Veronica White

Position
Curator of Academic Programs, Princeton University Art Museum and Lecturer
Role
Italian Renaissance Art History
Bio/Description

Profile

Veronica Maria White (B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., Columbia University) serves as a liaison between different academic departments and the Museum, teaches in the galleries and study rooms, works with the student guides, and oversees the internship programs. She served as a postdoctoral fellow at the Morgan Library and Museum, and worked as an exhibition assistant at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in both the department of Drawings and Prints and the department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts. She also taught at Columbia University, Rutgers University, and Vassar College. Her publications include articles on the drawings of Guercino and Annibale Carracci, and on the prints of Jacques Callot. White joined the Museum staff in 2014. Through her teaching experiences in the Museum, she has become increasingly interested in interdisciplinary approaches to the collections and has designed several related installations, including: The Bubonic Plague in Early Modern Italy; Going to Extremes: Physiognomy, Caricature, and Studies of ExpressionArt and Climate: Making the Invisible Visible; and Fluid Motions: A Conversation between Art and Physics.