The American Academy in Rome, a dynamic international institution supporting artists and scholars with the space to learn, create, and work toward interdisciplinary breakthroughs, presents the first exhibition dedicated to the influence of a group of trailblazing women who helped record archaeology and landscapes from new vantage points.
On view May 14–November 9, Women and Ruins: Archaeology, Photography, and Landscape celebrates women explorers, archeologists, and travelers from the early 1900s who adopted the camera to document excavations that were yielding major new discoveries about antiquity and the radical transformations of Italy in the period. Contemporary social mores constrained women’s participation in cultural and scientific activities such as archaeology. The Academy brings to light the ways in which a cohort of American, British, and Italian women used photography as a tool for understanding both the ancient past and for interpreting the social and political transformations of their times.
The pioneering women whose photographs are highlighted in the exhibition include:
Women and Ruins explores how Rome became a hub for artists, writers, archaeologists, and intellectuals, especially after the unification of Italy known as the Risorgimento, when major excavations attracted experts from around the world. These individuals were deeply connected, both professionally and personally, as they worked to uncover the city’s past. Their discoveries sparked debates about how to balance historic monuments with nature and the emerging modern cityscape. On view in the exhibition are photographic documents by Blake, Van Deman, Bell, and the Bulwer sisters of Rome, the Campagna Romana—the Lazio region’s countryside surrounding Rome—alongside their photographs from travels to Algeria, Tunisia, Croatia, and other parts of the Mediterranean.
The opening reception takes place on Wednesday, May 14 from 6:00 to 9:00pm. The event is accompanied by a Shaping the New City: Rome, a conversation with archaeologist Maria Grazia Turco, AAR’s Mellon Humanities Professor Caroline Goodson (2003 Fellow), and writer Selby Lynn Schwartz (2025 Fellow), who will discuss how, at the turn of the twentieth century, the city of Rome became a center of archaeological research, began a campaign for modernization, and fostered a nascent women’s movement in Italy.
Didascalia foto
Marion Elizabeth Blake, Via Valeria. Velino Mountain from Alba Fucens, 1947-1961. American Academy in Rome, Photographic Archive.