During President Julie Kornfeld’s inauguration week, join The Gund for a lecture by art historian Tanya Sheehan. Sheehan will discuss her research on Harlem Renaissance artists Charles Alston and Jacob Lawrence, whose work appears in The Gund Collection, exploring their involvement with public health during pandemics.

Throughout her career, Sheehan has navigated the intersection of American art history and critical medical humanities. Her inaugural book, "Doctored: The Medicine of Photography in Nineteenth-Century America" (Penn State Press, 2011), contends that medical models and metaphors played a vital role in bolstering the professional legitimacy of studio photographers and shaping the cultural identity of photographic portraiture during the Civil War and postbellum periods. "Doctored" concludes with a chapter on digital photography and contemporary makeover culture.

Sheehan's ongoing book project, for which she received a 2019–20 Boston Medical Library Fellowship in the History of Medicine and a 2023 Beinecke Visiting Senior Fellowship at CASVA, explores modernist art by African Americans. The project explores themes of Black agency through the lenses of medicine and public health, focusing on American art from the 1930s to 1950s by figures such as Charles Alston, Jacob Lawrence and their circle. Additionally, Sheehan is collaborating with Suzanne Hudson (USC) on the first collection of critical essays examining modernism and art therapy in a transnational American context, forthcoming from Yale University Press.

Tanya Sheehan is the Ellerton M. and Edith K. Jetté Professor of Art and chair of the Humanities Division at Colby College and a research associate at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. She also serves as principal investigator of Colby’s first Public Humanistic Inquiry Lab, a grant-funded faculty research initiative focused on critical perspectives about the intersection of medicine and race.

This event is part of The Gund's Public Health and the Arts Program Series.