Caroline Bruzelius
Anne Murnick Cogan Distinguished Professor Emerita of Art and Art History
Education
Ph.D., Yale University 1977
M.Phil., Yale University 1975
M.A., Yale University 1974
B.A., Wellesley College 1971
Overview
Caroline Bruzelius is the Anne M. Cogan Professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies at Duke University. She is a member of the American Philosophical Society, The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, London, and the Medieval Academy of America. Bruzelius received her Ph.D. from Yale University. She was awarded the Duke Alumni Distinguished Teaching Award in 1985 and in 2016 was given the Leadership award for the Wired! Lab at Duke. From 1994-1998, she served as the Director of the American Academy in Rome. In 2013-2014 she was the Richard Krautheimer Visiting Professor at the Hertziana Library/Max Planck Institute in Rome.
Her field of research is Gothic architecture, urbanism and medieval sculpture in France and Italy. Her books include: Preaching, Building and Burying: Friars in the Medieval City (Yale University Press, 2014); Medieval Naples (with William Tronzo), Italica Press; The Stones of Naples: Church Building in the Angevin Italy, 1266-1343 (Yale University Press, 2004); The Thirteenth Century Church at Saint Denis (Yale University Press, 1985), The Brummer Collection of Medieval Art at Duke University (1991), and The Abbey Church of Longpont and the Architecture of the Cistercians in the Early Thirteenth Century (1977). She is presently working on a new book, The Cathedral and the City, that will examine the social, political and economic context for cathedral building. She has also published numerous articles on the architecture of religious women ("Nuns in Space,") and Digital Technologies in Art History.
"My work takes me from the tops of buildings (see photo) to the foundations underneath and to all parts in between. I am interested in how we can understand the construction process of buildings that were created many centuries ago, and how their design and appearance reflected social, economic, and religious practice. The rigorous study of structures and walls and the historical documentation in archives are the points of departure for narratives on the shaping of man-made space and its significance."
"The remarkable capacities of digital modeling and mapping have greatly enriched the ways in which we can engage with the constantly changing and evolving lives of buildings and cities." At Duke, Bruzelius and a group of colleagues have integrated these new technologies into teaching and research projects that involve students at all levels (from freshmen through Ph.D. candidates) in creating digital models, maps, databases and interactive displays that enhance our understanding of historical monuments and their decoration. Bruzelius is a co-founder of Wired! (http://www.dukewired.org/), a group of faculty that integrate digital technologies into teaching and research (3D modeling, mapping, animations, laser scanning, interactive displays). She is also a co-founder (with Donatella Calabi) of Visualizing Venice (http://www.visualizingvenice.org/), an international collaboration that models growth and change in Venice over time (the partner universities are Venice and Padua). With a team of research collaborators, she created The Kingdom of Sicily Image Database, a search tool that collects and catalogues historical images (often produced during the Grand Tour) of the medieval monuments of the Kingdom of Sicily (the database will be imminently online).
Expertise
Medieval Architecture & Sculpture, Gothic Architecture, Historical & Cultural VisualizationMy traditional research fields are medieval architecture, urbanism, and sculpture. I have worked on cathedrals in France and elsewhere in Europe. I’ve just published a book on the impact of the mendicant orders on medieval architecture and cities. Two new projects will have to do with the financing of cathedrals and the role of architecture in the longue durée of architecture in the Kingdom of Sicily.
My new area of interest is digital visualization technologies for art and architecture. I am a co-founder of Wired! and Visualizing Venice. I have a 3-year collaborative NEH grant for a database on images of the medieval monuments of South Italy. Above all, we are excited about the potential of these new tools for showing transformation and change in man-made urban space. At Duke we have been pioneers in integrating new digital tools into teaching. This Ted @ Duke talk provides a good summary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYjhueongzg
Contact Information
24 Bradbrury Street, Apt. C, Cambridge, MA 02138
24 Bradbrury Street, Apt. C, Cambridge, MA 02138
Office hours:
By appointment: email me: c.bruzelius@duke.edu
(919) 641-0612
Projects
Huffman, Kristin L., et al. Visualizing Venice: Mapping and Modeling Time and Change in a City (Accepted). Routledge, 2017.
