Research Interests
- Land Art, Minimalism, and Conceptualism
- Gender and sexuality
- Critical theory
- Works on paper
Education
BA, University of California Berkeley
MA, University of Texas at Austin
Bio
Jana La Brasca is a researcher, writer, and PhD candidate in art history specializing in modern and contemporary art. Her dissertation, focused on sculpture, drawings, and conceptual projects by Alice Aycock created between 1968 and 1986, led to her appointment as curatorial researcher for Groundswell: Women of Land Art, at the Nasher Sculpture Center. Previously, she held the Mellon curatorial fellowship in Prints and Drawings at the Blanton Museum of Art, where she co-organized the exhibition Without Limits: Helen Frankenthaler, Abstraction and the Language of Print and contributed to After Michelangelo, Past Picasso: Leo Steinberg’s Library of Prints. Prior to doctoral study, she was the catalogue raisonné research fellow at Judd Foundation, in Marfa, Texas, and New York. She has presented her work in programs organized by Marfa Book Company, the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, the Henry Moore Institute, the Contemporary Austin, Landmarks, the Nasher Sculpture Center, the Art Galleries at Black Studies, and Women and Their Work. Her research has been further supported by a PEO Scholar Award, and predoctoral fellowships at the Menil Drawing Institute and the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Examples of her writing can be found here.