13.Indiana Susan
Nelson, Associate Professor, Fine Arts and EALC (Ph.D., Harvard Univ.):
East Asian art history, Chinese painting. 14.
Buffalo Minglu Gao mgao@acsu.buffalo.edu Ph.D., Harvard University Chinese
Art, Twentieth and twenty-first centuries Professor Gao is one
of the leading authorities on Chinese Art in the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries. He has an impressive record of curatorial activity in China
prior to 1989 and he has earned an M. A. and Ph.D. at Harvard. He
is the author of four books, two in Chinese and two in English. Books
(in English): Inside Out: New Chinese Art,ed. Fragmented Memory:
The Chinese Avant-Garde in Exile,co-ed. Books (in Chinese): Chinese
Avant-Garde Art The History of Contemporary Chinese Art 开的课:Chinese
Modernity and Avat-Garde中国的现代性和Contemporary Chinese Arts 当代中国美术 15.
Cornell AN-YI PAN ap76@cornell.edu Research: Chinese Painting;
Chinese sculpture; Japanese art in general; Cross-cultural analysis
of East Asian art; Sinological interpretation of Chinese art; Buddhist
theology and art; Modern and contemporary Chinese art Teaching: Survey
courses: Introduction to the Arts of China Introduction to the
Arts of Japan Chinese Painting Seminars: Arts of the Tang
Dynasty Arts of the Song Dynasty Friends of the Cold Season Dawn
of Modern Chinese Art Modernity and Chinese Art Select Publications: Books
in progress: Working title: "Li Gonglin's White Lotus Society
Picture and the Tang and Song Quest for Enlightenment" Articles: "The
Formation and Ideology of the Three Laughers Story and its Later Derivative:
The Two Laughers," in Professor Chu-tsing Li's Festschrift [in
press]"Painting and Friendship, Private and Political Life: The
Case of Li Gonglin(ca. 1049-1106)" in Journal of Sung-Yuan Studies
(September 2000)"Eclecticism in Shen Hao's Painting," in
Perspectives on the Heritage of the Brush, Lawrence: Spencer Museum
of Art, University of Kansas, 1997."A Southern Song Dynasty Amitabha
Triad Painting Reconsidered," in The Bulletin of the Cleveland
Museum of Art 81 (November 1994) 16.Chicago Jennifer
Purtle (Instructor of Chinese painting) jgpurtle@midway.uchicago.edu Yale
University Later Chinese Art. Research interests in Chinese visual
and material culture from the Six Dynasties to the present, especially
the cultural geography of Chinese visual production, urbanism, and
East-West exchange. "The Eyes Have It: Technology, Ritual,
and Animation in Chinese Sculpture and Painting from Han through Tang" HUNG
WU,巫鸿 Ph.D. Harrie A. Vanderstappen Distinguished Service Professor
in Art History and East Asian Languages and Civilizations. Teaching/Research
Interests: Early Chinese art and relationships between visual forms
(architecture, bronze vessels, pictorial carvings and murals, etc.)
and ritual, social memory, and political discourses. 17.UCI Judy
Chungwa Ho My research has been guided by a concern with how Chinese
art history has been shaped by forces both inside and outside China国内外的情况如何塑造了中国艺术史,
in particular, how recent archaeological finds have transformed our
present understanding and future direction of the field. 近来考古发现如何影响了目前的理解和对未来方向的定位 In
recent years, my major efforts have been directed towards the completion
of two book projects concerning intercultural contacts on the Silk
Road and the impact on art丝绸之路上的跨文化接触及其对前现代化艺术,形象塑造,视觉和宗教实践的影响, image-production,
and visual and religious practices in pre-modern China. The first
book, The Art of the Storyteller: Translation of a Buddhist Theme早中世纪的佛教主题的翻译
in Early Medieval China, concerns issues of visual and textual translations
of a Buddhist story--the Vimalakirtinirdesa sutra什么什么佛经的故事, and the
creation of the storyteller as a cultural hero. The second book,
Family and Redemption: Emotional Themes in Chinese Art During the
North/South Division, concerns the emergence of an unprecedented emotional
vocabulary during a period of decentralization when north China was
under the conquest dynasty of the Tuoba Wei拓拔魏统治下的北中国的什么什么. It analyzes
how various anxieties concerning family ideology, the position of
women, and other conflicts between the Chinese and nomadic populace
were played out in illustrations of Confucian filial piety坟墓和佛庙的儒教孝的虔诚和佛教故事中体现的华夏民族与游牧民族的冲突,妇人的地位,家庭的意识and
Buddhist stories that were circulating in tombs, ancestral shrines
and Buddhist temples at the time. 18.
