College Art Association Honors Haxthausen of Williams College

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. - Charles W. ("Mark") Haxthausen, the Robert Sterling Clark Professor of Art History and former director of the Graduate Program in Art History at Williams College, has been awarded the prestigious Distinguished Teaching of Art History Award from the College Art Association (CAA).

In announcing the award, the CAA sited Haxthausen for having "provided long, transformative, and inspiring leadership to one of the most important master's degree programs in art history in the United States. As Robert Sterling Clark Professor of Art History at Williams College and director of the Graduate Program from 1993 to 2007, he has served as an enthusiastic and energetic intellectual model, with his love of scholarship and carefully crafted and innovative pedagogy creating a degree program that in turn has produced numerous leading scholars, teachers, and curators in art history." Haxthausen will be formally recognized at an award ceremony during CAA's 97th Annual Conference on February 25 in Los Angeles.

Since coming to Williams from the University of Minnesota in 1993, Haxthausen's teaching repertory has included courses on art-historical method, European modernism, post-1960 art in Germany, and, most recently, silent film.

He is editor of "The Two Art Histories: The Museum and the University" (Yale/Clark Art Institute, 2002) and co-editor of "Berlin: Culture and Metropolis" (Minnesota, 1990). His essays have appeared in books, exhibition catalogues, and journals in Europe and North America. Current and recent research interests include: the theory and criticism of Carl Einstein; the Bauhaus, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner; Paul Klee; Sigmar Polke, and Fritz Lang's Metropolis.

Haxthausen received his B.A. from the University of St. Thomas, Houston, in 1966, and his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1976. He began his teaching career at Indiana University in 1970, moving on to Harvard in 1975, where he also served as curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum for eight years. Subsequently he taught at Minnesota before accepting the directorship of the Williams Graduate Program.

The College Art Association's award, established in 1977, annually honors the career of an art history teaching professional. Winners are selected for a multiplicity of criteria: their ability and magnitude in inspiring student pursuit of humanistic studies; rigorous intellectual standards and success in scholarly and lecture presentation; contribution to the advancement of knowledge and methodology in art history; interdisciplinary advancement of historical knowledge; and aid to students in developing their careers. The late Whitney Stoddard, who taught in the Williams Art Department from 1945-1976, was co-recipient of the CAA's distinguished teaching award in 1989.
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Mohican People Honored with Display in South Williamstown

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

The idea for the installation was inspired by a sculpture installation at Field Farm.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — A granite installation in Bloedel Park next to the town's new traffic rotary honors the area's first residents and caps an effort that began five years ago.
 
The large granite wall across from the Store at Five Corners is adorned with emblems inspired by the symbols that decorate baskets of the Mohican people. It provides a testament to the presence of the ancestors of the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican Indians, who, thousands of years ago, lived in the land now known as Berkshire County.
 
The black and red images of a leaf and bear claw are accompanied by an interpretive panel telling part of the story of the native people who fought with the Americans in their Revolutionary War and later were forcibly removed from the area in the late 18th century. 
 
Today, the Mohican people persist with nearly 1,600 enrolled members on or near a reservation in Wisconsin.
 
But the Stockbridge-Munsee Community has never lost its connection to its ancestral home, and, in the last decade, more of the area's contemporary residents have worked to recognize that link.
 
Bette Craig thought the then-planned roundabout would offer an opportunity to highlight that historic link.
 
"It all started in 2021 when MassDOT was having a Zoom meeting to tell the local community about it and get feedback and so forth," Craig said on Thursday. "At the time, I was the president of the South Williamstown Community Association. I was saying things about [the proposed project], and one of the community people listening was Polly Macpherson, who I knew from the League of Women Voters.
 
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