Livingston V. Watrous
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania
Greek Art and Archaeology, Bronze Age Aegean Art, Archaeology
Professor Watrous' interests include Aegean and Greek
art and archaeology. He is particularly interested in iconography (mainly
as it relates to Greek poetry) and the relationship between society, social
institutions and art. He has recently published articles on the archaeology
of Crete, and on the earliest architectural sculpture known in Greece.
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Recent Publications - The Cave Sanctuary of Zeus
at Psychro: A Study of Extra-Urban Sanctuaries in Minoan and Early
Iron Age Crete. University of Texas at Austin, Program in Aegean
Scripts and Prehistory, 1996; Kommos III, The Late Bronze Age
Pottery. Princeton University Press, 1992.
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Prizes, Awards & Grants - Director of the Gournia
Survey Project, important for the new information it provides about one
of the most significant excavations of a town in the Late Bronze Age Aegean.
Received grants from the Archaeological Institute of America, the National
Endowment for the Humanities, the National Geographic Society, the Fulbright
commission, and the Institute for Aegean Studies to support his archaeological
fieldwork and studies on Minoan Crete. In 1993/94 he was Elizabeth A. Whitehead
Professor at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens.
Livingston V. Watrous
605 Clemens Hall
645-2435X1084
watrous@buffalo.edu
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