Walter W.S. Cook Annual Lecture
Dr. Walter W.S. Cook (1888 - 1962) was the founding director of the
Institute of Fine Arts and a historian of Medieval Spanish art. Cook
received his doctorate from Harvard University and joined the
faculty at New York University in 1926 where he served as a
professor of art from 1932 to 1953. Of all his achievements, Cook is
most remembered for his energetic leadership in developing the
Institute of Fine Arts into one of the most prestigious centers for
graduate study in the field of art history.
Cook’s legacy is his resolve to change the way art historical
research and education is attained. He believed that the graduate
art history program should engage in special relationships with New
York’s art collections. To achieve this, in 1936 he moved the
graduate art history program from NYU’s Washington Square
campus to the Upper East Side and later named the research center
the Institute of Fine Arts. This location is central to the
city’s most renowned museums: the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
the Frick Collection, the Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern
Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Cook ingeniously
utilized New York’s cultural resources from this advantageous
location, in line with the Institute’s mission of objects
based research.
Cook further realized his vision of turning NYU’s graduate art
history program into an advanced research institute by placing
priority on acquiring faculty who were leaders in their respective
art historical fields. He utilized his position as the Director of
the Institute to appoint prominent German and Austrian
scholars (forced to flee during the Nazi era) such
as Erwin Panofsky, Walter Friedländer, Karl Lehmann, and
Julius Held. These professors were deeply involved with the
evolution of the modern discipline of art history and essential to
Cook’s transformative vision for the Institute.
The Walter W.S. Cook Alumni Lecture Series was inaugurated in 1959
on the occasion of the dedication of the James B. Duke mansion, the
current home of the Institute of Fine Arts. The series, which
invites prominent alumni to speak in honor of Dr. Cook, is organized
by the Institute's Alumni Association.
View the program of the memorial held in 1962 in honor of Dr.
Cook
Check the events calendar for upcoming
lectures in this series.
Archive
Thursday, October 5, 2023
Ronni Baer, Allen R. Adler, Class of 1967,
Distinguished Curator and Lecturer, Princeton University Art
Museum
Murillo and the North: The Case of Michael Sweerts
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Patricia Berman, Theodora L. and Stanley H.
Feldberg Professor of Art, Wellesley College
The El Greco Effect in Fin-de-Siècle Scandinavia
Tuesday, October 26, 2021
Lisa Conte, Head of Conservation, National 9/11 Museum and Memorial
Malleable Memories and an Evolving History: Preserving the 9/11
Memorial Museum’s Collection
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Denise Allen, Curator, Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts,
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
A Catalogue for 2020: Italian Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes at
The Met
Tuesday, October 29, 2019
Zainab Bahrani, Edith Porada Professor of Ancient Near Eastern Art and
Archaeology, Department of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia
University
Aby Warburg’s Babylonian Paradigm: towards an epistemology of the
irrational in the Bilder Atlas
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Dorothy Kosinski, Vradenburg Director and CEO of The Phillips Collection
‘Artists help God create the world.’ Markus Lüpertz at The
Phillips Collection/ Journeys and Return with Orpheus
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
Nadine Orenstein, Drue Heinz Curator in Charge, Department of Drawings and Prints,
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Hercules Segers and Rembrandt, the Eccentric and the
Traditionalist
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Emily Braun, Distinguished Professor, Hunter College and the Graduate Center
CUNY; Curator, The Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection
Alberto Burri: The Making of an Exhibition
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Ian Wardropper, Director, The Frick Collection
The Notorious Guises: Portraits on a French Renaissance Enamel
Plaque in The Frick Collection
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Emilie E.S. Gordenker, Director, Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis
Are Cross-Sections Boring? The Case of Saul and David
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Nicholas Adams, Mary Conover Mellon
Professor in the History of Architecture, Vassar College
Gunnar Asplund's Courthouse Extension in Gothenburg (1913-1936):
The Ironies of its History
November 17, 2011
Alice Donahue, Rhys Carpenter Professor
of Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College
Contradictions in Greek Naturalism
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Gary M. Radke, Dean's Professor of the
Humanities, Syracuse University
"As will please the ladies": Planning Choirs, Kitchens, and
Latrines in Fifteenth-Century Venetian Convents.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Christine Smith, Robert C. and Marion
K. Weinberg
Professor of Architectural History, Harvard University
Leon Battista Alberti: Old and New
Tuesday, 1 April 2008
Anne Litle Poulet, Director, The Frick
Collection
The Lodge of the Nine Muses: Houdon and Freemasonry
May 3, 2006
Leo Seinberg, Benjamin Franklin and
