Amanda Cachia
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Mail code: 1505Campus: Tempe
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Amanda Cachia (Ph.D. UCSD, 2017) is Professor of Practice in Museum Studies in the School of Art at the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts at Arizona State University and Affiliate Faculty in the Disability Studies B.A. Her research interests include disability art history, theory and activism, crip curatorial practices and access aesthetics, museums, institutional critique, and social justice, and critical disability approaches to translation, movement, medicine, and health. Cachia is the author of three books, Rehabilitating the Asylum: Mental Health Justice and Contemporary Art, (forthcoming 2027), Hospital Aesthetics: Disability, Medicine, Activism (2025), and The Agency of Access: Contemporary Disability Art and Institutional Critique (2024), the latter of which was shortlisted for the College Art Association’s 2026 Charles Rufus Morey Book Award. She is also editor of Curating Access: Disability Art Activism and Creative Accommodation (2022), which includes over 40 international contributors. She is currently working on her fourth book project, Disability Art: A Political History. She has guest edited two Special Issues for peer-reviewed journals, including “Curating New Openings: Re-thinking Diversity in the Museum,” Art Journal (2017); and “Transdisciplinarity in Disability, Art, and Design,” Journal of Arts and Communities (2024). A widely published scholar, Cachia’s texts have appeared in 20 edited volumes, and in peer-reviewed journals such as Journal of Curatorial Studies, Woman’s Art Journal, Journal of Modern Craft, Senses & Society, Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies, Disability Studies Quarterly, Museums and Social Issues, and other venues. Her article, “Crip Curation and the Aesthetics of the Undeliverable” published in the Journal of Visual Culture won the the Early Career Research Prize from the International Association for Visual Culture (2022). Her writing has been translated into Spanish, German, and Italian.
Since 2010, Cachia has organized 20 art exhibitions devoted to the work of disabled artists. In 2024, her exhibition Smoke & Mirrors at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University was supported by a $180,000 grant from the Ford Foundation. From 2023-2024, she was a curatorial consultant and commissioned essayist for the Getty Foundation and Getty Research Institute initiative PST ART exhibition and catalogue For Dear Life: Art, Medicine, Disability held at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. She is currently developing the major touring exhibition Vital Signs: From Patient to Power with Mid-America Arts Alliance and ExhibitsUSA which will be hosted by numerous galleries across the United States from 2027-2032. Cachia is also a curatorial and disability advisor for a major exhibition being developed about art and disability from the 19th century to the present at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2028.
Cachia’s research, writing, and curatorial work have been supported by grants and fellowships from the Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, Millard Meiss Publication Fund through the College Art Association, and Ford Foundation. She is a recipient of the $50,000 National Art and Disability Award (Established Category) from Creative Australia (2024), and the Irving K. Zola Disability Studies Emerging Scholar Award (2014).
Ph.D. Art History, Theory & Criticism, University of California San Diego, 2017
M.A. Visual & Critical Studies, California College of the Arts, 2012
M.A. Curatorial Studies, Goldsmiths College, University of London, 2001
Contemporary disability art and politics, crip curatorial studies, access aesthetics, social justice
Books:
Amanda Cachia, Rehabilitating the Asylum: Mental Health Justice and Contemporary Art, Manchester: UK: Manchester University Press (forthcoming, 2027).
Amanda Cachia, Hospital Aesthetics: Disability, Medicine, Activism, Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 2025. (Recipient of Creative Capital | Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, 2023 and College Art Association Millard Meiss Publication Fund 2024).
Amanda Cachia, The Agency of Access: Contemporary Disability Art and Institutional Critique, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2024.
Curating Access: Disability Art Activism and Creative Accommodation, edited by Amanda Cachia, London: Routledge, 2022.
Recent Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles:
Amanda Cachia, “A Firm Infirmity: Extending Rebecca Horn’s Aesthetic Prosthetics to Disability Studies,” Woman’s Art Journal, Spring/Summer 2025, Vol. 46, Issue 1.