Bruzelius, Caroline. Preaching, Building, and Burying. 2014.
Bruzelius, Caroline Astrid, and William Tronzo. Medieval Naples. 2011.
Bruzelius, C. The Stones of Naples: Church Building in the Angevin Kingdom, 1266-1343. Yale University Press, London, 2004.
Bruzelius, C. A. Paesaggi Perduti: Granet a Roma, 1802-1824. Electa, 1997.
Bruzelius, C., and J. Meredith. The Brummer Collection of Medieval Art. Duke University Press, 1991.
Bruzelius, C. The Thirteenth Century Church at St-Denis. Yale, 1985.
Bruzelius, C. Cistercian High Gothic: The Abbey Church of Longpont and the Architecture of the Cistercians in the Early Thirteenth Century. Analecta cisterciensia, 1979.
Olson, Mark, and Andrea Giordano. “Visualizing Venice: Developing a methodology for historical visualization.” Visualizing Venice: Mapping and Modeling Time and Change in a City, edited by Kristin Huffman et al., Routledge, 2017, pp. 20–25. Manual, doi:10.4324/9781315100685. Full Text
Bruzelius, C. A. “Italian Architecture in the High Middle Ages.” ,Cambridge World History of Religious Architecture, 2012.
Bruzelius, C. A. “From Empire to Commune to Kingdom: Notes on the Revival of Mnumental Sculpture in Italy.” Gothic Art and Architecture, Ed. C. Hourihane, 2011, pp. 134–55.
Bruzelius, C. A. “Project and Process in Medieval Architecture.” Mélanges d’Eliane Vergnolle, edited by Y. Gallet, 2011.
Bruzelius, C. A. “Marbles of the South: the Alife Arch and an Acanthus Capital from Southern Italy in the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University.” Studi in Onore Di Pina Belli D’Elia, 2011.
Bruzelius, C. A. “Brevi appunti sull’architettura degli ordini mendicanti nel contest sociale ed economica del Regno di Napoli.” Il Francescanesimo in Calabria, 2011, pp. 170–86.
Bruzelius, C. A. “Workers and Builders in the Angevin Kingdom.” Arnolfo’s Moment: I Tatti Sudies, 2008.
Bruzelius, C. A. “A Rose by any Other Name: the 'Not Gothic Enough' Architecture of Italy.” Reading Gothic Architecture, (Studies in Medieval Visual Culture, I), edited by Matthew Reeve, Brepols, 2008, pp. 93–109.
Bruzelius, Caroline. “The Dead come to Town: Preaching, Burying and Building in the Mendicant Orders.” The Year 1300, edited by A. Gajewski and Z. Opacic, 2008, pp. 203–334.
Bruzelius, C. A. “Naples as anti-Avignon? Robert the Wise, Sancia of Mallorca, and the Convent of Sta. Chiara (Corpus Domini) in Naples.” The Cultures of Papal Avignon, University of Minnesota Press, 2007.
