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Padma Kaimal

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Padma Kaimal

Batza Professor of Art

Department/Office Information

Art

Padma Kaimal is the Batza Family Chair in Art History. She trained in the History of Indian Art under Joanna Williams at the University of California, Berkeley. She has taught at 麻豆精品 since 1988. Her research questions common assumptions about art from the Tamil region. Did kings build the only architecture that matters? Did men? Are the boundaries of India鈥檚 modern states meaningful for understanding tenth-century architecture? How do narrative sculptures tell their stories? Are fierce goddesses demonic? Are museums the problem, the solution, or both to contentions over cultural property?  Her new book, Opening Kailasanatha: The Temple in Kanchipuram Revealed in Time and Space, reconstructs the aspirations, profound wisdom, Tantric secrets, and radically distinctive world view of ancient kings and queens of South India by closely analyzing the material forms of the elegant temple complex they built at the start of the eight century, and that has miraculously retained its form over the intervening centuries. Her previous book, Scattered Goddesses: Travels with the Yoginis (Ann Arbor: Association of Asian Studies, 2012) seeks to disrupt categories of East and West, victim and thief, as it traces the worship, ruination, dispersal, and re-enshrinement of nineteen sculptures from a tenth-century goddess temple.  Her essays have appeared in Religions, Third Text, Source, The Art Bulletin, the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Artibus Asiae, Archives of Asian Art, and Ars Orientalis. Fellowships from the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the J. Paul Getty Foundation, the American Institute for Indian Studies, the American Association of University Women, the Center for South Asian Studies at U. C. Berkeley, and 麻豆精品 have generously supported her research.

 

 

  • BA, Art History, Swarthmore College, May, 1979
  • MA, Indian Art, University of California Berkeley, June, 1982
  • PhD, Indian Art, University of California, Berkeley, May, 1988

鈥淪tone Portrait Sculpture at Pallava and Early Cola Temples: Kings, Patrons and Individual Identity,鈥 with honors, University of California, Berkeley, 1988.

  • Tenured Professor (7/2012-present); Tenured Associate Professor (7/2004-7/2012); Associate Professor (7/2001- 2012); Assistant Professor (7/1988-6/2001); Lecturer (2/87-5/87), Dept. of Art & Art History, 麻豆精品, Hamilton, New York.
  • Director, Asian Studies (Fall, 2006; Fall, 2007-Spring 2010), 麻豆精品, Hamilton, New York.
  • Robert H. Ho Associate Professor of Asian Studies (2006-2009), 麻豆精品, Hamilton, New York.
  • Visiting Lecturer, Dept. of Fine Arts, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, 1/88-4/88 (Art of India).
  • Teaching Assistant, Dept. of History of Art, University of California, Berkeley, California, 9/83-12/83 (Survey of Asian Art), 9/82-12/82 (Survey of Classical Art).

The Kailasanatha temple complex in Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu, India; the history and ideologies of museums and collecting; the history of goddess worship in India; architecture and sculpture of the Pallava and Chola periods in India; history of the art of Asia; South Asia/ India (post-colonial studies, general education); art theory; cultural studies.

Sculpture and architecture of early India, portraiture, the impact of patronage upon style, semiotics and critical theory, the iconography of Shiva's dance, gender, museum studies

Padma Kaimal sitting on stone steps with a local family

In the winter of 2012 I helped lead a trip for 27 faculty members to India. The goal was to confront questions of identity, culture, and knowledge across intellectual boundaries, and to challenge all of us who teach in the Core to stretch beyond our academic specialties. Read more about our experiences on the blog we kept, .

  • Tamil (3 years)
  • Sanskrit (2 years)
  • Hindi (1 year)
  • Italian (2 years)
  • French (2 years)
  • Latin (7 years)
  • Classical Greek (2 years)
  • Russian (1 year)

