"National Endowment for the Humanities" Archive

Chanchal Dadlani receives National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship

Chanchal Dadlani, associate chair and associate professor of art, has been awarded a prestigious fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Headshot of Chanchal Dadlani, Wake Forest University associate chair and associate professor of art

NEH Fellowships are competitive awards granted to scholars from all disciplines pursuing projects that embody exceptional research, rigorous analysis and clear writing. Fellowships provide recipients time to conduct research and publish a variety of materials.

Dadlani, a ZSR Foundation Faculty Fellow, teaches the history of Islamic and South Asian art and architecture and is the department’s primary architectural historian.

Categories: Faculty NewsInside WFU

Conference on the intersections of poetry, science and art, May 13-16

Art and science will come together at Entanglements: A Conference on the Intersections of Poetry, Science, and Art next week from May 13-16.

The 2019 Reynolda Conference at Wake Forest will bring together a diverse range of 10 leading poets, scientists, artists, and scholars from around the world whose work and/or teaching engages with trans-disciplinary investigations into shared principles and methods in literature, science and art.

Featured presenters will be joined by Wake Forest faculty and staff presenters, special guests, visiting attendees and the generalpublic for three days of innovative programming.

The conference is free. No registration is required. A schedule is available here.

Entanglements is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation with an award granted to the conference convener, Amy Catanzano, by the Wake Forest University Humanities Institute and the Reynolda House Museum of American Art.

Additional sponsors are the Wake Forest University Humanities Institute with a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Creative Writing Minor in the Department of English, and the Interdisciplinary Performance and the Liberal Arts Center (IPLACe) at Wake Forest University.

Entanglements is named after the quantum mechanical phenomenon of entanglement in which states of subatomic particles are intertwined with each other despite being spatially separated.

Categories: Inside WFU

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