Dr. Angela Miller's Recent Book Has Received Multiple Reviews
Body Language: The Queer Staged Photographs of George Platt Lynes and PaJaMa was Co-Authored with Nick Mauss
Body Language: The Queer Staged Photographs of George Platt Lynes and PaJaMa was Co-Authored with Nick Mauss
Both Dr. Kristina Kleutghen and Dr. Claudia Swan contributed to a special issue of the Journal of Early Modern History on “Global Early Modern Art.”
On February 9, Dr. Claudia Swan delivered a lecture at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, in conjunction with the exhibition Dutch Art in a Global Age.
As a part of SLAM’s University Day, PhD student Katie DiDomenico offers a talk at Gallery 338 about John Greenwood’s Sea Captains Carousing in Suriname.
Undergraduate Student Sam Brady-Myerov discusses tiles as tools for translating urban identities at SLAM.
PhD student Hannah Wier joined Assistant Curator Dana Ostrander to lead a lively discussion on Reframing the 19th Century at the Kemper Art Museum.
The students in "Van Gogh: Creativity, Mythology and Modern Art" created audio description tours for visually impaired guests at the Saint Louis Art Museum
Dr. Childs will join six members from the humanities and humanistic social sciences for a semester-long residential fellowship
The New York Times recently published an article on the excavation of a fourth-century church at Amheida (ancient Trimithis), the site where Dr. Aravecchia serves as Archaeological Field Director. The article discusses how the excavation's findings have revealed exciting, new information concerning early Christian burial practices.
The article highlights Dr. Aravecchia's excavations in Amheida
Over Spring break, Dr. Miller's class — “California Dreamin’: LA Culture and the Making of the Twentieth Century”— had the opportunity to spend seven days in Los Angeles, as part of the West Bay View Foundation Travel Seminar Endowment. Over the week, they explored both the renowned high art institutions and the grassroots public art that make the city an invaluable site for the development and study of American visual culture.