University Professor Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania
Beware of Texts
Thursday, April 21, 2005
Naomi Miller, Professor Emerita, Boston
University
From Babel to Broadway: Building Towers Towards Infinity
Monday, April 26, 2004
Dale Kinney, Graduate School of Arts
and Sciences, Professor, of History of Art, Bryn Mawr College
When Objects become Spolia: Lessons from Historiography
Monday, April 28, 2003
Isabelle Hyman, Professor of Fine Arts,
New York University
Brunelleschi to Breuer: An Art Historian’s Passage
Monday, April 15, 2002
Philip Pearlstein, Distinguished
Professor Emeritus, Brooklyn College
When the Dada Daddies got Real
Monday, April 9, 2001
Phyllis Prayer Bober, Leslie Clark
Professor in the Humanities Emerita, Bryn Mawr College
Art, Culture and Cuisine: The Defining Characteristics of the
Early Renaissance
Monday, May 8, 2000
Sam Sachs II, Director, The Frick
Collection
The Frick That Might Have Been
Wednesday, April 21, 1999
Vicki Goldberg, Author and Photography
Critic for The New York Times
War at a Distance: Camera and Combat
Monday, April 20, 1998
Richard E. Stone, Conservator, The
Sherman Fairchild Center for Objects Conservation, the Metropolitan
Museum of Art
Donatello and Verrocchio: Casting Technology and Sculptural
Form
Monday, April 28, 1997
Sarah Bradford Landau, Professor of
Fine Arts, New York
University Inventing the New York Skyscraper
Monday, April 22, 1996
Bill Hood, Professor of Art, Oberlin
College
Figs and Leaves: On Writing a History of the Male Nude
Monday, April 24, 1995
Susan Vogel, Henry J. Heinz II
Director, Yale University Art Gallery
Exhibition Dilemma: African Art Not Meant to Be Shown
Friday, April 22, 1994
Adam Gopnik, Art Critic of The New
Yorker
The Overabundant Larder and the Luminous Oblong Blur. A Theory of
Everything in American Art
Friday, April 30, 1993
Lucy Sandler, Helen Gould Shepard
Professor of Art History, New York University
From Heraldry to Portraiture: The Image of the Owner of the Book
in the Age of Chivalry
Friday, April 10, 1992
Heather Lechtman, Professor of
Archaeology and Ancient Technology, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Style in Technology: Metal and Cloth in Andean Prehistory
Friday, May 3, 1991
Marcel Franciscono, Professor of Art
History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Paul Klee and the Promise of Childhood
Friday, May 4, 1990
Edward Sullivan, Associate Professor,
New York University
National Identity, Tradition and Innovation in 20th Century
Mexican Painting
Friday, May 12, 1989
Marilyn Aronberg Lavin
The Place of Narrative in Italian Mural Decoration
Friday, April 29, 1988
William L. Barcham, Associate
Professor, Fashion Institute of Technology
‘Sancta dei Genetrix:’ Tiepolo’s Mary and the Enlightenment
Saturday, Mary 2, 1987
A Symposium in Honor of Richard Krautheimer
James Ackerman, Arthur Kingsley Porter
Professor of Fine Arts, Harvard University
The Early Planners of Rome: 1450-1560
Frederick Hartt, Paul Goodloe McIntire
Professor Emeritus of Art History, University of Virginia
Michelangelo: Imprint and Image
Irving Lavin, Professor of Art History,
The Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Bernini’s Image of the Sun King
Friday, May 16, 1986
Priscilla E. Muller, Curator of the
Museum, The Hispanic Society of America
Goya’s ‘Mundus Tenebrosus’? The Politic Patriot’s Last Projects
in Spain
Friday, May 11, 1984
William D. Wixom, Chairman of the
Department of Medieval Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art
A Reliquary Chasse Attributed to Canterbury: Style, Iconography,
Patronage
1983
Carol Herselle Krinsky, Professor of
20th century Architectural History, New York University
April 30, 1982
Tom Freudenheim, Director of the
Worcester Museum
Disappearing Act: The Art Historian and the Art Museum
1981
Bernard S. Myers, Editor in Chief for
Art Books, McGraw-Hall
The Expressionist Idea
Thursday, April 4, 1980
Wanda M. Corn, Professor and fellow,
the Wilson Center
Overcoming Cultural Inferiority: The Case of the American Artist
1979
Walter Cahn, Carnegie Professor of the
History of Art, Yale University
The idea of the masterpiece: Medieval and northern Renaissance
origins
Tuesday, May 2, 1972
John McCoubre, Department of Art
History, University of Pennsylvania
Figures on the Beach: Reflections on a 19th Century Scene
Thursday, May 6, 1971
J. Edward Kidder, Jr., International
Christian University, Japan
Early Buddhist Art: Horyu-ji
Tuesday, May 5, 1970
Linda Nochlin Pommer, Vassar College
Holman Hunt’s ‘Awakening Conscience’: The Theme of the Fallen
Woman in Nineteenth-Century Realsim
Tuesday, May 6, 1969
Joachim Gaehde, Brandeis University
Ingeniosa Manus: On the Originality of Carolingian Artists
Tuesday, May 7, 1968
Alfred K. Frazer, Department of History
and Archaeology, Columbia University
An Antiquarian Emperor Builds: Architecture in Claudius’s
Rome
1967
Howard Saalman, Professor of
Architectural History, Carnegie-mellon University
Haussmann’s Paris Revealed
1966
Creighton Gilbert, Sidney and Ellen
Wien Professor of History of Art, Brandeis University
Change in Piero della Francesca
1965
Milton Brown, Professor of Art,
Brooklyn College
Art Nouveau
1964
James Ackerman, Professor of Fine Arts,
Harvard University
Palladio’s Villas
1963
John P. Coolidge, Professor of Fine
Arts, Harvard University and Director, Fogg Art Museum
1962
Frederick Hartt, Professor of the
History of Art, University of Pennsylvania
Love in Baroque Art
1961
Phyllis Williams Lehmann, Professor of
Art, Smith College
The Pedimental Sculptures of the Hieron in Samothrace
1959
Millard Meiss, Professor of Art,
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University
Giotto and Assisi