Caterina Maderna

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Caterina Maderna (* 1955 , also Caterina Maderna-Lauter ) is a German classical archaeologist .

Caterina Maderna studied Classical Archeology, Ancient History , Art History and Christian Archeology at the Universities of Heidelberg and Göttingen . In 1982 she received her doctorate in Heidelberg under Tonio Hölscher with an investigation into idealized Roman portrait statues . She then worked as a research assistant in Heidelberg. From 1987 she was initially a research assistant at the Institute for Classical Archeology at the Technical University of Darmstadt , then a research assistant at the Institute for Classical Archeology at the University of Frankfurt , then at the Liebieghaus in Frankfurt am Main . In 2003 she completed her habilitation in "Classical Archeology" at the University of Mainz , where she subsequently worked as a private lecturer. From 2006, she was also a research assistant at the Art History Institute of the Technical University of Darmstadt. From 2010 to 2015 she represented Tonio Hölscher's vacant chair for Classical Archeology in Heidelberg. Since March 1, 2015, she has been an adjunct professor at the Institute for Classical Archeology at Heidelberg University.

Her main research interests are ancient sculpture, politics and religion in ancient sculptures from Greece and Rome as well as ancient reception from the 18th century to the present day, as well as museology .

Publications (selection)

  • Iuppiter, Diomedes and Mercury as models for Roman portrait statues. Investigations into the ideal Roman statuary portrait. Verlag Archäologie und Geschichte, Heidelberg 1988.
  • with Peter Cornelis Bol , Gabriele Kaminski (Ed.): Strangeness - Eigenheit. Egypt, Greece and Rome. Sharing and understanding. Symposium of the Liebieghaus, Frankfurt am Main from 28. – 30. November 2002 and 16. – 19. January 2003 (= Städel yearbook. New series. Volume 19). Scheufele, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 3-98097-011-6 .
  • with Brita von Götz-Mohr: Count Franz I. zu Erbach-Erbach and his collections in the castle of Erbach: antique marble sculptures, armor, weapons and antlers. A work of art in the collection and its cultural and historical significance. Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-7954-1998-1 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Caterina Maderna in the Virtual International Authority File , accessed June 9, 2019.