Alexander Nemerov | |
---|---|
Occupation |
Art historian Professor |
Alexander Nemerov (born 1963) is a Professor of Art and Art History at Stanford University. Prior to joining Stanford, he was a Professor of Art History and American Studies at Yale University. Over the years he has published several books and articles pertaining to the culture of American art dating from the eighteenth to the 1970s. His writing often analyzes fiction and poetry alongside works of visual art. His father was the poet Howard Nemerov, his aunt the photographer Diane Nemerov Arbus.
Born in Bennington, Vermont in 1963, the son of the poet Howard Nemerov, Alexander grew up in the context of the academic and contemplative life, his father having taught at Washington University in St. Louis, and earlier at Bennington College in Vermont. The period before Alexander's birth was chronicled in Howard's Journal of the Fictive Life. Alexander earned a BA in English and Art History from the University of Vermont in 1985, graduating Phi Beta Kappa, Cum Laude. He received his Doctorate and master's degrees in history of art from Yale University.
After completing his doctorate under the supervision of Jules Prown at Yale, Nemerov went on to teach at Stanford University for nine years, eight as Assistant Professor and one as a full Professor. His areas of expertise include American art from the colonial period to the 1970s, American literature, American material culture, and American history, with special interests in "defamiliarizing," "counter-intuitive," "close" readings of works of art and literature, paying particular attention to details of form, and formal analogies between visual and literary source material. Nemerov's approach to his objects of scholarly investigation thus shares certain affinities with methodologies commonly associated with the Yale School of literary criticism. As a teacher, Professor Nemerov is known for the quality of his lectures.
Nemerov was the recipient of the Dean's Award at Stanford in 1998, as well as the Internal Faculty Fellowship, Stanford Humanities Center, that year. Other awards/fellowships include the Material Culture Fellowship Smithsonian Institution/University Consortium for Studies in Material Culture, National Museum of American Art (1989–1991). In 2001 he returned to teach at Yale, where he received tenure. In 2012, he moved back to Stanford's art history department. In January 2014, he was named to the Stanford Daily's top 10 professors list.