Art, Art History, and Film Faculty

Oliver Wunsch

Associate Professor, 18th and 19th Century Art

Director of Undergraduate Studies, Art History

Profile

Oliver Wunsch’s research and teaching focus on European and American art in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He has a background as a painter and printmaker, and much of his research deals with the history of artistic techniques.

His first book, A Delicate Matter: Art, Fragility, and Consumption in Eighteenth-Century France, was published by Pennsylvania State University Press in 2024. It examines the unprecedented proliferation of physically unstable art in eighteenth-century France, from oil paintings that cracked within years of their creation to pastel portraits that were vulnerable to the slightest vibration. The book links these material practices to the commercial forces that enabled them, revealing how the rise of consumer culture fundamentally transformed the relationship between art, time, and value. The book was short-listed for the 2025 Kenshur Prize.

Wunsch is currently developing a second book about the trope of “aesthetic redemption” in the reception of European artworks representing Black subjects. A portion of this project was published in Art History in 2025.

His research has been supported by fellowships from the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery in Washington, the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the Bibliotheca Hertziana in Rome.

Publications

Books

A Delicate Matter: Art, Fragility, and Consumption in Eighteenth-Century France (University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2024).

 Journal Articles

“The Aesthetic Redemption of the Black Body in Eighteenth-Century France,” Art History 48, no. 1 (February 2025): 14–44, .

“Discriminating Taste: Skin Color and Connoisseurship in Eighteenth-Century France,” H-France Salon 14, no. 8 (2022): 1–12, .

 “Rosalba Carriera’s Four Continents and the Commerce of Skin,” Journal18, no. 10 (2020), .

“Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s ‘Black Countess’ Identified,” The Burlington Magazine 161, no. 1398 (October 2019): 828–833.  

“Watteau, through the Cracks,” The Art Bulletin 100, no. 2 (June 2018): 37–60.

“Diderot and the Materiality of Posterity,” Early Modern French Studies 40, no. 1 (2018): 63–78.

Book Chapters

“Imagine Watteau,” in Breaking the Silence: Methods of Writing Art History, ed. Caroline Fowler (Clark Art Institute / Yale University Press, 2025), 240–49.

“Making up Race: Whiteness, Pinkness, and Pompadour,” in Madame de Pompadour: Painted Pink, ed. A. Cassandra Albinson (Harvard Art Museums / Yale University Press, 2022), 74–85.

“Decay,” in The Philosophy Chamber: Art and Science in Harvard’s Teaching Cabinet, 1766–1820, ed. Ethan Lasser (Cambridge, MA and New Haven, CT: Harvard Art Museums and Yale University Press, 2017), 211–21.

 “Time,” in Drawing: The Invention of a Modern Medium, ed. Ewa Lajer-Burcharth and Elizabeth Rudy, (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Art Museums, 2017), 162–71.

Book Reviews

“Maurice-Quentin de La Tour,” Master Drawings (Winter 2023), 549–52, .

“Dare to Know: A Review,” Journal18 (December 2022), .

 “Art, Science, and the Body in Early Romanticism,” CAA Reviews, .