Ph.D. Stanford University (History of Art)
M.A. University of California, Riverside (History of Art)
B.S. University of California, Irvine (Information & Computer Science)
Early modern Japanese art, the supernatural in Japan & China, artistic exchange between East Asia and the Euro-American West, dialog between popular culture and "fine art," museum studies
ARTH 133 East Asian Art, Bronze to Mongols
ARTH 135 Developments in East Asian Art, Modernity
ARTH 231 Prints & Print Culture of Early Modern & Modern Japan
ARTH 232 Warrior Art of Japan & the Ryukyus
ARTH 234 East West Encounters
ARTH 333 Supernatural in Japanese Art
ARTH 334 Women & East Asian Art
MSST 110 Contemporary Issues in Museum Studies
I am engaged with the study of eighteenth-century Japanese visual culture, particularly the two-dimensional arts exploring new modes of representation, as well as the pictorial expression of the supernatural. How did these new techniques formulate a visual "revolution" and how did this revolution impact the rendering of traditional subject matter such as cityscapes? For supernatural themes, I investigate how the seen, the known, and the unknown intersect to produce imagery linked to literature, religion, and lived experience.
2016-2017 ACLS Burkhardt Fellowship
2010 Japan Foundation Short-term Fellowship
"The Poetry of Play: Hybridity in Amusements of the Four Seasons of Kyoto," Andon 112 (December, 2021)
"Mapping the Yodo River and Its Banks," Artibus Asiae 80, no. 1 (2020)
"Japanese Postwar Prints -- Repurposing the Past, Innovation in the Present," in Abstract Traditions: Postwar Japanese Prints from the ¸»¶þ´úÊÓƵapp University Permanent Art Collection, 2016
Student-Faculty Curated Exhibition Project: "(Mis)Perceptions," Upper Gallery, Richard E. Peeler Art Center, Fall, 2021
Book Project (in progress): "Seeing the City Anew: Maruyama Okyo's Representations of Kyoto, 1758-1790"