Ena Heller Named the 2010 Religion and the Arts Winner |
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After graduation, Heller focused her attention on establishing new places of learning through art, first at the Gallery at the American Bible Society (1998), and later as founding director of the Museum of Biblical Art (2005). MOBIA was conceived as a learning museum, whose unique mission is illustrated by noteworthy exhibitions and publications. Among them, Heller edited and contributed to the volumes Perspectives on Medieval Art: Learning through Looking (D. Giles Ltd., 2009) and Reluctant Partners: Art and Religion in Dialogue (American Bible Society, 2004), and the exhibition catalogs Tobi Kahn: Sacred Spaces for the 21st Century (D. Giles Ltd., 2009) and Icons or Portraits? Images of Jesus and Mary from the Collection of Michael Hall (American Bible Society, 2001). At MOBIA and elsewhere — the Society of Architectural Historians, College Art Association, the Council of American Jewish Museums, the Institute of Fine Arts, and numerous museums and universities throughout the country — Heller has presented papers and public lectures which emphasize the need for teaching art, and the connection between art and religion. In parallel, her independent scholarly research has resulted in contributions to volumes such as From the Margins: Women of the Hebrew Bible and their Afterlives (Sheffield Phoenix Press Ltd., 2009) and Women’s Space: Patronage, Place, and Gender in the Medieval Church (State University of New York Press, 2005).
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