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Month: October 2025

Gabriela Podlesny (BA December 2025) summer intern with Freeman’s-Hindman

Every two weeks, I would switch between the Fine Arts and the American Furniture, Decorative, and Folk Arts Departments. My summer-long project focused on database taxonomy, where I categorized +25,000 files according to historical classification (ex. Old Masters, Couture, 19th-Century Continental Furniture) after Freeman’s database merged with Hindman. From writing condition reports to cataloging objects for an upcoming auction, the Decorative Arts department offered something new every day. Additionally, I participated in live auctions through online and phone bidding. Research proved to be a vital skill, as I was frequently assigned pricing catalogues to study. I was able to use my notetaking and visual analysis skills to recognize patterns in quilts, carved horses, and Chippendale furniture. I could also create historic connections despite not directly knowing the context of the object, such as the rising popularity of mahogany furniture being directly attributed to growing transatlantic slavery.

Graduate Students presenting at conferences, fall 2025!

Molly Bernhard (PhD candidate) will be giving a talk at the 16th-Century Society Conference titled “”In Situ: Battle-Scarred Art from Early Modern Italy”

Camila Medina (PhD candidate) and Alexandra Schoolman (PhD candidate) will give talks at the SECAC annual conference. Medina will present “Queering the Grid: Mary Vieira, Gego, and the Transmateriality of Abstraction in the Cold War.” Schoolman’s talk is “Mourning Spaces: Memory, Marking, and Refuge in the Site-Specific Works of Horacio Zabala, Lotty Rosenfeld, and Artur Barrio.”

Cecelia Heintzelman will present at the 51st Annual Byzantine Studies Conference: “To Have and To Hold: The Enkolpion and Divinity in Byzantium.”