Jérémie Koering - Biography#
Jérémie Koering is graduate of the École du Louvre, and received a Ph.D. from the Université Paris 1 (2005) and an Habilitation from the EHESS (2019). Since 2020 he is professor of early modern art history at the University of Fribourg (CH). Before that, he was associate scientist at the CNRS (2010-2019) and he taught in several universities in France (Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Lyon 2, Rennes 2), in Abu Dhabi (PSUAD) and in Switzerland (Basel). He was a member of the Deutsches Forum für Kunstgechischte (2009-2010), a resident of the Académie de France in Rome (2003-2004) and he has received several scholarships: École Française de Rome (2000), Lavoisier (2005), Focillon/YALE (2014), Chastel/Villa Médicis (2016), Clark Institute (2020). He has lectured at the Bibliotheca Hertziana, the Columbia University, the Courtauld Institute, the Getty Research Institute, the Johns Hopkins University, the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, the Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies at Villa I Tatti, the Warburg Institute, the Yale University, the Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte...
His fields of study are Renaissance Art, epistemology of art history, and anthropology of images. He has published several books: Léonard de Vinci. Peintures et dessins (Hazan, 2007), Le prince en représentation (Actes Sud, 2013), Caravage, juste un détail (INHA, 2018) ; with Stephen J. Campbell, Andrea Mantegna : Making Art History (Wiley, 2015) ; with Yve-Alain Bois, Damisch/Schapiro a special issue of October (MIT, 167, 2019). Recently, he has published an essay in the field of image anthropology : Les iconophages. Une histoire de l’ingestion des images (2021). An english translation of this book is to be published by Zone Books in 2022. He is working on two books : the first on Meyer Schapiro and drawing as epistemic tool, the second on the metaphors of the artistic process in renaissance art. He is also editor of "Les Apparences" at Actes Sud publisher.