Senior Scholar

Susanne Kuberskys Hauptinteresse gilt den sozialen und wirtschaftlichen Kontexten, in denen Kunst entsteht und wirkt. Insbesondere hat sie sich mit der Künstlersozialgeschichte und der Geschichte des Kunstmarkts der frühen Neuzeit auseinandergesetzt sowie mit Transferprozessen in der europäischen Hofkultur des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts. In ihren aktuellen Forschungsprojekten geht es um Fremdengemeinschaften in italienischen Städten der frühen Neuzeit, um Dynamiken des Zusammenlebens und Interagierens und um Kunst als Ausdrucksträger kollektiver Identitäten.

Forschungsprojekte

Inter-National Rome: Mapping Collective Identities in Via Giulia
Via Giulia, commissioned in 1508 by Pope Julius II and designed by Donato Bramante, was intended as an artery connecting the city’s most important governmental institutions. One of several functions of the new axis was to channel and manage the pilgrims who crowded the city, especially on the occasion of Holy Years. more
Inter-National Rome: Mapping Collective Identities in Via Giulia
Via Giulia, commissioned in 1508 by Pope Julius II and designed by Donato Bramante, was intended as an artery connecting the city’s most important governmental institutions. One of several functions of the new axis was to channel and manage the pilgrims who crowded the city, especially on the occasion of Holy Years. more
Ideas, Networks, Identities
Das Collegio di Sant'Isidoro war im Rom des 17. Jahrhunderts ein bedeutendes intellektuelles Zentrum, in dem Gelehrte verschiedenster Disziplinen zusammentrafen, um aktuelle – teils brisante – theologische, philosophische und kunsttheoretische Themen zu erörtern und zu studieren. more
Santa Maria dell'Anima: Social Plurality and Art Patronage in the Age of the Reformation
At the time Martin Luther posted his theses on the cathedral portal in Wittenberg in 1517, the German national church of Santa Maria dell'Anima in Rome was in the process of complete renovation. The hospice associated with the church, run by a confraternity, was a contact point for people from the lands of the Holy Roman Empire from the Middle Ages on. more
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