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Post by deanna on Feb 22, 2013 9:41:20 GMT -7
Tuesday, February 26 at 5:30 pm Main Gallery Professor Justine Andrews Books as Art: Medieval Beginnings
After earning her Ph.D. from UCLA in 2002, Justine Andrews joined the faculty of the Department of Art and Art History at the University of New Mexico in 2004. Andrews has worked extensively in the museum field including the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Meadows Museum in Dallas, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. She also held a Fulbright Faculty Research Fellowship in Nicosia, Cyprus (2008), where she was in residence at the Cyprus American Archeological Research Institute. Her recent publications include "Gothic and Byzantine in the Monumental Arts of Famagusta: Diversity, Permeability and Power" in Medieval and Renaissance Famagusta: Studies in Architecture, Art and History, edited by Nicholas Coureas, Peter Edbury and Michael J.K. Walsh. (2012). Currently she is working on a book that analyzes the relationship of identity to Gothic Art and Architecture from Nicosia and Famagusta, Cyprus. At UNM she offers courses on Western Medieval, Byzantine, and Islamic Art and Architecture with a special emphasis on the interaction between these cultures.
Libro de Horas de Isabel la Catolica. Facsimile of the original fifteenth-century manuscript of Isabela Castile. 7-color offset lithograph with gold. Madrid: Testimonio CompaƱia Editorial, 1991. Lent by University of New Mexico Libraries, Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections
Co-sponsored by the UNM Department of Art and Art History with support from the Allene H. and Walter P. Kleweno Lecture Series Fund
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