Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Alice Van Vechten Brown

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Died
  
16 October 1949

Alice Van Vechten Brown, born June 7, 1862, in Hanover, New Hampshire, was an art educator and historian, notable for the creation of the first courses in museum training (1911) and modern art (1927) in the United States. The modern art course was taught by Alfred H. Barr, Jr., who would later claim the departmental headings he developed for the Museum of Modern Art were merely "the subject headings of the Wellesley course".

The daughter of a minister on faculty at Dartmouth College, she initially pursued a career as an artist, studying with the Art Students League of New York, until an illness in the family forced her return home. After her return, she took a job at Wellesley College running the Farnsworth Museum and heading up the art department. Charged with redesigning Wellesley's art history program, she moved the program from a study of photos and textbooks to a more active format involving laboratory methods. In the Wellesley program students learned artistic techniques to better understand the history of art.

With William Rankin, she was the author of A Short History of Italian Painting (1914).

She died October 16, 1949, in Middletown, New Jersey.

References

Alice Van Vechten Brown Wikipedia