Conlin obtained a PhD in art history and classics from the University of Michigan in 1993.[2] She is currently associate professor of art history and classics at the University of Colorado Boulder,[1] where she has received the Boulder Faculty Assembly Excellence in Teaching Award, and was named a President's Teaching Scholar in 2008.[3] She is also a member of the American Academy in Rome.[4]
Conlin specializes in the art, architecture and archaeology of ancient Rome, particularly in the imperial period.[2] Her work includes studies of Roman relief sculpture and marble carving analysis.[2] She is the co-director of the University of Colorado’s excavations at the Villa of Maxentius, on the Via Appia near Rome.[1]
Jacobs II, Paul W.; Conlin, Diane A. (2014). Campus Martius. The Field of Mars in the Life of Ancient Rome. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-1107023208.
Conlin, Diane Atnally (2013). "Rome, city of: 4. Julio-Claudian". In Bagnall, Roger S.; Brodersen, Kai; Champion, Craige B.; Erskine, Andrew; Huebner, Sabine R. (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Ancient History (First ed.). Blackwell. pp. 5910–5915. doi:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah16216. ISBN978-1-4051-7935-5.
Conlin, Diane Atnally (2013). "Rome, city of: 5. Flavian and Trajanic". In Bagnall, Roger S.; Brodersen, Kai; Champion, Craige B.; Erskine, Andrew; Huebner, Sabine R. (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Ancient History (First ed.). Blackwell. pp. 5910–5915. doi:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah16120. ISBN978-1-4051-7935-5.
Conlin, Diane A.; Heackl, Anne E.; Ponti, Gianni; Gregg, Christopher; Virgili, Paola (2006–2007). "The Villa of Maxentius on the Via Appia: Report on the 2005 Excavations". Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. 51/52. University of Michigan Press for the American Academy in Rome: 347–370. JSTOR25609499.
^Kleiner, Diana E. E. (2000). "Review of The Artists of the Ara Pacis: The Process of Hellenization in Roman Relief Sculpture". International Journal of the Classical Tradition. 6 (3): 463–467. ISSN1073-0508. JSTOR30222595.