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Susan Siegfried
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  Susan Siegfried

Professor
U of M Affiliation(s)
Women's Studies



PhD Harvard University



Contact Information:
150D Tappan Hall
Phone: 734.763.5917
Email: siegfrie@umich.edu
Office Hours: M 3:00-4:00pm & T 4:00-5:00pm

Fields of Study: Late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century French painting

About Susan  Siegfried:

Susan L. Siegfried received her PhD from Harvard University and has taught at the University of Leeds in Great Britain, where she directed the MA in the Social History of Art, and at Northwestern University in the United States. Her major research has been on European art of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, especially the French art world of the Revolutionary and Romantic periods. Her research interests include the thematisation of gender, social spaces for viewing art, and theoretical models of interpretation. She is currently preparing a book on Ingres, as a central figure in the emergence of new imaginative paradigms informing artistic practice and responses to art in the early nineteenth century. She has organized and contributed to major exhibitions in her field (The Age of Watteau, Chardin and Fragonard: Masterpieces of French Genre Painting, National Gallery of Canada, National Museum of Art, and Gemaldegalerie, 2003-4; The Art of Louis-Léopold Boilly, Kimbell Art Museum and National Gallery of Art, 1995-6; and Works by J.-A.-D. Ingres in the Collection of the Fogg Art Museum, 1980). In previous work for the J. Paul Getty Trust, Los Angeles, she helped develop national and international policy for the arts and humanities in the area of information policy; publications in this area include "The Policy Landscape" in The Politics of Culture, 2000.



Curriculum Vitae

View Susan Siegfried's C.V.

Selected Publications

Books:

Ingres: Painting Reimagined (2009)

Staging Empire: Napolean, Ingres, and David (co-author, 2007)

Fingering Ingres (co-author, 2001)

The Art of Louis-Léopold Boilly: Modern Life in Napoleonic France (1995)

Articles:

"Engaging the Audience: Sexual Economies of Vision in Joseph Wright," Representations (1999)

"Naked History: The Rhetoric of Military Painting in Postrevolutionary France," Art Bulletin (1993).




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