Neil Levine (art historian)
Neil Levine | |
|---|---|
| Born | Neil Arthur Levine 1941 (age 84–85) |
| Occupations | Art historian Educator |
| Awards | Slade Professor of Fine Art (1994-1995) Guggenheim Fellowship (2003) Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2010) |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | Princeton University Yale University |
| Thesis | Architectural Reasoning in the Age of Positivism: The Neo-Grec Idea of Henri Labrouste's Bibliotheque Sainte-Genevieve (1975) |
| Doctoral advisor | Vincent Scully |
| Influences | Donald Drew Egbert Robert Rosenblum |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Art history |
| Sub-discipline | Frank Lloyd Wright |
| Institutions | Harvard University |
Neil Levine (born 1941) is an architectural and art historian and educator. An authority on modern architecture, in particular, Frank Lloyd Wright and nineteenth-century France, he is the Emmet Blakeney Gleason Professor of History of Art and Architecture emeritus at Harvard University where he taught from 1973 until his retirement in 2014. He has authored, co-authored, and edited over fifteen books and published more than fifty articles and reviews on subjects ranging from Wright, Beaux-Arts and Postmodern architecture to the sculpture of Donald Judd.