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Notable Achievements

Associate Professor of Art History Allison Miller gave a virtual invited presentation on “Purple in Early China” to a Chinese art history class at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. on September 23.

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Expertise

Chinese art and archaeology

Ph.D., Harvard University, 2011

B.A., University of Chicago, 2003

Research Interests:

Chinese art and archaeology; early imperial court art and political culture; intellectual history of the Qin and Han dynasties; ritual; material culture; the theory and function of ornament; technical art history; aesthetics

Biography:

Allison R. Miller specializes in the art and archaeology of early China and investigates the relationship of visual forms to political history and contexts of artistic production. Her interdisciplinary research examines the form and material of Chinese art (paintings, murals, sculpture, textiles) and architecture (palaces, tombs, and temples) in relation to early aesthetics, modes of production, political and intellectual history, and archaeological contexts. Her book, Kingly Splendor: Court Art and Materiality in Han China, was published by Columbia University Press in 2020.

Courses:

05-014 Confucius Says: the Moral Life Examined (Freshmen Seminar)

71-024 Introduction to Art History: East Asian

71-214 Arts of China

71-224 Arts of Japan

71-234 Ancient Chinese Art and Civilization

71-254 Landscape & Environment in Chinese Art

71-264 Art in China Since 1911

71-814 Theory and Methods of Art History

71-824 Capstone Research Seminar

  • Ph.D., Harvard University, 2011

    B.A., University of Chicago, 2003

    Research Interests:

    Chinese art and archaeology; early imperial court art and political culture; intellectual history of the Qin and Han dynasties; ritual; material culture; the theory and function of ornament; technical art history; aesthetics

    Biography:

    Allison R. Miller specializes in the art and archaeology of early China and investigates the relationship of visual forms to political history and contexts of artistic production. Her interdisciplinary research examines the form and material of Chinese art (paintings, murals, sculpture, textiles) and architecture (palaces, tombs, and temples) in relation to early aesthetics, modes of production, political and intellectual history, and archaeological contexts. Her book, Kingly Splendor: Court Art and Materiality in Han China, was published by Columbia University Press in 2020.

    Courses:

    05-014 Confucius Says: the Moral Life Examined (Freshmen Seminar)

    71-024 Introduction to Art History: East Asian

    71-214 Arts of China

    71-224 Arts of Japan

    71-234 Ancient Chinese Art and Civilization

    71-254 Landscape & Environment in Chinese Art

    71-264 Art in China Since 1911

    71-814 Theory and Methods of Art History

    71-824 Capstone Research Seminar

  • Books

    Miller, A. Kingly Splendor: Court Art and Materiality in Han China. New York: Columbia University Press, 2020. 

    Journal Articles

    Miller, A. “Painting Bronze in Early China: Uncovering Polychromy in China’s Classical Sculptural Tradition.” Archives of Asian Art 72.1 (2022): 1-53.

    Miller, A.“Jade, Imperial Identity, and Sumptuary Reform in Jia Yi’s Xin Shu.” Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 15.1 (2016): 103-121.

    Miller, A.“Emperor Wen’s ‘Baling’ Mountain Tomb: Innovation in Political Rhetoric and Necropolis Design in Early China.” Asia Major (Third Series) 28.2 (2015): 1-37.

    Chapters in Edited Volumes

    Miller, A.“The Han Hybrid Style: Sculpting an Imperial Utopia.” In Dialogue with the Ancients: 100 Bronzes of the Shang, Zhou, and Han Dynasties: The Shen Zhai Collection, edited by Patrick K.M. Kwok, 84-97. Singapore: Select Books, 2018.

    Reviews

    Miller, A. Review of Liu Yang, ed. Beyond the First Emperor’s Mausoleum: New Perspectives on Qin Art (Minneapolis: The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2014). CAAreviews.org.

    Miller, A. Review of Dusenbury, Mary M., ed. Color in Ancient and Medieval East Asia (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015). Journal of the American Oriental Society 137.1 (2017): 140-142.


In the News

  • Southwestern Student Earns National Recognition for Art History Research

    Natalie Davis ’26 awarded with runner-up honors in ASIANetwork’s nationwide essay contest.

  • Associate Professor Allison Miller Discusses Theft of Ancient Terracotta Army Statue

    Associate Professor of Art History Allison Miller speaks with CGTN America on the theft of part of an ancient terracotta army statue worth millions.