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Richard De Puma is the F. Wendell Miller Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Classical Art and Archaeology at the School of Art and Art History, University of Iowa, where he taught for more than thirty years. He earned his B.A. at Swarthmore College, and holds the M.A. and Ph.D. in Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology from Bryn Mawr. He is on the advisory boards of several scholarly publications and only recently resigned the position of General Editor of the University of Wisconsin Press’ Studies in Classics series after more than a decade of service. In addition, he is a Research Associate at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, and an elected member of both the German Archaeological Institute in Berlin, and the National Institute of Etruscan and Italic Studies in Florence. Most recently, he was Senior Curatorial Consultant for the exhibition “Art in Roman Life: Villa to Grave” at the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art. He is the author of nine books on various aspects of Etruscan and Roman art and archaeology, and has published more than fifty articles and book reviews in numerous scholarly journals here and in Europe. His third book on Etruscan engraved mirrors was published in Rome in December, 2005, and he is currently completing the exhibition catalogue for “Art in Roman Life” and another book on Etruscan forgeries. For many years he was on the Advisory Board of the American Journal of Archaeology and has been a long-time lecturer for the Archaeological Institute of America. He has excavated in Italy, Turkey and India, and most recently has co-directed excavations at Crustumerium, an ancient Latin city just north of Rome. He is also Senior Curatorial Advisor for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
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Etruscan Archaeology
May 12-16, 2008
at the University of Oklahoma
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Etruscan Art and Culture offers an intense introduction to the history and archaeology of this major pre-Roman culture which flourished in Italy ca. 1000 to 100 B.C.. Despite their great wealth and cultural sophistication, the Etruscans are relatively little known or appreciated today. Why is this so? In this OSLEP seminar students will learn the answer to that question and have the opportunity to study and discuss topics with a well-known expert in the field of Etruscology. He will introduce the current state of our knowledge about Etruscan culture with discussions on their architecture, painting, sculpture, luxury arts, language, mythology and religious beliefs. In addition, there will be investigations of specific archaeological sites where he has excavated, and treatments of such topics as forgeries that have implications for other periods of art history.
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The Class Reading List: (These books and articles supplied
by OSLEP)
- Etruscan Civilization by Sybille Haynes,
- Etruscan Art by Nigel Spivey,
- Religion in Ancient Etruria
by Jean-René Jannot
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