Alumni

Robin Greeley

Robin Adèle Greeley (PhD, 1998) teaches at the University of Connecticut, where she focuses on art and politics in modern and contemporary Latin America. She is Affiliate Faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and has also held visiting faculty positions at Harvard and Stanford. A founding member of the Symbolic Reparations Research Project, she is currently engaged in analyzing policies and practices of aesthetic memorialization in symbolic reparations for victims of human rights...

Diana Greenwold

Diana Greenwold (Ph.D., 2016) is the Associate Curator of American Art at the Portland Museum of Art in Portland, Maine. Her dissertation, “Crafting New Citizens: Art and Handicraft in New York and Boston Settlement Houses, 1900-1945,” explored the intersection between art and social work in early 20th-century America. In 2013, Greenwold was the Douglass Foundation Fellow in the American Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Her recent projects have included Of Whales in Paint: Rockwell Kent’s Moby Dick and Model Citizens: Art and Identity in...

Andrew Griebeler

Andrew Griebeler (2010) studies medieval and Byzantine art with Diliana Angelova and Beate Fricke. Andrew graduated with a B.A. in art history and biology at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington. Andrew’s research interests include manuscripts, spolia, and medieval science and image theory.

https://hellenic.princeton.edu/people/andrew-griebeler

Anthony Grudin

Anthony (Ph.D. 2008) is associate professor of art history at the University of Vermont. He is the author of Warhol’s Working Class: Pop Art and Egalitarianism (University of Chicago Press, 2017). His essays have appeared in Warhol: Headlines (National Gallery, 2011), 13 Most Wanted Men: Andy Warhol and the 1964 World’s Fair (Queens Museum/Andy Warhol Museum, 2014), ON&BY Andy Warhol (Whitechapel/MIT, 2016), American Masters (National Gallery of Australia, 2018), ...

Sarah Hamill

Sarah Hamill (PhD, 2008; dissertation title “David Smith in Two Dimensions: Photography, Sculpture, and Space”) is Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at Sarah Lawrence College (formerly Associate Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at Oberlin College). She is the author of David Smith in Two Dimensions: Photography and the Matter of Sculpture (University of California Press, 2015) (awarded a Meiss/Mellon Author’s Book Award and a Wyeth Foundation for American Art Publication Grant from the College Art Association in 2013), and, with Megan R...

Grace Harpster

Grace Harpster (PhD 2018) is assistant professor at Georgia State University in Atlanta. She studies the relationship between art and Catholic reform in early modern Italy and its wider missionary networks. Her first major project follows the pilgrimages of cardinal-archbishop Carlo Borromeo (1538-84), examining his interactions with religious art and objects to incorporate ‘practice’ into our understanding of sacred images after the Council of Trent. In addition to other forthcoming works, she has published on how color theories affected both the conception of black African...

Joan Hart

Joan Hart (Ph.D 1981) is currently an independent scholar and expert in antique textiles of Kashmir and France.

Sharon Hecker

Sharon Hecker (BA cum laude Renaissance Studies, Yale University, MA History of Art 1994, Ph.D. 1999), specializes in modern and contemporary Italian Art. A leading expert on Medardo Rosso, she has authored over 20 publications on the artist, including A Moment’s Monument: Medardo Rosso and the International Origins of Modern Sculpture (UC Press, 2017), awarded CAA’s Millard Meiss Prize and recently published in Italian.
Sharon has curated numerous exhibitions on Rosso, including Medardo Rosso: Second Impressions (Harvard University Art Museums, 2004), the...

Samantha Henneberry

This past year, Samantha Henneberry (2008) completed museum study and fieldwork in Greece for her dissertation on Lakonian warrior-hoplite iconography and the role of diverse craft traditions in shaping warrior identity and social memory. While the Jacob Hirsch Fellow at the American School in Athens, she researched in various collections, including the National Archaeological and Acropolis Museums in Athens, Sparta Archaeological Museum, and Altes Museum in Berlin, and traveled throughout the archaic landscapes of the southern...

Stephanie Hohlios

Stephanie M. Hohlios specializes in modern and contemporary art from Japan. Her research interests include performance (broadly defined); gender, sexuality, and the body; labor identity and proletarian art; regionalism; transnational identity; trauma, affect, and memory. She has taught art history courses on the global modern and contemporary; Buddhist visuality and architecture; Japan; and Asia.

Her forthcoming dissertation examines the intersection of labor, gender, and the arts in a former coal mining community in Kyushu, Japan from the Early to Late Twentieth Century. It argues...