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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:New Light on the Sistine Chapel
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SUMMARY:New Light on the Sistine Chapel
DESCRIPTION:<h2><a href="/visual-representation-materiality-and-medium">VISUAL REPRESENTATION, MATERIALITY, AND MEDIUM</a></h2><h2>SPEAKERS:&nbsp;<span>Maria Loh, Princeton Institute for Advanced Study</span></h2><p><span>Maria H. Loh is Professor in Art History at CUNY Hunter College. She received her BA in History from McGill University (1993), a Certificat des Études from the École Régionale des Beaux Arts in Rennes (1995), a Licence in art history from the Université de Rennes II, France (1996), and her MA/PhD in Art History from University of Toronto (2003). She was a predoctoral fellow at the Getty Research Institute (2000-2002), the Joanna Randall-MacIver Junior Research Fellow at St Hilda’s College Oxford (2003-2004), the recipient of a Philip Leverhulme Prize (2007-2009), the Willis F. Doney Member at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (2012-2013), and Robert Lehman Visiting Professor at Villa I Tatti / Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies (2018). Until 2016, she taught in the Department of History of Art at University College London. She is the author of three books—</span><em><span>Titian Remade. Repetition and the Transformation of Early Modern Italian Art</span></em><span> (Getty Research Intitute, 2007); </span><em><span>Still Lives. Death, Desire, and the Portrait of the Old Master</span></em><span> (Princeton, 2015); and </span><em><span>Titian’s Touch. Art, Magic, &amp; Philosophy</span></em><span> (Reaktion, 2019)—and the editor of two special issues of the </span><em><span>Oxford Art Journal</span></em><span>—</span><em><span>Early Modern Horror</span></em><span> (Oxford, 2011) and </span><em><span>Mal’occhio: Looking Awry at the Renaissance</span></em><span> (co-edited with Patricia Rubin, Oxford, 2009). She is a regular contributor to </span><em><span>Art in America</span></em><span> and has also written on: portraiture and loss; “special affect” in early modern painting and sculpture; melancholia and the Renaissance in Ottocento Italy; remakes in Chinese cinema; repetition in Hitchcock’s Vertigo; and the work of Sherrie Levine. Her fourth book </span><em><span>Liquid Sky</span></em><span> will explore visual representations of the early modern sky.&nbsp;</span></p>
LOCATION:Sackler Building, Room 422
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20250313T213000Z
DTEND:20250313T230000Z
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