Ann Reynolds is an Associate Professor in the Department of Art and Art History and the Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of Texas at Austin and Assistant Chair for Art History. In her research and teaching, she focuses on twentieth and twenty-first century art and visual culture in the United States and Europe with a concentration on the theory and practice of archival research. She is currently completing on a book entitled Imagining an Altogether: Cinema, Surrealism, and New York 1940–1970. This book provides a history of relationships among New York artists, poets, novelists, critics, choreographers, and filmmakers circa 1940–1970 that were shaped by shared, if heterogeneous, commitments to surrealism and its legacy, primarily through an engagement with film. Investigating the traces of such sharing, much of which is preserved in the archives of individuals, as it constellated both in the same moment and over time, reveals historical continuities and legacies that a focus on a single generation or group may lose sight of. In articulating the interplay between the more mundane aspects of New York life and how people came to terms with larger cultural, social, economic, and political events, she draws out the complexities of how individuals experience and share, shape and contest culture, and cultural politics, in ways that are not necessarily reflected in institutional art historical narratives and that are inherently more racially and sexually diverse.

Some of Reynolds’s most recent publications include the forthcoming essays “Mediated Visibility: Magnum’s Legacy of Water Imagery” for a special issue of LA+ on media, (Spring 2025) and “Parker Tyler’s ‘Film as The Problem of Space Control,’” for Abigail Susik, ed. Beyond Still Life: Surrealism and Animation. (Bloomsbury Press, 2025); and published essays, such as “No Strangers” for the exhibition catalogue The Young and Evil: Queer Modernism in New York, 1930–1955 (David Zwirner Gallery, 2019); an essay on Ruth Asawa for the exhibition In a Cloud, in a Wall, in a Chair: Modernists in Mexico at Midcentury (Art Institute of Chicago, 2019); and Joan Jonas (Fundación Botín, 2016 and US Pavillion, Venice Biennale, 2015). Reynolds is also the author of Robert Smithson: Learning From New Jersey and Elsewhere (MIT Press, 2003), which was translated into French in 2014. She has received residency fellowships from the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ (2021-2022); the National Humanities Center, NC (2017–2018); and the Clark Art Institute (2006). She has been the recipient of five teaching awards including the College of Fine Arts Distinguished Teaching Award in 2006.

She is not taking PhD students for the 2025-2026 academic year.

 


A History of Failure PDF

How the Box Contains Us PDF

Curving into a Straight Line PDF

No Strangers PDF