Art & Art History Program
Rogers 101
CPO 2162
859-985-3530

Contact:


Eileen McKiernan González, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Art History

Traylor, Room 406
CPO 2162

Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday and Friday 11-noon, 1:30-2:00 PM
Monday and Wednesday 5:30-6:00 PM

Phone: 859-985-3543
Fax: 859-985-3541

E-Mail:

At Berea College since 2003

Degrees
  • B.A., Wheaton College, 1992
  • M.A., The University of Texas at Austin, 1997
  • Ph.D., The University of Texas at Austin, 2005
Courses
  • ART 121: Survey of Western Art I: Paleolithic to Gothic Art
  • ART 124: Survey of Western Art II: Renaissance to Modern Art
  • ART 242: Medieval Art
  • ART 245: 19th and 20th Century Art
  • ART 250: Indian and Southeast Asian Art
  • ART 265: Islamic Art and Architecture
  • ART 267: Colonial and Modern Latin American Art
  • ART 386: Art, Pilgrimage, and Crusade
  • ARH 340/450: Women in Medieval Art
  • ARH 386: Convivencia: The Art of Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Spain
  • GSTR 210: Art and Identity in the Americas
  • GSTR 410: Senior Seminar in Contemporary Global Issues: Violence, Identity, and Representation
  • Berea Short Term:
         - Avant-Garde Art and Tango, Argentina and Uruguay, January 2008 and 2010
         - Islamic Thought and Practice, Egypt, January 2007
         - Art and Culture of Thailand, Thailand, January 2005
  • Kentucky Institute for International Studies:
         - Director of Southern Spain program
         - Jewish, Christian and Islamic Arts of Spain, upcoming Summer 2012
         - Islamic Art of Spain and North Africa, Summer 2011, 2010
         - Artist Travel Journal: Between Orientalism and Post-Colonialism in Morocco, Summer 2010
         - Early Christian and Byzantine Art, Summer 2009, 2005
         - Islamic Art and the Ottoman Empire, Summer 2009, 2005
         - Ancient Greek Art and Architecture, Greece, Summer 2008
         - Italian Renaissance Art, Italy, Summer 2007, 2006
         - Italian Medieval Art, Italy, Summer 2006
Special Interests
Medieval Iberia (Modern Spain and Portugal), Women’s patronage in the Middle Ages