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Awards | Jul 28, 2015 |
Call for entries: Fitch Fellowships to award design grants
Boh staff
By Staff

Professionals in the field of historic preservation, including those working in preservation, landscape architecture, urban design, environmental planning, materials conservation, decorative arts, architectural design and history as well as related fields, are invited to apply for a selection of funding opportunities with the James Marston Fitch Charitable Foundation. Deadline for the grants is October 15, 2015.  Apply and learn more online.

Samuel H. Kress Mid-Career Fellow: Research grants of up to $15,000 will be awarded to one mid-career professional whose research project relates to the appreciation, interpretation, preservation, study and teaching of European art, architecture and related disciplines from antiquity to the early 19th century, in the context of historic preservation in the United States. Potential Kress Fellow projects could include the exploration of shared European and American influences in style, design, materials, construction techniques, building types, conservation and interpretation methodologies, philosophical and theoretical attitudes, and other factors applicable to preservation in both Europe and America.

Fitch Mid-Career Fellow: Research grants of up to $15,000 will be awarded to one or more mid-career professionals who have an academic background, professional experience and an established identity in one or more of the following fields: historic preservation, architecture, landscape architecture, urban design, environmental planning, architectural history and the decorative arts. The James Marston Fitch Charitable Foundation will consider proposals for the research and/or the execution of the preservation-related projects in any of these fields.

Richard L. Blinder Fellow: This biennial award for up to $15,000 will be presented to an architect for a proposal exploring the preservation of an existing structure, complex of buildings, or genre of building type through addition, renovation, or other means. The proposal may focus on a real project, or it may be a polemical exercise; in either case, originality is highly valued. The proposal must advance architectural preservation in the United States.

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