About AHAA

The Association of Historians of American Art (AHAA) is a membership organization and an affiliated society of the College Art Association (CAA).

Founded in 1979, AHAA fulfills its mission of promoting scholarship in the historical art of the United States through several means. We sponsor two sessions at the CAA annual meeting. Our semiannual Newsletter, issued in spring and fall, is filled with current information about exhibitions, publications, and other news and recently expanded to include book reviews: for a limited time only, the current Newsletter's contents are offered here. And our Membership Directory, an exclusive members' benefit, is an invaluable guide to current scholars of American art.

We invite you to join our collegial international community of scholars by becoming a member of AHAA as we seek to develop a lively and accessible forum for the exchange of information and ideas.

History of AHAA
The Association of Historians of American Art was founded in 1979 at the University of Illinois at Chicago under the direction of David Sokol in response to the need for an advocacy group that would promote scholarship in American art. Since then the organization has held sessions annually at the College Art Association meeting and has published a newsletter.

In 1988 AHAA moved to the University of Delaware , where it was led by William I. Homer. Under his direction the meetings became a forum for presenting organized panels dealing with scholarship in the field, and the newsletter was expanded. In 1993 AHAA was turned over to Ann Gibson and Michele Bogart, both at the State University of New York, Stony Brook. The newsletter was published by Helen Harrison at the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center.

In 1998 Mary Ann Calo and David Brigham accepted responsibility for AHAA. Calo agreed to edit the newsletter and Colgate University made a commitment to provide a student assistant to help with that publication. Brigham and Calo shared responsibility for programming at the annual meeting. In response to members' interest, AHAA became an affiliated society of the College Art Association and drafted its first set of bylaws.

Diana Linden and Andrew Walker became co-chairs of AHAA in 2001, when Wendy Greenhouse began editing and publishing the newsletter, with the assistance of Ilene Susan Fort between 2002 and 2006. In 2002 Charlene Garfinkle became the organization's first secretary as well as serving as treasurer. In 2003, AHAA sponsored a symposium jointly with the Terra Museum of American Art and the Art Institute of Chicago on the subject of "Collecting America: Museums, Patrons, and the Meanings of Objects." During Linden and Walker's tenure, AHAA increased its membership and began discussion of not-for-profit status for the organization.

Sarah Cash and Elizabeth Kennedy were elected co-chairs in 2003, when Kimberly Orcutt joined the board in the newly created position of membership coordinator;as a result, membership rolls increased significantly. Ê

Under Charlene Garfinkle's leadership, AHAA established 501c3 designation, and in 2005 an annual directory of members was first issued. A survey of members undertaken in 2004 provided input on AHAA's chronological and geographical parameters. That year, a reception in Chicago honored AHAA founding chair David Sokol and furthered discussion about future direction of the organization. In 2006 responsibility for compiling information for the newsletter was divided among additional volunteers, with Sally Anne Duncan undertaking the new publications list and Isabel Taube gathering information for the exhibitions listings. Under the guidance of Katherine Manthorne and Leo Mazow, book reviews were introduced in the newsletter. AHAA's bylaws were revised to allow a staggered rotation of new co-chairs, and the organization's website was launched.