BIO
Patricia Berger, Associate Professor of Chinese
Art, received her Ph.D. in the History of Art in 1980
from the University of California, Berkeley. Before
joining the Berkeley faculty in 1997, she served as
Curator of Chinese Art at the Asian Art Museum of
San Francisco and taught at Oberlin College and the
University of Southern California. Her most recent
book, Empire of Emptiness: Buddhist Art and Political
Authority in Qing China (University of Hawaii, 2003)
deals with the 18th-century Qing court's use of Buddhist
art in their relationship with Mongolia and Tibet.
She also co-authored a series of exhibition catalogs
on Buddhist art in China and Inner Asia, including
Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism
(University of Hawaii, 1994), Mongolia: The Legacy
of Chinggis Khan (Thames and Hudson, 1995), Tibet:
Treasures from the Roof of the World (Bowers Museum,
2003), and Three Emperors (Royal Academy, London,
2006). Her current research focuses on Buddhist painting
and photographic portraiture in early 20th-century
China and Inner Asia. She is a member of the Group
in Buddhist Studies and currently chair of the Department
of the History of Art.
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