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Faculty of Classics

 

Biography

I was born and raised in Croatia, where I began studying Latin and Greek through the public school system. After high school, I moved to the United States, earning a degree in Art History from Columbia University in 2014. My first museum job, at the Brooklyn Museum, shaped my decision to become a curator.

I went on to complete a PhD in Art History at the University of Chicago (2025), where I developed a specialisation in Roman marble sculpture from Anatolia. A graduate curatorial fellowship allowed me to further my museum work at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles from 2022 to 2024. Before coming to Cambridge, I was Assistant Curator of Ancient Art at the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio (2024–2026).

Today, I serve jointly on the Faculty of Classics and as Senior Curator of Mediterranean Antiquities at the Fitzwilliam Museum, overseeing collections that extend from the Greek and Roman world to the Levant, South Arabia, Mesopotamia, and Iran.

Research

  • Roman sculpture, Anatolia, and the eastern Roman Empire
  • Ancient display, repair, and interpretation
  • How ancient viewers made meaning from objects in space

I am an art historian focusing on the sculptural production of the eastern provinces of the Roman Empire, especially Anatolia (present-day Türkiye). My research examines what might be described as curatorial work in antiquity: how Roman patrons chose, arranged, and maintained objects in public spaces. As part of my curatorial work, I am also continuously engaged in provenance research and the study of the twentieth-century illicit antiquities trade.

Recently, my research has focused on statue repairs and other forms of aesthetic upkeep in Asia Minor, including the modification of public sculpture by Christian communities. Part of my interest lies in the logistical side of this work – How were statues hoisted up into their niches? Who paid for their cleaning? Where were they stored when not on view?

A central concern of my research is interpretation: how viewers compared nearby statues, read objects through space, responded to inscriptions and architectural settings, and coped with confusing, damaged, or anonymous monuments. This interest extends to ekphrasis, visual rhetoric, and the later reception of ancient sculpture, including Winckelmann and the modern historiography of classical art.

Publications

Key publications: 

Books

(forthcoming, 2027) Anatolia and the Classical World, edited with Kenneth Lapatin, Vincent Blanchard, and Ludovic Laugier. Los Angeles: Getty Publications.

(In progress) Roman Marble Sculpture in the J. Paul Getty Museum. Volume 1: Ideal Sculpture, co-authored with Jens Daehner. Los Angeles: Getty Publications.

Articles

(forthcoming) “Staging Antiquity: Curatorial Interventions and the Performance of Heritage in the Theater of Miletus.” In Visibilità. Materialità e Percezione Dei Paesaggi Scultorei: Diskussionen Zur Antiken Skulptur (DiAS) Workshop 2, edited by Alice Landskron and Thoralf Schröder. Schriftenreihe Des ÖHI Rom. Vienna: Böhlau.

(forthcoming, 2027) “Reimagining Local Histories in Roman Anatolia.” In Anatolia and the Classical World, edited by Kenneth Lapatin, Vincent Blanchard, Ludovic Laugier and Roko Rumora. Los Angeles: Getty Publications.

(2026) “Polychromy as Provenance Research: A Statuette of Venus and Cupid from Roman Syria,” with Alison Whyte. In Proceedings of the 12th International Round Table on Polychromy in Ancient Sculpture and Architecture, Los Angeles: Getty Publications.

(2024)A Niche Medium: Medial Properties of Façade Statuary in Roman Ephesus.” In Of Things and Stories: Current Takes on Object Biography, Medium, and Materiality, edited by Christina Marini and Lita Tzorzopoulou-Gregory. Selected Papers on Ancient Art and Architecture 8. Boston: Arch. Institute of America.

(2024)Review of ‘Souvenirs and the Experience of Empire in Ancient Rome’ by Maggie Popkin and ‘Destinations in Mind: Portraying Places on the Roman Empire’s Souvenirs’ by Kimberly Cassibry.” caa.reviews, February 2024.

(2023)Review of ‘Chroma: Ancient Sculpture in Color.’” Burlington Magazine, March 2023.

(2022)Excavating Ancient Expressions of Gender.” Art in America, May 2022.

Other publications: 

 

EXHIBITIONS

(2027) Anatolia and the Classical World, with Kenneth Lapatin, Vincent Blanchard, and Ludovic Laugier. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. April-September 2027.

(2023) The Horse and Rider from Albania, with Jens Daehner. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. July 26, 2023-January 29, 2024.

(2022) Making Sense of Marbles: Roman Sculpture at the OI, with Kiersten Neumann. Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures (ISAC) Museum, Chicago. September 15, 2022–March 12, 2023.

Teaching and Supervisions

Teaching: 
  • Greek and Roman art, archaeology, and visual culture
  • Hellenistic, Roman and Late Antique sculpture
  • Museum collections, provenance research, and curatorial practice

I teach and supervise across Greek and Roman art and archaeology, with particular interests in the visual culture of the eastern Roman Empire. I especially welcome projects on sculpture, Anatolia/Asia Minor, public monuments, statue display, display architecture, and the relationship between objects, viewers, and urban space.

My teaching and supervision also extend to provenance research and curatorial practice, which includes investigating past dealers active in the twentieth century trade in antiquities. Areas of interest in this area include Türkiye, Lebanon, Syria, Greece, and the Balkans.

Senior Curator, Mediterranean Antiquities, Fitzwilliam Museum
Linked Appointment, Faculty of Classics

Contact Details

rr764@cam.ac.uk
The Fitzwilliam Museum, Trumpington Street
Cambridge CB2 1RB
+44 (0)1223 332900 [museum]
Not available for consultancy

Affiliations

Latest news

Faculty wins University Outreach Award

22 May 2026

The Faculty is delighted to announce that we have been named the recipient of the University Outreach Award at Classics for All ’s 6th annual Impact Awards. The award recognises the Faculty’s extensive outreach and widening participation initiatives designed to break down barriers and make classical subjects accessible to...

Cambridge and Yale Postgraduates Explore Ancient Environments

20 May 2026

In late March, postgraduate researchers from the Cambridge Faculty of Classics travelled to Yale University for the second Yale-Cambridge Roman Empire Workshop. Held over three days in New Haven, Connecticut, the international conference brought together early-career scholars and senior faculty from archaeology, classics...

CANCELLED: Gray Lectures 2026

18 May 2026

Unfortunately, this year's J.H. Gray Lectures have been cancelled due to speaker ill-health. We are sorry for the short notice and for any inconvenience caused.

Phyle Project

5 May 2026

The Faculty is delighted to announce that Dr Daniel Sutton has won a Phyle Project Award, for scholars working on how democracy has been preserved, restored, or recovered across time. For more information please see the Phyle Project website .