Two fully funded postdoctoral positions are available to begin in the 2026-27 academic year, working primarily with Professor Cammy Brothers. It is a one year, renewable position.
Candidates must have a Ph.D. or be in their final year of their doctoral program with the expectation of a degree by October 1, 2026. The field is defined broadly as the art and architecture of the early modern Mediterranean world, 1100-1700, but the specific focus is open.
Deadline: Applications should send the following in a single pdf by March 2, 2026: a letter of interest (1 page) indicating the candidate's background and reason for pursuing a postdoctoral position; a description of the proposed research and writing project to be pursued during the fellowship year (2-4 pages, it can be distinct from the Ph.D. topic but it can also be a publication plan building on the doctoral dissertation); a writing sample (between 20 and 40 pages), for example a dissertation chapter, a published article, or an essay under review for publication; an academic and/or professional c.v. (no more than three pages), including full educational background and language knowledge; and the names and contact information of two references (reference letters themselves will be solicited later in the evaluation process).
Contact: Queries and applications should be addressed to: brotherslabepflgmail.com
Please name your file LASTNAME_POSTDOCEPFL.pdf.
Professor Cammy Brothers: https://actu.epfl.ch/news/appointment-of-epfl-professors-178/.
Salary: Postdoctoral funding is at standard EPFL rates: in 2026 it is 88,000 CHF (more details are here: https://www.epfl.ch/campus/services/people-experience/en/remuneration-and-benefits/salaries-of-other-staff-categories/)
NB: Knowledge of French is not a criterion for evaluation, but successful candidates will be encouraged to learn French upon acceptance; courses are available at EPFL.
Reference:
JOB: Two Postdoctoral Positions, History, Theory, and Heritage, EPFL Lausanne. In: ArtHist.net, Feb 4, 2026 (accessed Feb 4, 2026), <https://arthist.net/archive/51671>.