Professor Ursula Rehn Wolfman was born in Steinfeld, Austria and educated in Germany, England, France and the United States. She received the Diplôme Supérieur from the Université de Paris (Sorbonne) in Paris in literature and philosophy and completed her graduate studies at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, and the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, with a doctorate in French literature and art history. Her dissertation topic was ‘Ecriture/lecture: Jeu d’Espace littéraire, artistique, sculptural – Samuel Beckett – Alberto Giacometti’.Her particular field of interest is the relationship between the arts, i.e. literature, architecture, painting, sculpture and music.As an independent scholar, she has lectured at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C, at Georgetown University (as adjunct professor) and at many museums, both local and national, for the Smithsonian Associates.She also lectures on numerous international tours for the Smithsonian Institution in France, Spain, Germany, Austria, Eastern Europe, the Baltic region and Russia.
Contributed Posts
Oct 15, 2016 The Bauhaus: Architecture, Art and Music II
Sep 12, 2016 The Bauhaus: Architecture, Art and Music I
May 14, 2016 Music, Art and Nature
Apr 17, 2016 Intersections of Art and Music – Rothko and Pollock
Mar 13, 2016 Music – Silence – and the Art of Listening
Feb 6, 2016 Scriabin’s Color Symbolism in Music
Jan 10, 2016 Čiurlionis – Symbolism in Art and Music in Lithuania