Applications for the H. Allen Brooks Traveling Fellowship (of $50,000), offered by the Society of Architectural Historians, are due October 3. It is meant to support travel by a scholar who received her/his PhD (or other graduate terminal degree) in the past five years.
Their summary is copied below.
PURPOSE
The Society of Architectural Historians’ prestigious H. Allen Brooks
Travelling Fellowship will be offered for 2016 and will allow a recent
graduate or emerging scholar to study by travel for one year. The
fellowship is
not for the purpose of doing research for an
advanced academic degree. Instead, Professor Brooks intended the
recipient to study by travel and contemplation while observing, reading,
writing, or sketching.
The goals are to provide an opportunity for a recent graduate with an advanced degree or an emerging scholar to:
- see and experience architecture and landscapes firsthand
- think about their profession deeply
- acquire knowledge useful for the recipient’s future work, contribution to their profession, and contribution to society
The fellowship recipient may travel to any country or countries during
the one-year period. This fellowship is funded completely by the Society
of Architectural Historians’ H. Allen Brooks Travelling Fellowship
Fund.
THE AWARD
In 2016 the Brooks Fellowship will be $50,000 and will cover expenses
incurred by the Brooks Fellow for one year of travel. The award is
non-renewable and award amounts may vary in future years. SAH suggests
that if additional financial support is needed to cover other related
expenses, that the applicants contact their respective
university/college, academic adviser, department head, employer or
outside foundations to investigate the financial opportunities afforded
them. The Award will be paid in quarterly installments.
SCHEDULE
| April 1, 2016 | Application Period Opens |
| October 3, 2016 | Application Period Closes at 11:59 p.m. Central Standard Time |
| October 4–November 17, 2016 | Jury Deliberations |
| December 2016 | Award Announced |
| January 1, 2017 | Travel may begin as soon as this date |
CRITERIA
The H. Allen Brooks Travelling Fellowship is open to a scholar who will
earn a PhD or advanced terminal degree in the first half of 2016 (by
June 30, 2016) or an emerging scholar who was awarded a PhD or advanced
terminal degree in 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012 or 2011 in a field related to
the built environment.
Such degrees include PhDs in the history, theory or criticism of
architecture, landscape architecture, or urbanism; historic
preservation; the practice of architecture, landscape architecture, and
urban planning; or other fields of advanced study related to the built
environment including an MArch, MUP, MLA or a master's in a historic
preservation program.
Priority will be given to those whose chosen profession is relevant to
the interests and objectives of the Society of Architectural Historians,
i.e., the history of the built environment, historic preservation,
conservation, and social implications of architecture, landscape
architecture, and urbanism.
The fellowship is intended to be a special honor for the recipient and
is to be awarded to a truly outstanding candidate, based on
distinguished academic achievement, leadership potential, personal
motivation, and promise. This is an international fellowship so
candidates from any country may apply. All applicants must be
current members of the Society of Architectural Historians.
The Brooks Fellowship will be selected by the H. Allen Brooks
Travelling Fellowship Committee which is appointed by the president of
SAH.
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
The Brooks Fellowship recipient will be expected to keep an online journal by posting at least once per month to the
SAH Blog.
The blog posts will document the fellow’s travels in text and images,
including photographs, video, drawings, or other media. (See past
recipient blog posts
here.)
This record will be used by the SAH office to approve payment
distribution. One payment of $12,000 will be made at the beginning of
the fellowship, and three subsequent payments of $12,000 each will made
throughout the year. A final payment of $2,000 will be made upon the
submission of an SAH Newsletter article reflecting upon the fellowship
recipient’s travel (see below).
Fellowship recipients will write a summary article for the SAH
Newsletter (1,000-2,000 words) that documents their travel, explains how
the fellowship contributed to the recipient’s understanding of the
built environment, and details how they anticipate the fellowship will
influence their future work. While travelling or shortly thereafter, the
fellowship recipient also will be expected to upload images to
SAHARA,
the SAH shared image archive. The recommended number of images to
upload is 500. Upon their return, fellowship recipients will make
themselves available to their local SAH chapter, should the chapter wish
to hear a presentation about the fellowship year.
APPLICATION DETAILS
The application deadline is October 3, 2016.
Applicants must be current members of SAH.
Join or renew by clicking here. To apply, follow the instructions at the top of this page. In the application you will be asked to provide:
- A statement (in English, 1000 words max) that details:
- The applicant’s academic and career goals
- What the applicant hopes to achieve intellectually during the Fellowship period
- How this Fellowship will advance the applicant’s academic interests and will make a difference in their professional work
- A
travel proposal outlining travel sites and buildings or landscapes in
those sites. Submitting a Google map outlining the sites would be a
plus.
- A proposed budget for the fellowship year
- A two-page writing sample
- Proof of terminal degree and date (photocopy of diploma), see above criteria
- Curriculum vitae (5 pages maximum)
- Five representative photographs taken by the applicant (low resolution)
Also required are:
Two recommendations submitted by October 3, 2016.
Recommendations should be submitted by thesis advisors or individuals
who can critically assess the applicant’s academic and/or professional
work. Recommenders will be asked to assess the applicant’s intellectual
curiosity, scholarly ability, and potential to benefit from the
fellowship. They will also be asked to provide evidence of applicant’s
distinguished academic achievement, leadership potential, and personal
motivation.