Smith

History of Science, Technology & Economics

Katja Guenther

Rebecca L. Spang

Intellectual & Cultural History

Suzanne Lynn Marchand

Esther Schor

Linguistics

Vera Gribanova

Literary Criticism

Bénédicte Boisseron

Stathis Gourgouris

Daniel Hack

Paul Saint-Amour

John Zilcosky

Medieval & Renaissance History

Charlene M. Eska

Katherine L. French

Music Research

Alejandro L. Madrid

Guthrie P. Ramsey

Near Eastern Studies

Yoav Di-Capua

Philosophy

Juliette Kennedy

Christopher Peacocke

Amie Thomasson

Religion

David Brakke

Judith Weisenfeld

 

Theatre Arts & Performance Studies

Daphne A. Brooks

Translation

Matt Reeck

U.S. History

Keisha N. Blain

Brenda J. Child

Jennifer Mittelstadt

Claudio Saunt

Manisha Sinha

 

CREATIVE ARTS

Biography

Peter J. Filkins

Choreography

Gary Abbott

Anne Bluethenthal

Silvana Cardell

Moriah Evans

Ishmael Houston-Jones

Cynthia Oliver

Drama & Performance Art

César Alvarez

Jibz Cameron

Jen Silverman

Michael Gene Sullivan

Fiction

Jennifer Croft

Hernan Diaz

Brandon Hobson

Ladee Hubbard

Alexandra Kleeman

Rebecca Makkai

Dinaw Mengestu

Maaza Mengiste

C.E. Morgan

Lysley Tenorio

 

Film-Video

Beth B

David Finkelstein

Moko Fukuyama

Ellie Ga

Ja’Tovia Monique Gary

Terike Haapoja

Autumn Knight

Jenny Lion

Janis Crystal Lipzin

Angelo Madsen Minax

Alison O’Daniel

Kathryn Ramey

Gregory Ruzzin

Courtney Stephens

Ioana Maria Uricaru

Fine Arts

Tyrone Ta-coumba Aiken

Linda Besemer

Colin Brant

Christy Chan

Anna Craycroft

Aaron S. Davidson

Lisa Corinne Davis

Nathaniel Donnett

Melissa Dubbin

June Edmonds

Joey Fauerso

Chie Fueki

Maria Gaspar

Mark Thomas Gibson

Lisa E. Harris

Margaret Honda

Jessica J. Hutchins

Patrick Jackson

Cannupa Hanska Luger

Josephine Meckseper

Yunhee Min

Janice Nowinski

Anna Sew Hoy

Lynne Woods Turner

Alisha Wormsley

Bruce Yonemoto

 

General Nonfiction

Rebecca Donner

Melissa Febos

Michael Pollan

Christopher Sorrentino

Jerald Walker

Edward L. Widmer

Thomas Chatterton Williams

Edward Wilson-Lee

Music Composition

Patricia Alessandrini

Phyllis Chen

David Dominique

Peter David Evans

Jonathan Bailey Holland

Sungji Hong

Panayiotis Kokoras

Charles Peck

Leah Reid

Rafael Rosa

Örjan Sandred

Nathan Shields

Marlon Simon

Photography

Keliy Anderson-Staley

Gary Burnley

Kelli Connell

Sam Contis

Kristen Joy Emack

Odette England

Nancy Elizabeth Floyd

Philip David Heying

Robert Bruce Langham

Lorie Novak

Ed Panar

Mimi Plumb

Rebecca Soderholm

Poetry

Eduardo C. Corral

Allison Funk

Yona Harvey

Jay Hopler

Joyelle McSweeney

Tomás Q. Morín

Valzhyna Mort