Curatorial Intern
About
Jacqueline Giz is a PhD student in the History of Art department studying the visual and material culture of the Roman world. Her work focuses on domestic space, with particular interests in sumptuous dining vessels, quotidian objects, and subelite experience. She holds an M.A. in Art History from Rutgers University, with a concentration in Cultural Heritage and Preservation Studies. As a co-terminal degree student at Rutgers, she also earned her B.A. in Art History with minors in Classics, Archaeology, and Political Science with distinction as an Honors College Scholar.
Jacqueline has worked with collections at the Princeton University Art Museum, the American Academy in Rome, and the Archivio Boncompagni Ludovisi. At each institution, her projects have varied in nature, including curatorial initiatives, provenance studies, and database management. At Rutgers’ Zimmerli Art Museum, Jacqueline spent over three years as a Student Educator, engaging diverse publics with art from across space and time. She currently serves as a finds assistant for the Casa della Regina Carolina project at Pompeii.