External

  • Millard Meiss Publication Grant from the College Art Association, November 2019: toward the publication of Opening Kailasanatha: The Temple in Kanchipuram Revealed in Time and Space (Seattle: University of Washington, 2021).
  • Louise and John Steffens Founders鈥 Circle Member and The Starr Foundation East Asian Studies Endowment Fund Member, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, 鈥淕ender and Other Metaphors at the Kailasanatha Temple in Kanchi,鈥 in residence 2010-2011.
  • Summer Fellowship, National Endowment for the Humanities, 鈥淐ollecting and Scattering,鈥 2007.
  • American Fellowship, American Association of University Women, 鈥淟earning to see the Goddess,鈥 2001-2002.
  • Fellowship, National Endowment for the Humanities, 鈥淟earning to see the Goddess,鈥 2001 (January 鈥 December).
  • J. Paul Getty Post- Doctoral Fellowship in the History of Art, 鈥淧atronage & Style in Early Cola temples,鈥 1990-91.
  • Fellow, 鈥淧atronage & Style in Early Cola Temples,鈥 Center for South Asian Studies, UC Berkeley, spring,1991.
  • American Institute of Indian Studies Senior Fellowship, 鈥淧atronage & Style in Early Cola temple,鈥 summer, 1990.
  • American Institute of Indian Studies, Junior Fellowship, Dissertation research in India, 1984-85.

Internal

  • Professor of the Year, 麻豆精品 chapter of the American Association of University Professors, 2022.
  • Batza Family Chair in Art & Art History, 2016-present.
  • Distinguished Teaching Award, Alumni Corporation, 麻豆精品, 2014.
  • Major Grant, 麻豆精品 Research Council, 鈥淕ender and Other Metaphors at the Kailasanatha Temple in Kanchi,鈥 2010-2011.
  • Major Grant, 麻豆精品 Research Council, 鈥淕oddesses in their homes,鈥 fieldwork in India, 2006.
  • Picker Fellowship, Fieldwork on medieval south Indian temple patronage, 1999-2000.
Book cover of "Scattered Goddesses" by Padma Kaimal

Books

  • Opening Kailasanatha: The Temple in Kanchipuram Revealed in Time and Space. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2021.
    • As discussed at the .
  • Scattered Goddesses: Travels with the Yoginis (Ann Arbor: Association for Asian Studies, 2013).

Edited Volumes

  • Religion, Special Issue: Scattering and Destroying: On the Unforeseen Consequences of Collecting and Reuse in South Asian Art 13.11(2022). Guest co-editor with Janice Leoshko and Catherine Asher.
  • Themes, History and Interpretations: Indian Painting: Essays in Honour of B. N. Goswamy.  Co-edited with Mahesh Sharma. Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing, 2013.
  • Ruins: Fabricating Histories of Time. Third Text (Special Issue) 112 (September, 2011). Volume co-edited and introduction co-authored with Janice Leoshko.
  • 鈥溾橳o my mind鈥: Essays for Joanna Gottfried Williams,鈥 Artibus Asiae 69.2 (2009) and 70.1 (2010).

