Faculty

Melissa Eppihimer

Contact

Visitor Lecturer, ancient Near Eastern art and archaeology, rediscovery and reception of antiquity

Constellation(s): Agency, Identity, Visual Knowledge

Melissa Eppihimer's research focuses on the art and archaeology of early Mesopotamia, specifically of the late third and early second millenia BCE. Her main area of study is the art of the Akkadian dynasty and its impact on post-Akkadian rulers, monuments, and imagery.  To assess the visual manifestations of historical consciousness she evaluates changes and continuities in Mesopotamian art. Another of her research interests is the collecting and interpreting of ancient Near Eastern art in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries. Here, she examines how Persia, Babylon, and Assyria were categorized, understood, and visualized by antiquarians and collectors. Her teaching incorporates these areas of study alongside the art, architecture, and archaeology of the Near East from antiquity to the modern era, and the role of museums and cultural heritage in the modern Middle East. 

Education

Education
PhD Harvard University
MA Harvard University
BA Yale University

Selected Publications

'Caylus, Winckelmann, and the Art of 'Persian' Gems,' Journal of Art Historiography (forthcoming).

'A Paradox of Eighteenth-century Antiquarianism: ‘Persian’ Gems among the Tassie Casts,' Journal of the History of Collections (2015).

'Posthumous Images and the Memory of the Akkadian Kings,' in Critical Approaches to Ancient Near Eastern Art, ed. by Brian Brown and Marian Feldman (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2013), 319-44.

'Representing Ashur: The Old Assyrian Rulers' Seals and their Ur III Prototype,' Journal of Near Eastern Studies 72/1 (2013), 35-49.

'Assembling King and State: The Statues of Manishtushu and the Consolidation of Akkadian Kingship,' American Journal of Archaeology 114/3 (2010), 365-380.