Anna Schreurs

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Anna Schreurs-Morét , née Schreurs, (born June 11, 1963 ) is a German art historian . She currently teaches at the Art History Institute of the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg i. Breisgau.

Life

Anna Schreurs studied art history , Italian philology and urban planning in Bonn and Rome. She was a member of the Bonn Graduate School “The Renaissance in Italy and its European Reception” and a scholarship holder of the Fondazione Lemmermann in Rome. In 1995 Schreurs received his doctorate with Gunter Schweikhart in Bonn with the dissertation “Antikenbild und Kunstanschauungen des Neapolitan painter, architect and antiquarian Pirro Ligorio (1513-1583)” . From 1996 to 2005 she was a research assistant at the Art History Institute of the University of Frankfurt and from 2006 to 2011 research assistant at the Art History Institute in Florence , Max Planck Institute, in the Alessandro Nova directorate . In Florence she was also the scientific director of the Sandrart.net project (online edition of the “Teutschen-Academie der Edel Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste” 1675–1680, commented by a network-based research cooperation).

In 2010 she completed her habilitation with a thesis on “ Joachim von Sandrart between text and image. Painting and Poetry in the Times of the Thirty Years' War ”and in 2011 accepted a position at the University of Freiburg , where she has since been professor of early modern art history. In addition, since April 1, 2013, she has been the Dean of Studies for academic courses in the Dean's Office of the Faculty of Philosophy.

Scientific activity

Anna Schreurs-Morét is a member of the board and the concept group of the Collaborative Research Center (SFB for short) 948 “Heroes, Heroizations, Heroisms” as well as sub-project leader of the research project B3 (1st funding phase) and Project D4 (2nd funding phase). Furthermore, she has been the scientific contact person for FRAMAS (Freiburg Academy for Museum, Exhibition and Collection Knowledge) for the field of art history since 2014. She is also an external member of the Marbach-Marburg-Wolfenbüttel research association with the project outline "Image Politics: The Author Portrait as Iconic Authorization".

Her research interests concern Italian and German art of the early modern period, painting in Germany in the 17th century, the reception of antiquities in Italy in the 16th century, art theory and art literature of the early modern period, the history of art history / science on the Internet and the reception of Ovid and the mythological Renaissance writings.

For her publication Antikenbild und Kunstanschauungen by the Neapolitan painter, architect and antiquarian Pirro Ligorio (1513 / 14-1583) she received the Hans Janssen Prize of the Academy of Sciences in Göttingen in 2002. In 2013 she received the Instructional Development Award (IDA) from the University of Freiburg for the teaching concept Knowledge in Process: "Collaborative online publications by students at the University of Freiburg".

Fonts

  • Antique image and views of art by the Neapolitan painter, architect and antiquarian Pirro Ligorio (1513 / 14–1583) (= Atlas. Bonn Contributions to Renaissance Research, Vol. 3). Cologne 2000
Editorial activity
  • Joachim von Sandrart: Teutsche Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste, Nuremberg 1675–1680, scientifically commented online edition, jointly published. with Thomas Kirchner , Alessandro Nova , Carsten Blüm and Thorsten Wübbena, 2008–2012. ( online )
  • From all over the world: The artists of the Teutschen Academie by Joachim von Sandrart, Turnhout 2015 (Ed. Together with Lucia Simonato and Susanne Meurer)
  • Under Minerva's protection. Education through art in Joachim von Sandrarts Teutscher Academie, ed. v. Anna Schreurs with the participation of Julia Kleinbeck, Carolin Ott, Christina Posselt and Saskia Schäfer-Arnold, exhibition catalogs of the Herzog August Library No. 95, Wiesbaden 2012
  • Benvenuto Cellini - Art and Art Theory in the 16th Century, ed. by Alessandro Nova and Anna Schreurs, Cologne 2003

Web links