Articles

  • 鈥淐ollecting as Ordering or Scattering, Scattering as Destruction,鈥 Religion, Special Issue: Scattering and Destroying: On the Unforeseen Consequences of Collecting and Reuse in South Asian Art 13.11(2022): 1039. ().
  • 鈥淲hy Do Yoginis Dance?鈥 In Beyond Bollywood: 2000 Years of Dance in the Arts of South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Himalayan Region. Edited by Forrest McGill, 21-31. Exhibition Co-Curators Ainsley M. Cameron and Forrest McGill. San Francisco: Asian Art Museum 鈥 Chong-Moon Lee Center for Asian Art and Culture, 2022.
  • 鈥淟oved, Unloved, Changed: Afterlives of the Kail膩san膩tha Temple in Kanchipuram,鈥 Artibus Asiae 81.2 (2021): 125-180.
  • 鈥淲ord Image Tango: Telling Stories with Words and Sculptures at the Kail膩san膩tha Temple Complex in K膩帽c墨puram.鈥 In Archaeology of Bhakti II: Royal Bhakti, Local Bhakti. Edited by Emmanuel Francis and Charlotte Schmid, pp. 159-207. Collection Indologie no 132. Pondicherry, India: 脡cole fran莽aise d鈥橢xtr锚me Orient/Institut Fran莽ais de Pondich茅ry, 2016.
  • 鈥淟ak峁墨 and the Tigers: A Goddess in the Shadows,鈥 in The Archaeology of Bhakti. Edited by Charlotte Schmid and Emmanuel Francis, 142-176. Pondich茅ry: Ecole fran莽aise d'Extr锚me-Orient/Institut fran莽ais de Pondich茅ry, 2014.
  • 鈥淭he Inverted Gaze,鈥 in Themes, History and Interpretations: Indian Painting: Essays in Honour of B. N. Goswamy.  Edited by Mahesh Sharma and Padma Kaimal, 12-16. Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing, 2013.
  • 鈥淚nterpreting Sculpture from the Tamil Region,鈥 in Interpretation and Reflection: South Asian Art Historians Engage Vidya Dehejia. Edited by Annapurna Garimella with Molly Aitken, Debra Diamond and Dipti Khera. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2013.
  • 鈥淵oginis in Stone: Auspicious and Inauspicious Power,鈥 in Yogin墨 鈥 History, Polysemy, Ritual. Edited by Istv谩n Keul. Trondheim, Norway: Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 2012.
  • 鈥淎bout Ruins,鈥 with Janice Leoshko as an introduction to Third Text (Special Issue), Ruins: Fabricating Histories of Time 112 (September, 2011).
  • 鈥淪hiva Nataraja: Multiple Meanings of an Icon,鈥 in A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture. Edited by Rebecca Brown and Debra Hutton, pp. 471-485. Blackwell Companions to Art History, series editor Dana Arnold. London: Blackwell, 2011.
  • 鈥淐olor and Sculpture in South Asia,鈥 Source: Notes in the History of Art 30.3 (Spring, 2011): 33-39.
  • 鈥溾橳o my mind鈥: Essays for Joanna Gottfried Williams,鈥 introduction to a 12-essay Festschrift, Artibus Asiae 69.2 (2009): 7-11.
  • 鈥淪outh Indian Sculpture in the Ackland Art Museum,鈥 in Fashioning the Divine: South Asian sculpture at the Ackland Art Museum, ed. Pika Ghosh, pp. 139-148. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill: Ackland Art Museum, 2006.
  • 鈥淟earning to see the Goddess,鈥 Journal of the American Academy of Religion 73.1 (2005): 45-87.
  • 鈥淪eductive and Repulsive: The deceptive contrasts of a South Indian goddess,鈥 Rotunda 36.1 (2003): 28-35.
  • 鈥淎 Man鈥檚 World? Gender, family and architectural patronage in medieval India,鈥 Archives of Asian Art LIII (2002-2003): 26-53.
  • 鈥淭he Problem of Portraiture in South India, 970-1000 CE,鈥 Artibus Asiae 59, 3/4 (2000): 139-179.
  • 鈥淭he Problem of Portraiture in South India, 870-970 CE,鈥 Artibus Asiae 59, 1/2 (1999): 59-133.
  • 鈥淪hiva Nataraja: Shifting Meanings of an Icon,鈥 Art Bulletin 81.3 (1999): 390-419.
  • 鈥淓arly Cola Kings and 鈥楨arly Cola Temples:鈥 Art and the Evolution of Kingship,鈥 Artibus Asiae 56, 1/2 (1996): 33-66.
  • 鈥淧assionate Bodies: Constructions of the Self in South Indian Portraits,鈥 Archives of Asian Art 48 (1995): 6-16.
  • 鈥淧layful Ambiguity and Political Authority in the Large Relief at Mamallapuram,鈥 Ars Orientalis 24 (1994): 1-27; reprinted in Asian Art: An Anthology, Rebecca M. Brown and Deborah S. Hutton, eds., London: Blackwell, 2006, pp. 43-56.

Reviews

  • Review of La cr茅ation d'une iconographie 艣iva茂te narrative: Incarnations du dieu dans les temples pallava construits by Val茅rie Gillet, Journal of the American Oriental Society 131: 3 (July-September 2011).
  • Review of The Great Penance at Mamallapuram: Deciphering a Visual Text, by Michael Rabe, CAAReviews (2003) (/).
  • Review of Temple Architecture and Sculpture of the Nolambas, by Andrew Cohen, Journal of Asian Studies 59.3 (2000): 76-77.
  • Review of Lives of Indian Images, by Richard Davis, Journal of Ritual Studies (1997).
  • Review of Art of the Imperial Cholas by Vidya Dehejia and Rajarajesvaram: The Pinnacle of Chola Art by B. Venkataraman, Journal of Asian Studies 51.2 (1992): 414-416.

