Cheryl Finley
Cheryl Finley is an art historian, author, curator and critic. She was a professor at Cornell University and Director of the AUC Art History + Curatorial Studies Collective. She won Bard Graduate Center's Horowitz Book Prize for her book, Committed to Memory: the Art of the Slave Ship Icon, in 2019.
Early life and education
Finley studied Spanish at Wellesley College as an undergraduate student and earned her PhD in Art History and African American studies from Yale University, where she co-founded the Photographic Memory Workshop in 1998 with Laura Wexler, Leigh Raiford and Robin Bernstein.Career
Finley began in the art world as an art appraiser specializing in photography. Until 2024, she was Associate Professor and Director of Visual Studies in the History of Art Department at Cornell University. In 2016, Finley helped organize and host Black Portraitures III with Deborah Willis, Awam Amkpa and Manthia Diawara in Johannesburg. This nomadic annual conference convenes artists and scholars to discuss imagery of the African Diaspora in visual culture. In 2017, she was a speaker at the 28th Annual James Porter Colloquium at Howard University along with Lorna Simpson, Fred Wilson, Dawoud Bey, Kinshasa Holman Conwill, and Kellie Jones. That same year she spoke with Deborah Willis and Kellie Jones about Black social movements on a panel at the annual College Art Association's conference in New York.In 2019, Finley took a leave of absence from her teaching job at Cornell University to become the inaugural Director of the Atlanta University Center Collective for the Study of Art History and Curatorial Studies. The Collective culls together students from Clark Atlanta, Morehouse, and Spelman to study curatorial and art historical practices and is the only program in the US focused on training professionals of color in this field. In 2019, she was a panelist for Miami Art Basel's tenth annual Discussion on African Diaspora Art along with Dr. Moyo Okediji, and Sopo Aluko.
Finley writes primarily about Black contemporary artists. Among her publications are monographs on the photographer Teenie Harris, on Terry Adkins, a book about the use of the slave ship image in art and culture, a pictorial book about Harlem, and most recently an exhibition catalog from the collection of Souls Grown Deep Foundation. In 2019, Finley won the Horowitz Book Prize from the Bard Graduate Center for her book Committed to Memory: The Art of the Slave Ship Icon. Finley has also contributed to ArtForum and ArtNEWS.