Sarah Diebel | Lecturer
Department of Art and Design
University of Wisconsin-Stout
323E Applied Arts Bldg.
Phone: 715.232.1918
eMail: diebels@uwstout.edu
Teaching Schedule | Fall 2007
ARTH.223.002: Survey of Art-Anchient-Med
ARTH.223.004: Survey of Art-Anchient-Med
ARTH.326.001: Greek and Roman Art
ARTH.326.001: Italian Renaissance
Office Hours
Mon | Wed - 10:00am to 12:00pm
Education:
Ph.D. Rutgers University, Graduate Program in Art History
M.A. University of Minnesota
B.A. Macalester College (Cum Laude)
Professional Experience:
Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-Stout, Menomonie, WI
Adjunct Lecturer, College of St. Catherine, St. Paul, MN
Visiting Lecturer, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
Publications:
“Putting Theodora in her Place: The Imperial Presence at S. Vitale in Ravenna,” in Twentieth Annual Byzantine Studies Conference, Abstracts of Papers, 20-23 October, 1994, Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C., 1994, pp. 42-43.
Conferences/Presentations/Papers:
2007 Renaissance Society of America Annual Conference, Miami Paper: “The Studiolo of Urbino and the Art of Memory”
2006 Renaissance Society of America Annual Conference, San Francisco Paper: “Memory, Meditation, Preaching, and the Intarsia Urban View”
2004 Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities Art History Symposium, College of St. Catherine, St. Paul, MN Paper: “Memory in the Ideal World: Urbino, Baltimore and Berlin”
2004 Seminar: The DaVinci Code: Mary Magdalene, Her Legend Continues, Wisdom Ways Center for Spirituality, St. Paul, MN Presentation: “Leonardo’s Last Supper: Debunking The DaVinci Code”
2004 Interview on “Campus Scope” for campus cable TV network, University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, MN Segment Title: “Leonardo’s Last Supper: Debunking The DaVinci Code”
2001 Renaissance Society of America Annual Conference, Chicago Paper: “The Art of Memory and the Perspective Panels in Urbino, Baltimore and Berlin”
1995 Art History Graduate Student Symposium, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Paper: “Spiritual Androgeny in Savoldo’s St. Matthew”
1994 Byzantine Studies Conference, Ann Arbor, MI Paper: “Putting Theodora in her Place: The Imperial Presence at San Vitale in Ravenna”
Undergraduate Courses Taught:
Survey of Art: Ancient to Medieval
Survey of Art: Renaissance to Modern
Introduction to Art (Art Appreciation
Masaccio and his Contemporaries
The High Renaissance in Italy
Itialian Renaissance Art
Renaissance and Baroque Art
Women in Art
Greek and Roman Art
Medieval Art