Scholarly Work in Progress

  • 鈥淢apping Artistic Space: The Kaveri Style鈥 (website)
  • 鈥淭he infamous 鈥楬ead Sacrifice to Durga鈥欌 (essay)
  • 鈥淭he Sculptural Program of the Triple Temple in Kodumbalur: Two Missing Sculptures Rediscovered鈥 (essay)

Committees

  • Member, University Property Committee, 2018-2020
  • Member, Faculty Affairs Committee, 1/2016-6/2018, 8/2019-12/2019
  • Member, Bridge Committee on the Performing Arts, 2017-present
  • Chair, Task Force on Performing Arts Facilities, 5/2014-4/2015
  • Search committee for the Dean/Provost, 2011-2012.
  • Search committee that hired President Herbst, 2009-2010.
  • Asian Studies Program, director, 2006-2010; member, 1988-present.
  • Advice and Planning Committee, 2006-09.
  • Search committee for Vice President for Communications, 2004-05.
  • Executive Committee, implementation of the Diversity strategy of the Strategic Plan, 2004-2007.
  • Women鈥檚 Studies Advisory Council, 2004-present.
  • Middle East and Islamic Studies, 2006-present.
  • Strategic Planning Steering Group, 2002-04.
  • Faculty Affirmative Action Oversight, chair, 2002-2003
  • Editorial Advisory Committee, 麻豆精品 Scene, 2002-2003.

Administrative service

  • Director, Division of University Studies, 2020-2023
  • Director, Core Revision Committee, 2020-2021; Implementation Director (2021-2023)
  • Co-chair, Middle States Self-Study Steering Committee, 1/2016-6/2018
  • University Professor, Communities & Identities component of the Liberal Arts Core Curriculum, 2013-2019
  • Sophomore Residential Seminar, taught on ARTS 244: Temples, Caves & Stupas with extended study to India, 8/2016-1/2017
  • Middle East and Islamic Studies, On-campus coordinator, Spring 2016; Member, 2006-present.
  • Member, Bridge Committee on the Performing Arts, 2017-present
  • Chair, Task Force on Performing Arts Facilities, 5/2014-4/2015
  • Search committee for the Dean/Provost, 2011-2012.
  • Search committee for the President, 2009-2010.
  • Asian Studies Program, director, 2006-2010; member, 1988-present.
  • Advice and Planning Committee, 2006-09; 2016-2018.
  • Search committee for Vice President for Communications, 2004-05.
  • Executive Committee, implementation of the Diversity strategy of the Strategic Plan, 2004-2007.

Presentations at University Events

  • 鈥淥n linking Core courses,鈥 White Eagle conference on the Core Curriculum, 2009.
  • 鈥淩eligion and Art: Seeing and Believing -- Re-imagining Ritual from Architectural Remains,鈥 Religion Department's luncheon series on Religious Literacy at 麻豆精品, October 16, 2008.
  • 鈥淭he Prefocus/Focus exercise,鈥 White Eagle conference on the Core Curriculum, 2003, 2005.
  • 鈥淒ispersing the Kanchi Goddesses,鈥 Reunion College, June 2005.
  • 鈥淲hat Makes a Temple Tantric?鈥, Brown Bag lunch series, Women鈥檚 Studies Center, February 3, 2004.
  • 鈥淲hat I wish I had known during my first five years,鈥 panel presenter, Women鈥檚 Studies Center, November 2004.
  • 鈥淭eaching literature in Core Cultures as a non-specialist in the field,鈥 Core Cultures Faculty Seminar, 2002.
  • 鈥淟earning to See the Goddess,鈥 Humanities Colloquium, September 25, 2001.

