Manhattan DAâs office credits Elizabeth Marlow, associate professor of art and art history, with âinvestigative supportâ leading to the seizure of ancient bronze statues.
ââIt was a shrine to the imperial cult,â said Elizabeth Marlowe, director of the museum studies program at ±«Óătv, who has tracked the statueâs history.â
A major exhibition of photographs, This Place explores Israel and the West Bank âas place and metaphorâ through the eyes of 12 internationally acclaimed artists. Because the exhibition is divided among four collegiate art galleries, it has presented a perfect opportunity for museum studies students to apply what theyâve learned outside of the classroom. Professor [âŠ]
On December 26, 2004, an earthquake in Sumatra, Indonesia, set in motion a series of tsunamis that bulldozed areas of southeast Asia and killed more than 220,000 people in 12 countries. Eight years later, ±«Óătv professors on a faculty development trip to India stopped in the Delhi Craft Museum, where a 7-footâtall scroll depicting the [âŠ]
Beyond the collections, annual memberships, and traveling exhibits, thereâs a lot going on behind the scenes at the worldâs museums, and a new ±«Óătv minor in museum studies seeks to dive deep into the operation, ethics, and history of museums around the globe.
±«Óătv faculty members will join together to walk the Camino de Santiago, the route to the shrine of the apostle St. James who is said to be buried in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Spain. The interdisciplinary experience is made possible through the Kallgren Fund, an endowed fund created to support faculty members [âŠ]