Roger Stalley
Roger Andrew Stalley (born 12 June 1945) is a scholar and teacher in medieval architecture and sculpture. His speciality is Early Gothic and Romanesque architecture and sculpture in England and Western Europe with a particular focus on Irish architecture and art.[1] He has published numerous papers and books including Cistercian Monasteries of Ireland in 1987, for which he was awarded the Alice Davis Hitchcock Medallion in 1988 by the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain,[1] and Early Medieval Architecture in 1999 for the Oxford History of Art series. He is noted for his innovative teaching practices[2] for example, The Medieval Architecture Online Teaching Project,[3] and is recognised in the 2021 publication Mapping New Territories in Art and Architectural Histories, Essays in Honour of Roger Stalley.[4] Education and careerProfessor Stalley spent his formative years in Coventry and Lincolnshire[2] before graduating from the University of Oxford (Worcester College) with a degree in modern history, following which he read for a master's degree in the history of European art at the Courtauld Institute of Art, London. He graduated in 1969 and moved to Ireland, where he has remained, apart from a brief spell in North Carolina in 1985 undertaking a fellowship at the National Humanities Center. Now a Fellow Emeritus of Trinity College Dublin (appointed 2011), he commenced his time in Ireland as a lecturer in history of art at Trinity College in 1969, where he spent the majority of his career except for his time in North Carolina and as a Fellow at the Institute of Irish Studies at Queen's University Belfast between 1975 and 1976. Upon his retirement from university life in 2010, he had been the head of the School of Histories and Humanities at Trinity College for two years, having been awarded full professorship in 1990.[1] Honours and appointments to public bodies
Stalley has provided his services to a number of public bodies, including acting as a member of the Irish Architectural Archive,[8] on the governing board of the Dublin Institute of Technology (2002–2004), as a council member at the Society of Antiquaries of London (2001–2004) and as foreign advisor to the International Center of Medieval Art (New York) for three terms, the last being 2002–2005.[1] Other informationPhotographs contributed by Roger Stalley to the Conway Library are currently being digitised by the Courtauld Institute of Art, as part of the Courtauld Connects project.[9] As well as contributing, Professor Stalley has also used photographs from the library in his work, e.g. an image of Gloucester Cathedral in his article 'Innovation in English Gothic Architecture: Risks, Impediments, and Opportunities for British Art Studies in June 2017.[10] Selected publications
References
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