Other

  • Co-leader with Eliza Kent of a two-week study tour of India for 25 faculty who teach in the Liberal Arts Core Curriculum, January 2012.
  • 麻豆精品 liaison to the New York State Independent College Consortium For Study In India, 2008-2010
  • Year of Chinese Art in 2009
  • 鈥淎sian Art Study Day鈥 at the Picker Art Gallery, April 12, 2008, co-presenter with Steve Greenberg of Hamilton College
  • Study tour of study options in India for 麻豆精品 students, August 2008 and December 2011.
  • Designed and served as first leader of the 2004 when ARTS study group in London, 2004-2006
  • Consulted on selection and exhibition of Chinese sculpture from the Sackler Foundation, Picker Art Gallery, Spring 2004.
  • Search for Intern for the Sophomore Year Experience, summer, 2003.
  • Search for tenure-track specialist in Hinduism, Department of Philosophy & Religion, non-voting consultant, 2003.
  • Advisor, Honors Project in Women鈥檚 Studies (Jaime Warsavage), 2003.
  • Affirmative Action Interviews with job candidates, 2002-2003.
  • Consulting with 麻豆精品 Development Office, fundraising, 2002-2003.
  • London Study Group (History), teaching and logistical support, 2002.
  • Search for Director of Research for Case Library, non-voting participant, summer, 2002.
  • Evaluator, Habilitation thesis defense of Val茅rie Gillet, 脡cole Pratique des Hautes 脡tudes (EPHE, Paris), December 2022.
  • Evaluator, Ph.D. thesis defense of Nicolas Cane, 脡cole Pratique des Hautes 脡tudes (EPHE, Paris), December, 2017.
  • External Review Committee, Art History Department, Skidmore College, 2016.
  • Editorial Board, Archives of Asian Art, 2010-present.
  • Editorial Board, Global South Asia series, University of Washington Press, 2013-present
  • Reviewer for grant proposals, School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton NJ
  • Editorial Board, Archives of Asian Art, 2010-present.
  • Advisory Committee (on manuscripts for publication), Institut Fran莽ais de Pondich茅ry and 脡cole fran莽aise d鈥橢xtr锚me-Orient, Pondichery, India, 2006-present. 
  • Executive Committee Member (2006-2008) and Trustee (2004-present), the American Institute of Indian Studies, Chicago.
  • President, American Council on Southern Asian Art, 1999-2004
  • Fellowship Selection Committee, American Institute for Indian Studies, 2001-2003 
  • Dissertation committee member for Preeti Bahadur, Chandigarh University, 2003.
  • Mentor, Career Development Workshop, College Art Association, 1998, 2000, 2005.
  • Reviewer for submitted manuscripts; Artibus Asiae, Art Bulletin, Ars Orientalis, South Asian Studies, AIIS Dissertation Prize/Indiana University Press, Oxford University Press, Simon & Schuster; 1996-2009.
  • Reviewer for fellowship applications to: Getty Fellowship Program (1997); Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (2000); National Endowment for the Humanities (2003).
  • Board of Directors, Earlville Opera House, 2003-2006.
  • Chair, Gallery Selection Committee, Earlville Opera House, 2003-2006.
  • Education Unlimited, 2001, 鈥淩eading The Meanings In Indian Art: Sculpture And Architecture In South India, 600-900 C.E.鈥.
  • High School Seminar, 2002, 鈥淭emples, Caves and Tombs: Highlights of Indian Art鈥.

On Panels at National and International Conferences

鈥淪peaking in the Voices of Sons and Wives,鈥 in the session 鈥淜illing the Oriental Despot,鈥 Annual Conference on South Asia, Madison Wisconsin, October 22, 2022.

鈥淥pening Kailasanatha: The Temple in Kanchipuram Revealed in Time and Space,鈥 Padma Kaimal in conversation with Anirudha Kanisetti, Zoom recording aired 5 March 2022, 15th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival, Jaipur, India.

鈥淚nscriptions and Invisibility at the Kailasanatha temple in Kanchi,鈥 in Hidden Meaning: Absence, Obscurity and Invisibility in the Tamil Temple, Annual Conference on South Asia, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 22, 2021 (by Zoom).

鈥淚dentifying Through Difference: Materiality and Diasporic Receptions of Tantra,鈥 Yogini/Tantra Workshop sponsored by the Lilly Foundation, The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, The Smithsonian, Washington DC, November, 2020 (by Zoom). 

Co-convener, with Katherine Kasdorf (curator of South Asian art at the Detroit Institute of Arts), of a symposium on Zoom: 鈥淩euniting the Tamil Yoginis: The Plans Take Shape,鈥 October 16-17, 2020 (11 am 鈥 2 pm EDT), Sponsored by the Office of the President, 麻豆精品.

鈥淕etting the Band Back Together: Reuniting the Kanchi Yoginis,鈥 co-chaired with Katherine Kasdorf, Half-day symposium at the Conference on South Asia, University of Wisconsin, October 17, 2019.

鈥淐ategories and culture: excavating thought from the sculptures of the Kailasanatha temple Kanchipuram,鈥 in 鈥淭he materiality of religion at Kailasanath: exploring the embodiment of religion at a Chola temple,鈥 Annual Conference on South Asia, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 13, 2018.

鈥淎uspiciousness and Gender at the Kailasanatha temple in Kanchipuram,鈥漣n 鈥淚conographic Riddles: Goddesses and the Ambiguity of Form,鈥 Annual Conference on South Asia, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 23, 2015.

