Raquel Henriques da Silva
Associate Professor at the Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (FCSH-NOVA), Department of Art History. Head of the Master in Museology, FCSH-NOVA. Author of research and dissemination studies on the fields of museology and and artistic heritage, urbanism and architecture (19th-20th century), and visual arts.
Principal investigator of the following research projects:
-Sources for the History of Art Museums in Portugal (2010-2013). Funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (PTDC/EAT-MUS/101463/2008)
-Lx Conventos - From sacred city to secular town. The extinction of religious orders and the dynamics of urban transformation in the nineteenthe century Lisbon (2013-2015).
Funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (PTDC/CPC-HAT/4703/2012)
Scientific director of the Neo-Realism Museum.
Curator of art exhibitions.
Director of the Instituto de História de Arte (Institute of History of Art), FCSH-NOVA, from 2010 to 2017.
Former director of the Museu do Chiado- Museu Nacional de Arte Contemporânea (National Museum of Contemporary Art), from 1994 to 1997.
Former director of the Instituto Português de Museus (Portuguese Institute of
Museums), from 1997 to 2002.
Former member of the board of directors of the Serralves Foundation, representing the Ministry of Culture (2000-2006).
Scientific coordinator of the Lisbon’s historical centre candidacy for World Heritage, later participating in the Working Group, which outlined the Strategic Plan for the Baixa-Chiado.
Member of the National Council for Culture, in the Museums’ Section
Terry van Druten
Studied Art History at the University of Amsterdam, after having completed the Willem de Kooning Academy of Fine Arts in Rotterdam. He is specialized in nineteenth-century Dutch art and the history of museums. Since 2008 he works at Teylers Museum in Haarlem as Curator of the Art Collections. He has been responsible for many exhibitions, devoted to a diversity of themes ranging from the botanical art of Pierre-Joseph Redouté to the similarities between the work of Rineke Dijkstra and Claude Lorrain. Recently, he curated exhibitions about Dutch and Russian Romantic painting in collaboration with Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery, and about nineteenth-century Dutch watercolors with The Mesdag Collection in The Hague. Currently he is preparing an exhibition on the botanical art of Franz and Ferdinand Bauer.
Associate Professor at the Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (FCSH-NOVA), Department of Art History. Head of the Master in Museology, FCSH-NOVA. Author of research and dissemination studies on the fields of museology and and artistic heritage, urbanism and architecture (19th-20th century), and visual arts.
Principal investigator of the following research projects:
-Sources for the History of Art Museums in Portugal (2010-2013). Funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (PTDC/EAT-MUS/101463/2008)
-Lx Conventos - From sacred city to secular town. The extinction of religious orders and the dynamics of urban transformation in the nineteenthe century Lisbon (2013-2015).
Funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (PTDC/CPC-HAT/4703/2012)
Scientific director of the Neo-Realism Museum.
Curator of art exhibitions.
Director of the Instituto de História de Arte (Institute of History of Art), FCSH-NOVA, from 2010 to 2017.
Former director of the Museu do Chiado- Museu Nacional de Arte Contemporânea (National Museum of Contemporary Art), from 1994 to 1997.
Former director of the Instituto Português de Museus (Portuguese Institute of
Museums), from 1997 to 2002.
Former member of the board of directors of the Serralves Foundation, representing the Ministry of Culture (2000-2006).
Scientific coordinator of the Lisbon’s historical centre candidacy for World Heritage, later participating in the Working Group, which outlined the Strategic Plan for the Baixa-Chiado.
Member of the National Council for Culture, in the Museums’ Section
Terry van Druten
Studied Art History at the University of Amsterdam, after having completed the Willem de Kooning Academy of Fine Arts in Rotterdam. He is specialized in nineteenth-century Dutch art and the history of museums. Since 2008 he works at Teylers Museum in Haarlem as Curator of the Art Collections. He has been responsible for many exhibitions, devoted to a diversity of themes ranging from the botanical art of Pierre-Joseph Redouté to the similarities between the work of Rineke Dijkstra and Claude Lorrain. Recently, he curated exhibitions about Dutch and Russian Romantic painting in collaboration with Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery, and about nineteenth-century Dutch watercolors with The Mesdag Collection in The Hague. Currently he is preparing an exhibition on the botanical art of Franz and Ferdinand Bauer.