Site Specific Award: Arts and Environment Advocate |
WILLIAM L. FOX
William L. Fox is founding Director of the Center for Art + Environment at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada, and has variously been called an art critic, science writer, and cultural geographer.
He has published
sixteen books on cognition and landscape, hundreds of essays in art monographs,
magazines and journals, and fifteen collections of poetry. Among his nonfiction
titles are Aereality: On the World from Above; Terra Antarctica: Looking Into
the Emptiest Continent; In the Desert of Desire: Las Vegas and the Culture of
Spectacle; and The Void, the Grid, and the Sign: Traversing the Great Basin.
Fox is also an artist who has exhibited in numerous group and solo shows in
eight countries since 1974. He has twice been a Lannan Foundation Writer in Residence.
Fox has researched
and written books set in the extreme environments of the Antarctic, the Arctic,
Chile, Nepal, and other locations. His work has been reviewed in The New York
Times, Los Angeles Times, The Times Literary Supplement, Artforum and Nature.
He is a fellow of both the Royal Geographical Society and Explorers Club and he
is the recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, National
Endowment for the Humanities, and National Science Foundation. He has been a
visiting scholar at the Getty Research Institute, Clark Art Institute, the
Australian National University, National Museum of Australia, and the Oslo
School of Architecture and Design. Fox serves on the editorial advisory boards
of the Archaeologies of Landscape in the Americas book series, ARID: Journal of
Desert Art, Design & Ecology, and Humanities Research (Australian National
University).