鈥淪culptural themes and monastic principles at the Muvarkoyil temple comples in Kodumbalur,鈥 Archaeology of Bhakti III: The Minor Dynasties, Kodumbalur, Tamilnadu, August 10, 2015.

Invited Lectures and Workshops

鈥淥pening Kailasanatha: The Temple in Kanchipuram Revealed in Time and Space,鈥 Interview by Raj Balkaran for his podcast 鈥淣ew Books in Indian Religion,鈥 to be released January 24, 2023. https://rajbalkaran.com/podcast.

鈥淚nterpreting Sculpture from the Tamil Region,鈥 Symposium in Honor of Vidya Dehejia, Art History Department, Columbia University, New York, September 22-24, 2022.

鈥淪cattered Goddesses: Travels with the Yoginis,鈥 Society for Art and Cultural Heritage of India, San Francisco, September 17, 2022.

"Who Built the Stone Temples of Ancient South India: Key Monuments of the Pallava and Early Chola Period," Arts of Asia lectures, Society for Asian Art, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, September 16, 2022.

Discussant, 鈥淓xhibiting the Tamil Yoginis: International Museum Dialogues,鈥 Exhibition Workshop funded by the Lilly Endowment, Inc., Detroit Institute of Arts (zoom), June 28, 2022.

Discussant, 鈥淵oginis Across Religious Traditions,鈥 Exhibition Workshop funded by the Lilly Endowment, Inc., Detroit Institute of Arts (zoom), June 6, 2022.

鈥淥pening Kailasanatha: The Temple in Kanchipuram Revealed in Time and Space,鈥 Interview by Anirudh Kansetti for the 15th Jaipur Literature Festival, February 23, 2022.

鈥淥pening the Temple: Reading Material Form at an Ancient Temple in India,鈥 College of Charleston, Charleston SC, March 24, 2022 (zoom).

鈥淥pening the Temple: Meaning in Material Form at the Kailasanatha Temple in Kanchipuram,鈥 Online Public Seminar Series, Jnanapravaha (Mumbai, India), April 6-7, 2021.

鈥淧rovenance of the Sackler/Freer鈥檚 Tamil Yogini,鈥 paper delivered as invited specialist to the Yogini/Tantra Workshop (on Zoom) sponsored by the Lilly Foundation, for The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, The Smithsonian, Washington DC, May 19-20, 2020. 

鈥淐osmic and Earthly Dance in the Arts of India and Its Neighbors,鈥 Planning workshop for a large-scale exhibition, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, February 1-2, 2019.

鈥淩eading ancient ritual and thought through material evidence,鈥 in 鈥淭race: Artisanal Intelligence, Material Agency, and Ritual Technology in South Asian Art,鈥 Harvard University, Cambridge MA, December 7-8, 2018.

鈥淗ow a building tells you to move: worship at the Kailasanatha temple in Kanchipuram,鈥 Tufts University, September 14, 2017.

鈥淪anctified Spaces: Monumental Places and the Construction of Authority,鈥 at "Materializing Sanctity, Enacting Authority: Text, Image, and Performance in India and China,鈥 Colloquium organized by the departments of Religious Studies, Classics, and Art History at Brown University, March 14-15, 2016.

鈥淪cattered Goddesses: Travels with the Yoginis,鈥 Center for the Humanities, Temple University, Philadelphia, September 23, 2015.

鈥淪cattered Goddesses: Travels with the Yoginis,鈥 South Asian Religions Distinguished Lecture, Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University, Montreal, March 2015.

鈥淐hange and Persistence: The Kailasanatha Temple at Kanchi from the 8th-21st Centuries,鈥 The Templeton Lecture in Art History, University of California at Davis, January 9, 2015.

Conferences organized and Sessions chaired

鈥淩euniting the Tamil Yoginis II: Planning the Exhibition,鈥 co-organizer with Katherine Kasdorf and Emma Natalya Stein, 麻豆精品, November 4-5, 2022.

鈥淜illing the Oriental Despot,鈥 Annual Conference on South Asia, Madison Wisconsin, October 22, 2022.

鈥淧ortraiture and the Human Figure in Orissa (Odisha), 8th -13th Century,鈥 Annual Conference of the College Art Association, February 13, 2019.

鈥淯nusual Iconographies of South Asian Deities,鈥 Annual Conference on South Asia, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 23, 2017.

鈥淲ays around Sri Lanka in South Asian art history,鈥 Annual Conference on South Asia, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 27, 2016.