Professor Sheila O’Donnell becomes first Irish architect inducted into American Academy of Arts and Letters
Posted 28 February, 2019
UCD Professor Sheila O’Donnell is to become the first Irish architect to be inducted into the (opens in a new window)American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Professor O'Donnell, who is a graduate of and faculty member at the UCD School of Architecture, will be one of five foreign honorary members welcomed into the 120-year-old body in May.
Founded in 1898 as a life-long society for the United States’ leading architects, artists, composers, and writers, the American Academy of Arts and Letters elects new members into its 250 strong assembly only as current members pass away.
The Academy has 75 Foreign Honorary Members, of which only three are Irish.
Acclaimed novelist and University College Dublin alumni Colm Tóibín is among its membership, as are fellow Irish writers John Banville and Edna O’Brien.
We are pleased to announce that Sheila O’Donnell has been elected as one of five new Foreign Honorary Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the first Irish architect to receive this honour. (opens in a new window)https://t.co/405IMXdtpG (opens in a new window)pic.twitter.com/7KWor1cmkb
— O'Donnell + Tuomey (@odonnell_tuomey) (opens in a new window)February 26, 2019
Professor O'Donnell will formally join the Academy at a ceremony held at the society’s main building in upper Manhattan, New York, where composer David Del Tredici will give the keynote address.
Others elected this year as Foreign Honorary Members include the British novelist Rachel Cusk and the Brazilian photographer Sebastiao Salgado.
Membership of the American Academy of Arts and Letters has over the past century and beyond included William Merritt Chase, Childe Hassam, Julia Ward Howe, Henry James, Edward MacDowell, Theodore Roosevelt, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, John Singer Sargent, Mark Twain, and Edith Wharton.
A foundering director of Irish architectural firm O’Donnell + Tuomey, alongside fellow UCD alumni (opens in a new window)Professor John Tuomey, Professor O'Donnell has won a number of international awards, including a Royal Gold Medal - the world's most prestigious architecture award.
In 2014 she and Professor Tuomey were presented with the Medal in recognition for having a “significant influence on the advancement of architecture" across the world.
By: David Kearns, Digital Journalist / Media Officer, UCD University Relations