Dr. Kellie Jones is Hans Hofmann Professor of Modern Art in the Department of Art History & Archaeology and Professor of  African American & African Diaspora Studies at Columbia University. Her research interests include African American and African Diaspora artists, Latinx and Latin American Artists, and issues in contemporary art and museum theory.

Dr. Jones is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (Boston) and the American Philosophical Society (Philadelphia) and holds an honorary Doctorate from The Courtauld in London. She is a recipient of a Lenfest Distinguished Faculty Award from Columbia University. She has also received awards from the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, Harvard University; The College Art Association; and Creative Capital | Warhol Foundation. She was the inaugural recipient of the High Museum’s, David C. Driskell Prize, in 2005. In 2016 she was named a MacArthur Foundation Fellow.

Dr. Jones’s writings have appeared in a multitude of exhibition catalogues and journals.  She is the author of two books published by Duke University Press, EyeMinded: Living and Writing Contemporary Art (2011), and South of Pico: African American Artists in Los Angeles in the 1960s and 1970s (2017), which received the Walter & Lillian Lowenfels Criticism Award from the American Book Award in 2018 and was named a Best Book of the Decade in 2019 by ArtNews, Best Art Book of 2017 in The New York Times and a Best Book of 2017 in Artforum. Her latest book October Files: David Hammons will be released in Spring 2025 on MIT Press.

Dr. Jones has also worked as a curator for over four decades and has numerous major national and international exhibitions to her credit.  Her exhibition “Now Dig This! Art and Black Los Angeles, 1960-1980,” at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, was named one of the best exhibitions of 2011 and 2012 by Artforum, and best thematic show nationally by the International Association of Art Critics (AICA). She was co-curator of “Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the 1960s” (Brooklyn Museum), named one the best exhibitions of 2014 by Artforum.


Awards

American Philosophical Society Member, 2023

Lenfest Distinguished Faculty Award Columbia University, 2023

The Courtauld, University of London Honorary Doctorate, 2022

College Art Association Distinguished Scholar, 2020

American Academy of Arts & Sciences Member 2019

ARTnews, Best Book of the Decade South of Pico, 2019

Walter & Lillian Lowenfels Criticism Award American Book Award, South of Pico, 2018

Amherst College Honorary Doctorate, 2018

College Art Association Excellence in Diversity Award, 2018

New York Times, Best Art Book of 2017 South of Pico, 2017

Artforum, Best Book of 2017  South of Pico, 2017

MacArthur Foundation MacArthur Fellowship, 2016

Terra Foundation Fellow, 2013

Andy Warhol Foundation Art Writers Grant, 2013

McColl Center for Art + Innovation Artist-in-Residence, 2012

David C. Driskell Prize 2005



Books

October Files: David Hammons MIT Press, 2025

Wangechi Mutu Phaidon Press, 2023

Mickalene Thomas Phaidon Press, 2022

Lorna Simpson Phaidon Press, 2022

South of Pico: African American Artists in Los Angeles in the 1960s and 1970 Duke University Press, 2017

EyeMinded: Living and Writing Contemporary Art Duke University Press, 2011

Essays

“Paradox of the Gone” in David Hammons: Day’s End Whitney Museum of American Art, 2024

“Nancy Elizabeth Prophet and Augusta Savage: Sculptural Habits of Black Modernism,” in Huey Copeland and Steven Nelson, eds. Black Modernisms in the Transatlantic World. Washington D.C.: Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, 2023

“The World According to Linda Goode Bryant,” in Just Above Midtown 1974 to the Present Museum of Modern Art, 2022

“Intermedial Doggerel,” in Ulysses Jenkins: Without Your Interpretation Hammer Museum and Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia,  2021

“When Painting Stepped Out to Lunch,” in Terry R. Myers, ed Candida Alvarez: Here. A Visual Reader Chicago: The Green Lantern Press, 2020

Exhibitions