The Robert Lehman Collection Fellows
Current
Christopher Daly
Christopher Daly is the 2024-26 Andrew A. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow. He is a specialist in Italian Renaissance painting, having published on Jacopo del Sellaio, the workshops of Botticelli and Ghirlandaio, and the late fifteenth-century Lucchese painters, among other topics. In the Lehman Collection he is focused on updating the cataloging for the fourteenth- and fifteenth-century Italian paintings. He holds a BA from the State University of New York at New Paltz (2012), MA from Ohio University (2015), and PhD from Johns Hopkins University (2023).
Christopher Daly. “Thinking Through a Tondo by the Master of the Fiesole Epiphany.” Journal of the Walters Art Museum 77 (2024) (https://journal.thewalters.org/volume/77/essay/tondo/)
Christopher Daly. “Two reconstructions for Ghirlandaio’s workshop and a new altarpiece by Bastiano Mainardi.” Arte Cristiana 110, no. 931 (July-August 2022): 304-315.
Christopher Daly. “Dans l’atelier de Sandro Botticelli: l’exemple du Maître des bâtiments gothiques (Jacopo Foschi?).” In Botticelli, Artiste et Designer. Ed. Ana Debenedetti and Pierre Curie. Exh. cat., Musée Jacquemart-André, Paris. Brussels, 2021, 66-75.
Christopher Daly. “Reconsidering Lucchese painting after Filippino.” In Filippino Lippi: Beauty, Invention, Intelligence. Ed. Geoffrey Nuttall, Paula Nuttall and Michael W. Kwakkelstein. Leiden, 2020, 296-321
Christopher Daly. “A New Fragment of the Carmine Altarpiece and Other Works by Jacopo del Sellaio.” Commentari d’arte 20, nos. 58-59 (September-December 2014): 53-60
Past
Melanie Gifford
Melanie Gifford’s interdisciplinary research focuses on Dutch and Flemish painters. Before taking up a fellowship at the Met, she worked in the Scientific Research Department of the National Gallery of Art from 1992 to 2021, combining her background as a working painting conservator (at the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore), a PhD in art history, and her expertise in the microscopic analysis of painting materials. Her research uses material evidence to consider art historical questions: tracing artistic decisions by individual artists, exploring relationships between groups of artists, and documenting the evaluation of artistic style by seventeenth-century viewers.
Melanie Gifford is working on a book that weaves together scientific analysis and art history to explore how a radically new form of landscape depiction was born in the early seventeenth century. During the revolt of the Netherlands against Spain, as the northern provinces transformed themselves into the Dutch Republic, innovative naturalistic landscapes like Jan van Goyen’s Sandy Road with a Farmhouse (1627) celebrated local dunes and hazy skies to embody a new Dutch self-awareness. Melanie’s technical analysis of painting materials and techniques has established that artists achieved this dramatic transformation of artistic style by radically altering their painting techniques. In the late 1620s, émigré artists from Antwerp, who previously had specialized in colorful imagined vistas, abandoned that century-old system of painting techniques for a streamlined process that evoked direct observation of the local scene.
However, the two systems of landscape painting techniques coexisted and seem to have appealed to different patrons. Court patrons and the rural aristocracy valued exotic scenes that used traditional techniques; the radical art techniques used to render the Dutch countryside appealed to a new urban merchant class. This book considers the reception of the two modes of landscape, exploring how painting techniques carried specific meaning for seventeenth-century viewers.
E. Melanie Gifford et al., “First Steps in Vermeer’s Creative Process,” “Experimentation and Innovation in Vermeer’s Girl with the Red Hat,” “Vermeer’s Studio and the Girl with a Flute” in “New Findings from the National Gallery of Art” special issue of the Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art 14:2 (Summer 2022), forthcoming.
E. Melanie Gifford, "Rubens’s Invention and Evolution: Material Evidence in The Fall of Phaeton," Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art 11:2 (Summer 2019) DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2019.11.2.1
E. Melanie Gifford and Lisha Deming Glinsman, “Materials and Techniques of High-Life Genre Painting: Collective Style and Personal Manner” in exh. cat. Vermeer and the Masters of Dutch Genre Painting: Inspiration and Rivalry, Paris, Dublin and Washington, 2017, 64-83.
Andrea Maxwell
Andrea Maxwell’s current project focuses on fifteenth- and sixteenth-century artists working throughout Northern Italy, the Veneto, and the Marche region. She recently defended her dissertation, "Painting and Persecution: Anti-Jewish and Anti-Protestant Visual Rhetoric in Northern Italy, 1475-1550," which traced the ways in which anti-Jewish imagery transformed to include the new Reformation heretic throughout the Alpine region of Italy. In her work, Dr. Maxwell is examining a series of choices that artists and their patrons made to develop art in support of the Catholic Church and to formulate local communal identity and belief systems regarding religious others. This summer, she is expanding this research into a book project, while also investigating the use of pseudo-script in these so-called peripheral regions of early modern Italy. An example of this can be found in Carlo Crivelli’s panel of An Apostle (1471-73) in the Lehman Collection.
Krisztina Ilko
Krisztina Ilko's project focused on a cluster of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century manuscripts and panel paintings commissioned by Augustinian friars. This research investigated the power of art in the promotion of the ethos and unique eremitical identity of the Augustinian Order. Special attention was paid to the Augustinians' collaboration with Sienese masters, and in particular Giovanni di Paolo. With twenty-one panels, The Metropolitan Museum of Art has the largest collection of paintings by Giovanni di Paolo outside of his native city of Siena. Eleven of these are in the Robert Lehman Collection, including a small devotional panel depicting the Exaltation of Nicholas of Tolentino, the first canonized member of the Augustinian Order.
Nenagh Hathaway
Nenagh Hathaway was the Mellon Curatorial Fellow in The Robert Lehman Collection from 2017-2019.
Krisztina Ilko
Krisztina Ilko was the Hanns Swarzenski and Brigitte Horney Swarzenski Fellow from 2018-2019.
Katja Schmitz-Von Ledebur
Katja Schmitz-Von Ledebur was the Andrew W. Mellon Fellow from 2018-2019.
Nenagh Hathaway
Nenagh Hathaway was the Slifka Foundation Interdisciplinary Fellow from 2016-2017.
Fausto Nicolai
Fausto Nicolai was the Andrew W. Mellon Fellow from 2016-2017.
Pablo Vazquez Gestal
Pablo Vázquez Gestal was awarded a J. Clawson Mills Scholarship
Allan Doyle
Allan Doyle was the Jane and Morgan Whitney Fellow from 2012-2013.
Petra Raschkewitz
Petra Raschkewitz was the Annette Kade Charitable Trust Fellow from 2012-2013.
Cindy Kang
Cindy Kang was the Jane and Morgan Whitney Fellow from 2011-2012.
Giancarla Periti
Giancarla Periti was the Sylvan C. Coleman and Pam Coleman Memorial Fund Fellow from 2008-2009.