Draft:Cheng-hua Wang
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Last edited by Bearcat (talk | contribs) 10 hours ago. (Update) |
Cheng-hua Wang (Chinese: 王正華; family name: Wang) is an art historian, academic, author and Associate Professor at Princeton University.[1]
Early life
[edit]Wang earned her B.A. in history in 1985 and M.A. in Chinese art history in 1989 from National Taiwan University. She received her Ph.D. in Chinese art history from Yale University in 1998.[1]
Career
[edit]Wang is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton.[1] She was previously Associate Research Fellow at the Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, Taipei. [2]
Wang has published extensively in both Chinese and English. Her Chinese publications are collected in Art, Power, and Consumption: One Perspective on the History of Chinese Art (2011). Her English-language work appears in Artibus Asiae, Orientations, and Nan Nü: Men, Women, and Gender in Early and Imperial China. She has twice contributed to field-wide discussions in The Art Bulletin (2007, 2014), addressing critical international trends in art history.
Currently, she is completing a monograph, contracted with Harvard University Press, on the painting theme Along the River During the Qingming Festival (Qingming Shanghe tu), exploring the construction of painting history through thematic links, the relationship between a primordial artwork and its derivatives, and the emergence of city views in late 16th-century China.
Selected Honors and Awards
[edit]2015-2016, Senior Fulbright Research Grants (declined).
2010-2014, Head of the joint project Artistic Interactions between East Asian And Europe, 1600-1800, sponsored by Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
2000-2014, research grants for specific projects, National Science Council and Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
Fall term 2013, Heinz Götze Visiting Professor, Institute of East Asian Art History, Heidelberg University.
2007-2010, Promising Scholar Fellowship, National Science Council, Taiwan.
Spring term 2008, Visiting Professor, Department of the History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University.
2005-2006, Harvard Yenching Fellowship, Harvard-Yenching Institute, Harvard University.
May 1999, Frances Blanshard Prize for outstanding dissertation, Department of the History of Art, Yale University.[3]
Notes
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