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Andrew Hershberger, Assistant Professor, Art History, Bowling Green State University.
Dr. Hershberger received his Ph.D. Art and Archaeology, at Princeton University in 2001. He also holds a master’s degree from Princeton University, in Art and Archaeology, and a master’s degree from the University of Chicago, in Art History. Dr. Hershberger works in the areas of modern and contemporary art history and in the history of photography. His research has been funded through grants and fellowships from Princeton University, the Department of Art and Archaeology, and the Mellon Foundation. He has cocurated several exhibitions of nineteenth and twentieth-century photographs including one at the Princeton University Art Museum in conjunction with the 2000 international conference "Surviving the Photograph," and two within the Department of Art and Archaeology on photographs of the middle east and southeast Asia respectively. His recent publications include an essay on Andre Malraux''s theory of photography in the "History of Photography" journal, and a feature article in the journal "Arts of Asia" on a nineteenth-century panoramic photograph of Macao by Felice Beato. He is currently revising his dissertation for publication as a book as well as writing an essay on Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre's diorama drawings. Hershberger is a member of the the College Art Association, the Midwest Art History Society, the Society for Photographic Education, CHArt--Computers and the History of Art, and the Medici Circle at BGSU.
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