Amanda Cachia, “Constructing Elastic Worlds: From Avant-Garde Exhibition Design to Crip Comfort.” Journal of Curatorial Studies, Vol. 13, Issue 2, 2024.
Journal of Arts & Communities, Vol. 15, Issue 2, October 2024, published online: February 2025, Special Issue: “Transdisciplinarity in Disability, Art and Design," Guest edited by Amanda Cachia.
Amanda Cachia (2024). “Crafting Disability: Re-envisioning Indian Textile Traditions.” The Journal of Modern Craft, 17(2), 109–123.
Amanda Cachia, “Crip Curation and the Aesthetics of the Undeliverable,” Journal of Visual Culture, Volume 22, Issue 3, 2023.
Book Chapters:
Amanda Cachia, “Disability Studies: Institutional Critique and Disability Art as an Heir to Art’s History,” Art History Now: Objects, Concepts, Approaches, edited by Geraldine Johnson, Routledge, Taylor & Francis: New York and London, 2026.
Amanda Cachia, “Moving towards touch: the ambulatory aesthetics of description” in Beyond the Visual: Multisensory modes of beholding art, edited by Ken Wilder and Aaron McPeake, London: UCL Press, 2025.
Amanda Cachia, “Cripistemology of the Cabinet: Jesse Darling’s Epistemologies (shamed cabinet),” in Art and the Critical Medical Humanities (Critical Interventions in the Medical and Health Humanities), edited by Fiona Johnstone, Stuart Murray, and Allison Morehead, London, UK: Bloomsbury Academic Press, December 2025.
Amanda Cachia, “Fugitive Crip Way-Finding and Artful Deception in the Museum,” in Pedagogical Art in Activist and Curatorial Practices, edited by Izabel Galliera and Noni Brynjolson, London and New York: Routledge, 2025.
Amanda Cachia, “Curating New Perspectives: How My Dwarfism Led Me to Disability Arts,” in Erin Pritchard (ed.) Dwarfism Arts and Advocacy: Creating Our Own Positive Identity, Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing, 2024.
Amanda Cachia, “Reinvention at the Wheel: Shaping New Histories in the Decolonization of Disability” in The Routlege Companion to Decolonizing Art History, edited by Tatiana Flores, Florencia San Martín, and Charlene Villaseñor Black, New York and London: Routledge/Taylor & Francis, 2023.
Amanda Cachia, “Art History’s Co-Inhabitants: Disabled Artistic Approaches to Indigeneity” in Routledge Companion to Art and Disability edited by Keri Watson and Timothy W. Hiles, London and New York: Routledge, 2022.
Courses
2026 Spring
| Course Number | Course Title |
|---|---|
| ARS 224 | Museum and Heritage Careers |
| ARS 224 | Museum and Heritage Careers |
| ARS 394 | Special Topics |
| ARS 394 | Special Topics |
| ARS 492 | Honors Directed Study |
| ARS 492 | Honors Directed Study |
| ARS 492 | Honors Directed Study |
| ARS 493 | Honors Thesis |
| ARS 493 | Honors Thesis |
| ARS 493 | Honors Thesis |
| ARS 499 | Individualized Instruction |
| ARS 499 | Individualized Instruction |
| ARS 499 | Individualized Instruction |
| DST 394 | Special Topics |
| ARS 592 | Research |
| ARS 592 | Research |
2025 Fall
| Course Number | Course Title |
|---|---|
| ARS 120 | Intro to Global Museum Studies |
| ARS 120 | Intro to Global Museum Studies |
| ARS 323 | Curatorial Activism |
| ARS 323 | Curatorial Activism |
| ARS 492 | Honors Directed Study |
| ARS 492 | Honors Directed Study |
| ARS 492 | Honors Directed Study |
| ARS 493 | Honors Thesis |
| ARS 493 | Honors Thesis |
| ARS 493 | Honors Thesis |
| ARS 499 | Individualized Instruction |
| ARS 499 | Individualized Instruction |
| ARS 499 | Individualized Instruction |