Duke University Stanley K. Abe sabe@duke.edu Associate Professor
of Art History Stanley Abe received his Ph.D. from the University
of California, Berkeley. His field of research is Chinese Buddhist
art中国佛教美术. Since writing hismonograph, titled Ordinary Images: Chinese
Buddhist and Daoist Art of the Fifth and Early Sixth Centuries 5.6世纪的中国佛教道教美术C.E.,
he is developing a critical study of the construction of a history
of Buddhist art in the West during the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries 9世纪和20世纪初的西部佛教美术史. This study pays special attention to
colonialism, collecting, museums, aesthetic theory, ethnography and
religion. Northern Wei北魏 19. Maryland Professor
Jason Kuo jk103@umail.umd.edu Chinese Art Professor Jason Kuo,
an authority on Chinese art, is the author of Wang Y黙n-ch'i's Art
of Landscape Painting; Trapping Heaven and Earth in the Cage of Form;
Innovation within Tradition; The Painting of Huang Pin-hung; The Austere
Landscape: The Paintings of Hung-jen; Word as Image: The Art of Chinese
Seal Engraving; Chen Chikwan; Heirs to a Great Tradition: Modern Chinese
Paintings from the Tsien-hsiang-chai Collection, and Rethinking Art
History and Art Criticism. 山水画,印章,现代中国画 From 1993 to 1998, he undertook
the study of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century art of Shanghai,
a research project, funded by the Henry Luce Foundation, combining
the work of six scholars from China and six from the United States.
Two books are in press: Art and Identity in Postwar Taiwan and Modern
Chinese Poster-Calendars. 20. Brown Maggie
Bickford Associate Professor maggie_bickford@brown.edu Professor
Bickford works in an object-centered practice, which makes full use
of the materials and methods of history and the study of literature.
Her research and writing has centered on the development of scholar-amateur
ink painting文人水墨画, especially with reference to genre formation尤其是涉及流派形成
and to the relationship between Chinese painting and poetry中国画于诗歌的关联. Her
current book projects continue that line of investigation and extend
into new areas. "Zhao Mengjian赵孟頫, Qianxuan钱选, and the Late Song
Literati Avant-Guard晚宋文人先锋派" explores the stylistic and iconographic
fluidity of scholar-painting and its reception during the late Song/early
Yuan period研究文人画的风格流派和图示流质及其在晚宋和元早期被接受. "Luck and Virtue: Auspicious
Visuality in China" 中国之视觉吉祥investigates interactions and intersections
among imperial, popular, and scholarly visual traditions皇室,平民和文人的视觉传统的交叉影响
by means of studying embodiments of good outcomes(fecundity, longevity,
prosperity and peace) throughout the long imperial period, form the
third century B.C. to the early twentieth century. Her teaching interests
are oriented similarly, stressing the primacy of visual evidence and
extending now into non-elite areas of material culture. Professor
Bickford teaches the history of Chinese art from the Stone Age through
the twentieth century, occasionally comparatively with Japan.从石器时代到20世纪,有时也做与日本的比较 21.
Oregon East Asian Program Charles H. Lachman clachman@aaa.uoregon.edu Associate
Professor, Department of Art History (Chinese and Japanese art)Charles
Lachman specializes in art theory and the history of Buddhist art艺术理论和佛教艺术史,
especially in China中国,印度日本, though his research and teaching occasionally
extend to India and Japan as well. His publications include Evaluations
of Sung Dynasty Painters of Renown宋朝画家评鉴 (E.J. Brill, 1989), and various
articles which have appeared in Artibus Asiae, Art Bulletin, Asia
Major, Clues, and elsewhere; he is currently working on a book concerning
problems of interpreting Ch'an Buddhist painting禅宗绘画. He has held
grants and fellowships from the NEH, the Social Sciences and Humanities
Research Council of Canada, the Asian Cultural Council, and the College
Art Association, and recently spent a term in residence at the UO
Humanities Center. 22. Georgia Bradley
Tindall (Ph.D. Ohio State) Assistant Professor of Art: History
of Art, India, South-East Asia, China. 23.