Pages
Bruzelius, C., and P. Vitolo. “The medieval kingdom of sicily image database.” Visual Resources, vol. 35, no. 1–2, Apr. 2019, pp. 74–87. Scopus, doi:10.1080/01973762.2019.1558994. Full Text Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, C. “Digital technologies and new evidence in architectural history.” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, vol. 76, no. 4, Dec. 2017, pp. 436–39. Scopus, doi:10.1525/jsah.2017.76.4.436. Full Text
Bruzelius, C., and P. Vitolo. “The Kingdom of Sicily image database.” Archeologia E Calcolatori, no. 27, Jan. 2016, pp. 107–30. Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, Caroline. “Taryn E. L. Chubb and Emily Kelley, eds., Mendicants and Merchants in the Medieval Mediterranean. (Medieval Encounters 18/2–3.) Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2012. Paper. Pp. iv, 149. $68. ISBN: 9789-0042-4976-9.” Speculum, vol. 90, no. 2, University of Chicago Press, Apr. 2015, pp. 525–26. Crossref, doi:10.1017/s0038713415000664. Full Text Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, C. “Friars in the Medieval City : Preaching Building and Burying.” Debates, vol. 6, June 2014, pp. 11–22. Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, Caroline. “Building-in-Time: From Giotto to Alberti and Modern Oblivion. By Marvin Trachtenberg. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2010. xxvi + 490 pp. $65.00 cloth.” Church History, vol. 82, no. 2, Cambridge University Press (CUP), June 2013, pp. 431–36. Crossref, doi:10.1017/s0009640713000231. Full Text Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, C. “Teaching with Visualization Technologies: How Does Information Become Knowledge?” Material Religion, vol. 9, no. 2, 2013, pp. 246–53. Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, C. “The architecture of the mendicant orders in the middle ages: An overview of recent literature.” Perspective (France), no. 2, Jan. 2012, pp. 365–86. Scopus, doi:10.4000/perspective.195. Full Text Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, C. A. “I morti arrivano in città : predicare, seppellire e costruire. Le chiese dei frati nel Due-Trecento.” Colloqui D’Architettura, 2011. Open Access Copy
Bruzelius, Caroline. “Brendan Cassidy, Medieval Sculpture.” Art Bulletin, E Reviews, 2009.
Pages
Bruzelius, C. “Trying to forget: The lost Angevin past of Italy.” Memory and Oblivion, 2000, pp. 735–43.
Bruzelius, Caroline. “A Note on Two Dynastic Monuments in the Thirteenth Century: St.-Denis and Sta. Maria Iconavetere in Foggia.” Ivista D’Arte (V Serie). Periodico Internazionale Di Storia Dell’Arte Medievale E Moderna 2017 ~ A. 52 N. 7 MéLanges À Fabienne Joubert, edited by Denise Borlée, and Laurent Ciavaldini, pp. 119–28. Open Access Copy
Pages
Digital Thinking and Art History: Re-Imagining Teaching, Research, and the Museum. Narrator. (2015)
A description of the research and teaching initiatives of the Wired! Lab.
Digital Thinking and Art History: Re-Imagining Teaching, Research, and the Museum. Narrator. (2015)
A description of the research and teaching initiatives of the Wired! Lab.
The Echo of the Stones. Creator. (2018)
This video summarizes a collaborative project between the universities of Padua, Suor Orsola Benincasa, Salerno and Duke.
NED Talk. The Nasher Museum of ARt. Narrator. Let There be Light (and Color)! (2015)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmMJoDf5phU&list=PLiP9sGu9irZ8PiBbRZwHJT6B62O-02nK9&index=4
Member. American Philosophical Society. April 2020
Krautheimer Professor. The Hertziana Library, Rome. December 2013
Grant for supporting Summer Digital Training Workshop June 2013. Gladys K. Delmas Foundation. December 2012
Fellow. American Academy of Arts and Sciences. November 2012
Pages
Selected Grants
The Kingdom of Sicily 1130-1442 awarded by National Endowment for the Humanities (Principal Investigator). 2011 to 2015
Wired awarded by Samuel H. Kress Foundation (Principal Investigator). 2014 to 2015
2015 Visualizing Venice Workshop awarded by Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation (Principal Investigator). 2015
Visualizing Venice Training Workshop awarded by Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation (Principal Investigator). 2014 to 2015
800 Years in 8 Minutes: Time and Change at San Maggiore in Naples awarded by Josiah Charles Trent Memorial Foundation (Principal Investigator). 2012
New Technologies for Old Buildings: The Franciscan Churches of Medievel Campania awarded by Josiah Charles Trent Memorial Foundation (Principal Investigator). 2010
Becoming a Capital in Medieval South Italy: Naples from the 9th to the 12th centuries awarded by National Endowment for the Humanities (Principal Investigator). 2008