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Faculty
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Kris Groberg
Kris Groberg is Assistant Professor of Art History at NDSU. She earned her Ph.D. (summa cum laude) from the University of Minnesota. The title of her dissertation is “Petropolitan Reliquary: Temple of the Resurrection on the Blood” (Pp. 467). Her academic specialty is the History of Russian Art and Architecture. Her research interests include the Iconography of the Russian Orthodox Church, Images of Sophia in Russian Culture, the Devil in Russian Art, Russian Decadence & Symbolism and, most recently, the Study of Sacred Space (Hierotopy). She has taught at Concordia College, Duke University, F-M Communiversity, Minnesota State University Moorhead, and Norwich University. Groberg has published articles and reviews in the journals Alexandria, ARTMargins, Canadian-American Slavic Studies, Explorations, Modern Greek Studies Yearbook, Modern Judaism, Russian Review, Society of Historians of East European & Russian Art & Architecture Bulletin, Slavic Review, Theosophical History, and Women: East-West. She is editor of A Missionary for History: Essays in Honor of Simon Dubnov (University of Minnesota, 1998), and the author of the introduction, an article on the artistic relationship between Dubnov and his daughter, and a multi-lingual Dubnov bibliography in that work. Her published work includes eight bio-bibliographical essays on women artist-writers in Dictionary of Russian Women Writers (1994); essays in Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and the Soviet Union (1992); essays in European Women in Immigration (1994); a 100-page hardbound multi-lingual bibliography of the works of Vladimir Solov’ev (1998), and; a chapter on Satanism in Silver Age Russian Art in The Occult in Russian and Soviet Art (Cornell, 1997). She has published in English, Hebrew, Hungarian, and Russian. Groberg is a frequent lecturer on Russian Art History at such institutions as the Duke University Museum of Art, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, the Museum of Russian Art, the Center for Russian & East European Studies at the University of Kansas, and the Russian & East European Center at the University of Illinois. She often curates or serves as a consultant for exhibitions. She is the recipient of three NEH grants, the Basil Laourdas Fellowship at the University of Minnesota, and five Associateships at the University of Illinois. She is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, a charter member and officer in the Association for Women in Slavic Studies, the Institute of Modern Russian Culture at Blue Lagoon, Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, and the Society of Historians of East European & Russian Art & Architecture among others. At NDSU Groberg teaches Intro to Visual Arts and Intro to Art History, Art History I-II, Contemporary Art, American Art, Russian Art and Architecture, and Decadent & Symbolist Art. She oversees the NDSU Art Cinema program, which is in its third year, and in spring semester organizes student field trips to Minneapolis.
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For more information contact Kay
Beckermann, (701) 231-9564 |
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