Biography
Judith Brodie
Judith Brodie, curator of modern prints and drawings at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, is curator of Stanley William Hayter: From Surrealism to Abstraction.
Brodie was appointed to her present position at the National Gallery in 2002. As a curator in the Gallery’s department of prints and drawings since 1986, she has organized and collaborated on various exhibitions, most recently Prints Abound: Paris in the 1890s (2000) and A Century of Drawing: Works on Paper from Degas to LeWitt (2001), Drawings of Jim Dine (2004). She has written about prints and drawings by 18th- and 19th-century British artists, as well as 20th-century graphic works by Alberto Giacometti, Philip Guston, Paul Klee, Käthe Kollowitz, and Jacques Villon, among others.
Prior to coming to the Gallery, Brodie worked at the National Museum of American Art between 1985 and 1986 and the Philadelphia Museum of Art from 1978 through 1985. She was a visiting artist at Birgit Skiöld’s Print Workshop in London from 1976 to 1977 and taught printmaking at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1976. She attended the Rhode Island School of Design (M.F.A., 1976), Dartmouth College, and Mount Holyoke College (B.A., 1974).
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