Raphael Rosenberg

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Raphael Rosenberg (born July 10, 1962 in Milan ) is an Austrian art historian and professor at the University of Vienna .

Life

Raphael Rosenberg was born in Milan in 1962 as the son of a Viennese . From 1973 to 1980 he attended the French-speaking Lycée Stendhal in his hometown. From 1984 to 1990 he studied art history , history , classical archeology and Egyptology at the University of Munich and then from 1993 to 1995 he was a member of the graduate school "The Italian Renaissance and its European Reception" at the University of Bonn . In 1996 he completed his doctorate with a dissertation on descriptions and traces of Michelangelo's sculptures at the University of Basel .

From 1996 to 2004 he was a research assistant at the Art History Institute of the University of Freiburg and completed his habilitation there in 2003. From 2004 he held the chair for modern and contemporary art history at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg . Since September 2009 he has been teaching and researching as professor for Middle and Modern Art History at the Institute for Art History at the University of Vienna.

In 2009 he was elected a full member of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities , and in 2014 he was elected to the Academia Europaea .

Research priorities

In addition to the art of the Italian Renaissance, Rosenberg's main research interests include 19th-century art in France and the history of abstraction. He also deals with the history of art literature and art reception.

Publications

Books

editor

  • with C. Fruh, H.-P. Rosinski: Art history - but how? Ten topics and examples . Berlin 1989
  • with Katharina Krause: Bibliography on art on the Upper Rhine . 2 volumes, Freiburg im Breisgau, 1994 and 2000
  • Alternative catalog texts for documenta 12 . Institute for European Art History at Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, 2007
  • With Winfried Nerdinger : Timo Nüßlein, Paul Ludwig Troost (1878−1934). (= Hitler's Architects. Historical-critical monographs on regime architecture under National Socialism, Volume 1), Böhlau, Vienna, 2012.

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