What Do Meadows Art History Professors Research?
The legacy of scholarly research and the publication of books, journal articles and more runs deep at SMU Meadows’ Department of Art History. Below is a list of current faculty and a brief summation of their areas of expertise:
Chair of the department:
Adam Herring, The Emily Rich Summers Endowed Professor in Art History and director of graduate studies. Specialist in the art of the pre-Columbian Americas. Research interests include visual theory and semiotics, anthropological and materialist critique of visual experience, and the history of the discipline. 2017 Guggenheim Fellow.
Faculty:
Beatriz Balanta, assistant professor of art history. Scholarly work and interests include analysis of the photographic and literary dimensions of racial formation in Latin America; 19th-century debates regarding freedom, citizenship, and nation building in Brazil, Colombia, and the United States; contemporary theorizations of art practices from the Global South.
Roberto Conduru, Endowed Distinguished Professor of Art History. Research addresses modern and contemporary art and architecture in Brazil, with an emphasis on Afro-Brazilian art and on Constructivist architecture. Interests include global art history and current debates in the visual cultures of Latin America and the transatlantic world.
Elizabeth Bacon Eager, assistant professor of art history. Specializes in the transatlantic history of 18th- and 19th-century art and material culture, with a focus on intersections between art, science and technology.
Amy Freund, associate professor and The Kleinheinz Family Endowment for the Arts and Education Endowed Chair in Art History. Specialist in 18th-century European art. Research: politics and visual culture; portraiture and the history of selfhood; the visual representation of animals; and the history and decoration of mechanical objects, especially guns.
Randall Griffin, University Distinguished Professor. Research: different uses of nature in American modernism, along with depictions of the "abnormal body." Multiple awards and distinctions for his teaching and books.
Adam Jasienski, assistant professor of art history. Specializes in 16th- and 17th-century visual culture, particularly in Spain and Latin America. Research: Portraiture and identity; art in legal proceedings; distortion and imperfection in religious art; and the tension between official and unofficial forms of interacting with images.
Danielle Joyner, visiting assistant professor. Specializes in the arts and manuscript traditions of the European Middle Ages. Current research: ecocriticism and environmental histories to examine intersections among medieval arts, people and the environment.
Stephanie Langin-Hooper, assistant professor and Karl Kilinski II Endowed Chair of Hellenic Visual Culture. Primary research analyzes the terracotta figurines of Hellenistic Babylonia utilizing perspectives of miniaturization affect, postcolonialism, gender theory and materiality. Other research: miniaturization in the broader Hellenistic world, monuments and issues of monumentality in Mesopotamian art history, and Hellenistic Babylonian prosopography.
Lisa Pon, professor of art history. Specializes in early modern European art, architecture and material culture. Current research and teaching: the mobilities of art, the authority of the artist and the work of art as religious image.
Eric Stryker, assistant professor of art history. Scholar of modern and contemporary art, film, and photography, with particular interest in post-war Britain and Europe. Primary research: the use of visual media as techné in reconfigurations of social identity and human geography. Interests: technologies of the body, visual rhetoric and the production of space.
