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NYC’s Guggenheim Fellowship Celebrates 100 Years Of Cultural Impact, On View At New York Historical This Month

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THE GUGGENHEIM FELLOWSHIP AT 100, A New Special Exhibit Celebrating a Century of Cultural Impact 

On view at The New York Historical August 29 – November 30, 2025

Editor’s note: The Guggenheim Museum was recently included to receive new capital funding in the Fiscal Year 2025 budget, as promised from the mayor’s office, borough president’s offices, and city councilmembers funds.  While the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and the Guggenheim Museum are not the same company, they are founded by members of the same extended family – though for very different reasons.  This foundation has sponsored the likes of Linus Pauling (who is often called the “father of molecular biology,” having discovered sickle cell anemia and other diseases of biological origin).  He is also one of five people to have won more than one Nobel Prize, and is the only person to have been awarded two prizes unshared.   According to the Guggenheim Investments page,  “Notable recipients of Guggenheim Fellowships include Langston Hughes, Martha Graham, Ansel Adams, Alice Walker, Allen Ginsburg, Mary McCarthy, Vladimir Nabokov, Henry Kissinger, John Updike, and Cormac McCarthy.”

(New York, NY) – The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation – home to the Guggenheim Fellowships – celebrates a century of cultural impact with a special exhibit that chronicles the organization’s rich history and profound influence on American intellectual life and creative achievement. Titled The Guggenheim Fellowship at 100, this limited run presentation at The New York Historical opens August 29, 2025, and will explore the vast and rarely seen archives of the Foundation and spotlight some of the most notable Guggenheim Fellows over the last century. The exhibit is included in admission to The New York Historical, and will be displayed inside the main lobby as part of the Leah & Michael Weisberg Monumental Treasures Wall.

On view through November 30, 2025, The Guggenheim Fellowship at 100 will present seldom seen letters, photos, books, and applications from Guggenheim Fellows including writers, scholars, scientists, and artists such as Ansel Adams, Alvin Ailey, Hannah Arendt, James Baldwin, Rachel Carson, Aaron Copland, Robert Frank, Martha Graham, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Barbara McClintock, Thelonius Monk, Linus Pauling, F. Sherwood Rowland, Oliver Sacks, and many more.

Over the last century, the Guggenheim Foundation has supported over 19,000 exceptional writers, scholars, scientists and artists, adding to the cultural, scholarly, and scientific power of our country. Guggenheim Fellows have created forward-thinking art, made world-changing discoveries, given voice to all manner of experience, and answered some of our society’s biggest questions.

To see the full list of the 2025 Fellows and explore a century of Guggenheim Fellows, please visit gf.org.

The exhibit is curated by Hanna Pennington, Archivist and Associate Director, Guggenheim Foundation; and Saray Vazquez, Assistant Curatorial Coordinator, The New York Historical.

 

Exhibition Highlights 

 

Among the more than 70 artifacts and reproductions on view, the exhibit will feature:

 

The Guggenheim Fellowship at 100

On view August 29, 2025 – November 30, 2025

New York Historical

170 Central Park West

New York, NY 10024

More info: https://www.nyhistory.org/exhibitions/the-guggenheim-fellowship-at-100

 

About the Guggenheim Foundation

Created and initially funded in 1925 by US Senator Simon and Olga Guggenheim in memory of their son John Simon, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation has sought to “further the development of scholars and artists by assisting them to engage in research in any field of knowledge and creation in any of the arts, under the freest possible conditions.”

Since its establishment, the Guggenheim Foundation has granted over $400 million in Fellowships to more than 19,000 individuals, among whom are more than 125 Nobel laureates, members of all the national academies, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, Fields Medal, Turing Award, Bancroft Prize, National Book Award, and other internationally recognized honors. The broad range of fields of study is a unique characteristic of the Fellowship program.

The Guggenheim Foundation centers the talents and instincts of the Fellows, whose passions often have broad and immediate social impact. For example, in 1936, Zora Neale Hurston wrote Their Eyes Were Watching God with the support of a Guggenheim Fellowship and dedicated it to the Foundation’s first president, Henry Allen Moe. Photographer Robert Frank’s seminal book, The Americans, was the product of a cross-country tour supported by two Guggenheim Fellowships. The accomplishments of other early Fellows like e.e. cummings,  Jacob Lawrence, Rachel Carson, James Baldwin, Martha Graham, and Linus Pauling also demonstrate the strength of the Guggenheim Foundation’s core values and the power and impact of its approach. More information at gf.org.

 

About The New York Historical

 

New York’s first museum, The New York Historical is a leading cultural institution covering over 400 years of American history. Our offerings span groundbreaking exhibitions; peerless collections of art, documents, and artifacts; acclaimed educational programs for teachers and students nationwide; and thought-provoking conversations among leading scholars, journalists, and thinkers about the past, present, and future of the American experiment. The New York Historical is a museum of museums and a collection of collections. We are home to the Patricia D. Klingenstein Library, the Center for Women’s History, the DiMenna Children’s History Museum, and the future American LGBTQ+ Museum. We elevate the perspectives and scholarship that define the United States’ democratic heritage and challenge us all to shape our ongoing history for the better. Connect with us at nyhistory.org or at @nyhistory on FacebookTwitterInstagramTikTokYouTube, and Tumblr.

Banner Image: Guggenheim Fellowship graphic. Image Credit – Guggenheim Foundation


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We offer fellowships to individuals pursuing scholarship in any field of knowledge or creation in any art form under the freest possible conditions.