Biography

Margot Yale is a Provost Fellow and PhD candidate in the Department of Art History, as well as a recipient of the Visual Studies Graduate Certificate. She studies American art in the twentieth century, with particular interests in printmaking, histories of the Left and organized labor, and pedagogy and community-oriented practice. Her dissertation “From Red Feminism to the Blacklist: Labor Schools and the Work of Art, 1935–1957,” considers how women artists surveilled and blacklisted by the federal government under McCarthyism built solidarity with multiracial working-class audiences through pedagogy and the structural logic of the multiple. Her project is supported by a 2024–2025 Wyeth Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, as well as the Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley, Special Collections at the University of Michigan, the Decorative Arts Trust, and the Visual Studies Research Institute at USC. Her book chapter, “‘A Healthy Tonic’: Lucienne Bloch’s The Cycle of a Woman’s Life and the Value of the Artist at Work,” which examines the therapeutic dimensions of mural painting for incarcerated women under the New Deal welfare state, was published in Modernism, Art, Therapy, eds. Suzanne Hudson and Tanya Sheehan (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2024). Margot has held positions at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Museum of Modern Art, where she was a cataloguer of drawings and prints. She has curated exhibitions at Equity Gallery, Kings County Hospital (with the No Longer Empty Curatorial Lab), and the Princeton University Art Museum. She received her B.A. summa cum laude in art history and American Studies from Princeton University.

[myale@usc.edu]

Education

  • BA Princeton University, 6/2017