Rutgers Angela Howard, Associate Professor Asian Art Ph.D.,
IFA, New York University Biographical Information: Professor
Howard's teaching spans Chinese and Japanese art. Most of her research
has focused on the development of Buddhist art in China中国佛教艺术的发展,
as signaled by her first book, The Imagery of the Cosmological Buddha
(E.J. Brill, 1986). Her subsequent work recording Buddhist cave and
cliff sculptures 佛教洞窟与峭壁雕刻in remote areas of China has been funded
by a series of National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowships and
led to the article Since 1985 Dr. Howard has been especially involved
with the Buddhist art of southwest China (Sichuan and Yunnan四川云南),
from its inception to Song time 宋朝(ca.200-1250), focusing on the development
of an indigenous style and iconography determined by the influence
of cultures such as India, Tibet, and southeast Asia印度,西藏和东南亚文化的影响.
She has also researched Central Asian Buddhist art and its impact
on Chinese art of the Nanbeichao period.中亚佛教艺术及其对于中国南北朝艺术的影响 Also,
Professor Howard was hired in 1999 by the Asian Department, The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York, as Special Consultant in Buddhist Art, to
organize with other curators the exhibition Early Imperial China:
The First Millenium, Han Through Tang Dynasties, scheduled to open
March 2004. In this capacity, she has traveled twice to China (January
and May-June 2001) to visit the museums of different provinces to
select Buddhist art, mainly sculpture. Professor Howard is also responsible
for writing an introductory essay on the development of Buddhist
art and all the entries of the Buddhist artifacts in the forthcoming
catalogue. Current interests and
research: March 2001: Henry Luce Foundation China On-Site Seminar
Program grant administered by the Asian Cultural Council and given
to Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. According to the grant's
requirements Dr. Howard (Director of the project), Dr. Yu Chun-fang
(Rutgers, Chair Religion Department), and Dr. Li Chongfeng, Archaeology
Department, Beijing University, PRC, will teach ten graduate students
(five American recruited nationally and five Chinese) in a four-week
seminar Buddhist Art of the Kizil Cave Temples on location in Kizil,
Xinjiang, PRC. The $ 77,000 grant provides honoraria, traveling and
living expenses for all the participants, support for a conference,
and administrative fees paid to Rutgers.Dr. Howard is currently working
as the editor of Art of the Buddhist Caves and Temples of China (300-1800)
(New Haven and Beijing: Yale University Pressand Waiwen Press). This
is a collaborative work between Western scholars (Abe of Duke University,
Howard and Yu of Rutgers, Linrothe of Skidmore, Berger of Berkeley)
and Chinese scholars (Ma Shichang and Li Chongfeng of BeijingUniversity,
Ding Mingyi of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Luo Shiping of Beijing
Central Academy, Xie Jisheng of Tibetan Academy, Wang Jiapeng, and
Luo W enhua of Palace Museum, Beijing). She is also the Senior
Western Editor for the upcoming Three Thousand Years of Chinese Sculpture,
co-authored by Wu Hong, Yang Hong, and Li Song. (New Haven and Beijing:
Yale University Press and Waiwen Press, forthcoming Fall 2002). 24.
UCSB Peter Sturman sturman@arthistory.ucsb.edu Associate Professor B.A.,
STANFORD UNIVERSITY; M.A., PH.D., YALE UNIVERSITY Peter Sturman's
field is Chinese art history, and his research focuses on the literati
tradition in both painting and calligraphy in the Song dynasty. He
received a Fulbright, Andrew Mellon Fellowship and many others. His
publications range from Han dynasty to twentieth-century art and include
Mi Fu: Style and the Art of Calligraphy in Northern Song China, 1997. 25.
Columbia Robert Harrist reh23@columbia.edu Jane and Leopold
Swergold Professor of Chinese Art Robert E. Harrist, Jr. received
his Ph.D. in Chinese art and archaeology from Princeton University.
His research interests include Chinese painting, calligraphy, and
gardens中国绘画书法和园林艺术. His most recent lectures and publications deal
with the phenomenon of copies and replicas in Chinese art中国美术的赝品.
Currently he is at work on two projects, a general history of Chinese
calligraphy中国书法史and a book titled "Reading Chinese Mountains"
that will study the role of language in shaping perceptions of landscape塑造山水视觉的语言的角色.
jdm
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