Daniel Williamson

Image details

 

 

Dr. Daniel Williamson holds a PhD in art history from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University and a Masters in architectural history from the University of Virginia. He currently teaches art and architectural history at the Savannah College of Art and Design. His research and writing, which has been supported by a Panofsky Fellowship and SCAD Sabbatical Award, spans on 19th and 20th century architecture in both India and the United States with a primary focus on postcolonial architectures in India after independence. His most recent publications include “The Crawford Market: Sanitary Problems, Engineered Solutions, and Symbolic Gestures in Late Nineteenth-Century Bombay” in Mobs and Microbes Global Perspectives on Market Halls, Civic Order and Public Health edited by Leila Marie Farah and Samantha L. Martin and to be published by the University of Leuven Press in February and “Re-sacralizing Water Infrastructure at Balkrishna Doshi’s GSFC Township” in the volume Sacred Water Architecture edited by Anata Geva and forthcoming in May from Routledge. He is currently at work on a book length manuscript on the modern architecture of Ahmedabad, India after independence.