Amy Freund

Art History

Associate Professor and The Kleinheinz Family Endowment for the Arts and Education Endowed Chair in Art History

Email

afreund@smu.edu

Amy Freund is an associate professor and the Kleinheinz Family Endowed Chair in Art History at ÃÛÌÒ½´Methodist University. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, and began her teaching career in the ÃÛÌÒ½´art history department in 2005 as a Haakon Predoctoral Fellow. She subsequently held an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship at the National Gallery of Art’s Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts. Before joining the ÃÛÌÒ½´faculty in 2014, she was an assistant professor at Texas Christian University.

Freund is a specialist in 18th-century European art. Her first book,  (Penn State University Press, 2014), examines the ways in which sitters and artists used portraiture to reformulate personal and political identity during the French Revolution. Articles related to this project have been published in Eighteenth-Century Studies,  and in Interior Portraiture and Masculine Identity in France, 1789–1914 (Ashgate, 2010). Her second book, Noble Beasts: Hunters and Hunted in Eighteenth-Century French Art (Yale University Press, forthcoming 2025) analyzes the representation of the hunt in late 17th- and 18th-century France. Research from this project has been published in Art History, Journal18, and several edited volumes. Freund is also the past president of Historians of Eighteenth-Century Art and Architecture (HECAA): .

Education

Ph.D. and M.A., History of Art, University of California, Berkeley
A.B., Art History, summa cum laude, Princeton University

Recent Work

Research

European art of the long eighteenth century; politics and visual culture; portraiture and the history of selfhood; the visual representation of animals; gender and representation; the history and decoration of mechanical objects, especially guns.

Books

. Penn State University Press, 2014.

Articles

“Harping on patriotism: female education meets Orléanist ambition in Jean-Antoine-Théodore Giroust’s The Harp Lesson (1791),” co-authored with Tom Stammers, French History 38.1 (2024)

Guest editor, “,” special issue of Journal18 (9, Spring 2020)

“ co-authored with Michael Yonan, Journal18 #7 (Spring 2019).

Art History 42.1 (February 2019) 40-67.

“Good Dog! Jean-Baptiste Oudry and the Politics of Animal Painting,” in ed. Heather MacDonald, 66-79. Lucia/Marquand, distributed by Yale University Press, 2016.

“Men and Hunting Guns in Eighteenth-Century France,” in , eds. Jennifer Germann and Heidi Strobel. Ashgate, 2016.

The Art Bulletin 93.3 (September 2011): 325-344.

In Interior Portraiture and Masculine Identity in France, 1780-1914, edited by Temma Balducci, Heather Jensen, and Pamela Warner, 15-29. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011.

Eighteenth-Century Studies 41.3 (Spring 2008): 337-358.

Distinctions

Clark Fellow, Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA, Spring 2021

Ailsa Mellon Bruce Senior Fellowship, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Fall 2017.

Choice Outstanding Academic Title, American Library Association, for Portraiture and Politics in Revolutionary France, 2015.

Godbey Book Award for Portraiture and Politics in Revolutionary France, Dedman College Interdisciplinary Institute, SMU, 2015.

John H. Daniels Research Fellowship, National Sporting Library, Middleburg, Va., 2008.

Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 2006-08.

Haakon Predoctoral Fellowship in Art History, Division of Art History at ÃÛÌÒ½´Methodist University, Dallas, TX, 2004-06.

Course list

Early modern European art
The global 18th century
Portraiture
Animals in art
France 1500-1914
The decorative arts and the history of dress
The visual arts and the French Revolution
Amy Freund