Nicole Tiedemann-Bischop

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Nicole Tiedemann-Bischop (born March 25, 1971 in Freiburg / Elbe ) is a German cultural scientist and director of the Jenisch House in Hamburg .

Career

Nicole Tiedemann-Bischop attended high school in Warstade . After graduating from high school in 1990, she began studying cultural and art studies as well as linguistics and literature at the University of Bremen , which she completed in 1996 with a Magistra Artium. She then worked at the Historisches Museum Verden , the Vegesack Culture Station and the Design Center Bremen in the Wilhelm-Wagenfeld-Haus, among others .

Between 2001 and 2003 she worked as a research assistant at the Altona Museum . In 2005 she did her doctorate with Dieter Richter under the title Hair Art. On the history and significance of a human piece of jewelry through her research focus on hair images . In April 2005 she returned to the Altona Museum as a consultant for paintings and graphics. In addition, since 2007 she has been the director of the Jenisch Haus, a classicist country house with a park that serves as a branch of the museum, and as such is responsible for changing exhibitions on topics from art and cultural history.

Nicole Tiedemann-Bischop is married and has a daughter born in 2009.

Works (selection)

  • Blankenese - a myth , Husum 2002. (with Frauke Tietze)
  • Hair art. On the history and meaning of a human piece of jewelry , Cologne et al. 2006. (Dissertation)
  • The Jenisch House. Testimony of upper-class living culture , Hamburg 2018.
  • Dance of life. The Hamburg Secession 1919–1933 , Dresden 2019. (Ed. With Maike Bruhns and Anja Dauschek)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Katja Engler: When death waited on the sea. In: Die Welt , May 5, 2013, accessed on February 9, 2020 .
  2. Julika Pohle: Sissi also raved about Heinrich Heine. In: Die Welt, April 23, 2016, accessed on February 9, 2020 .
  3. Volker Stahl: In the footsteps of the Danes in Hamburg. In: Neues Deutschland , June 9, 2018, accessed on February 9, 2020 .
  4. Vera Fengler: "Dance of Life": The Art of the Hamburg Secession. In: Hamburger Abendblatt , April 14, 2019, accessed on February 9, 2020 .