Kim Woods

Kim Wilford Woods FSA is an art historian specialising in northern European late Gothic sculpture and is Senior Lecturer in art history at the Open University.[1]

Kim Wilford Woods

FSA
Academic background
Alma materCourtauld Institute
Academic work
Discipline
  • Art history
Sub-disciplineMedieval alabaster
Institutions
  • Open University

Career

She has a bachelor's degree in history from the University of York. She gained her PhD in art history in 1988 from the Courtauld Institute, University of London with a thesis titled 'Netherlandish Carved Wooden Altarpieces of the 15th and early 16th centuries in Britain'. She joined the Open University in 1999.[1] She was elected as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London on 11 November 2005.[2]

Select publications

  • Woods, K. W. 2017. 'The tree of Jesse gates from Scarisbrick Hall', in Davies, G. and Townsend, E. (eds.) A Reservoir of Ideas: Essays in honour of Paul Williamson. London, Paul Holberton/V&A publishing. 235-244.
  • Woods, K. W. 2017 'The activation of the image: expatriate carvers and kneeling effigies in late Gothic Spain', The Sculpture Journal 26/1, 11-23.
  • Woods, K. W. 2016. Cut in Alabaster: a material of sculpture and its European traditions 1330-1530. Harvey Miller.
  • Woods, K. W. 2016. 'Plantagenets in alabaster', Crooks, P., Green, D. and Ormorod, M. (eds) The Plantagenet Empire, 1259-1453. Shaun Tyas. 89-108.
  • Woods, K. W. 2014. 'Altarpieces in Alabaster' in Fajt, J. and Hörsch, M. (eds) Niederländische Skulpturenexporte nach Nord- und Ostmitteleuropa vom 14. bis 16. Jahrhundert (Studia Jagellonica Lipsiensia). Ostfildern. 41-58.
  • Woods, K. W. 2013. 'The Master of Rimini and the tradition of alabaster carving in the early 15th century Netherlands' Meaning in Materials 1400-1800, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 62. 56-83.
  • Woods, K. W. 2007. Imported images: Netherlandish Late Gothic Sculpture in England, C.1400-c.1550. Shaun Tyas.

References

  1. "Dr Kim Woods". Open University. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  2. "Kim Wilford Woods". Society of Antiquaries of London. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
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