Thessaloniki - Annual Open Meeting 2024
Presented By
American School of Classical Studies
Speaker(s)
Bonna D. Wescoat (Director of the School)
Susan I. Rotroff (Washington University in St. Louis, emerita)
Location
Casts Museum (Μουσείο Εκμαγείων) - New Building of the School of Philosophy, Aristotle UniversityAristotle University of Thessaloniki Campus
Thessaloniki 54124
Bonna D. Wescoat, Director of the School
“Report on the School’s Activity 2023”
Susan I. Rortoff, Washington University
“What does Hellenistic Pottery Mean?”
Bonna D. Wescoat is the Director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Art History at Emory University, and Director of American Excavations Samothrace. Her research interests center on architecture and sacred experience in ancient Greece, investigated through excavation, 3D digital modeling, architectural reconstruction, and experimental archaeology.
Susan Rotroff is a Classical archaeologist whose research focuses on the use of material culture to throw light on the daily lives of ancient people.
Since 1970, Professor Rotroff has been associated with the Agora Excavations, in Athens, where archaeologists have been investigating the civic center of the ancient town and the domestic and industrial neighborhoods that surrounded it. Her concentration there has been on the archaeology of the Classical and Hellenistic periods, using primarily ceramic evidence to reconstruct the activities and behavior of ancient Athenians. She has also worked on excavations at Troy and Sardis in Turkey, and at Carthage in North Africa, and has recently completed a study of pottery from the SEEP survey project, in southern Euboia. Planned future work includes ceramic analysis at Sparta, in Greece. As a classicist as well as an archaeologist, she is particularly interested in the combination of written sources and artifacts in the explication of ancient life.