Professorship for Provenance Studies

Organisational unit: Professoship

Organisation profile

Research and teaching in Provenance Studies at Leuphana cover the areas of provenance, restitution, and critical museum and art market studies. In addition to examining the past, present, and future of provenance and its production, we focus primarily on the institutional frameworks in which art is collected and exhibited. Here, we are particularly interested in the role of museums in the acquisition, archiving, display, and circulation of objects. To answer these questions, we also use digital tools and explore their relevance for provenance research and art history.

Main research areas

To further the understanding of the discursive and theoretical landscape related to the circulation of artworks, we critically engage with contemporary and historical debates. Our art and cultural history perspective is equally informed by legal, sociological, and economic considerations. Here, we pay special attention to the exploration of contexts of injustice (national socialism, colonialism). We also investigate art market aspects from critical lenses, such as forgery, corruption, and discrimination.

An essential component of our teaching is the inclusion of partners and concrete research projects, such as the Provenance Lab and its experimental research. Within the framework of excursions, we not only visit exhibitions, but also the depots and restoration workshops of museums. The exchange with curators, provenance researchers, artists, and experts of the art market is thereby central.

  1. 2024
  2. Published

    Interpreting Strings, Weaving Threads: Structuring Provenance Data with AI

    Rother, L., Mariani, F. & Koss, M., 31.01.2024, Sammlungsforschung im digitalen Zeitalter: Chancen, Herausforderungen und Grenzen. Günther, K. & Alschner, S. (eds.). Göttingen: Wallstein Verlag, p. 93-103 11 p. ( Kulturen des Sammelns. Akteure, Objekte, Medien; vol. 5).

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

  3. Published

    Analyzing the Depiction of Motherhood through Multimodal Networks. A Comparative Study about socially engaged engravers producing in Brazil in the 20th century

    Romero Ferrón, B. & Medina Fortes, L., 2024, Global Digital Humanities Symposium, Online.

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

  4. Published

    Auf dem Weg zu einer emanzipierten Provenienzforschung

    Rother, L., 2024, Entzug, Transfer, Transit: Menschen, Objekte, Orte und Ereignisse: 20 Jahre Arbeitskreis Provenienzforschung : anlässlich der Jubiläumstagung, 19.-20. April 2021 in Hamburg. A. P. E. V. (ed.). Heidelberg: arthistoricum.net, p. 158-165 8 p.

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearch

  5. Published

    Challenging Conventional Statistical Metrics for Gender Equity in Exhibitions Ecosystem

    Romero Ferrón, B. & Rodríguez Ortega, N., 2024, DH2024 Book of Abstracts.

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

  6. 2023
  7. Published

    Teaching Provenance to AI: An Annotation Scheme for Museum Data

    Mariani, F., Rother, L. & Koss, M., 27.12.2023, AI in Museums: Reflections, Perspectives and Applications. Thiel, S. & Bernhardt, J. (eds.). Bielefeld: transcript Verlag, p. 163-172 10 p.

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

  8. Published

    Hidden Value: Provenance as a Source for Economic and Social History

    Rother, L., Mariani, F. & Koss, M., 25.05.2023, In: Jahrbuch fur Wirtschaftsgeschichte. 64, 1, p. 111-142 32 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  9. Published
  10. Published

    Introducing VISU: Vagueness, Incompleteness, Subjectivity, and Uncertainty in Art Provenance Data

    Mariani, F., 2023, Computational Methods in the Humanities 2022 : Proceedings of the Workshop on Computational Methods in the Humanities 2022 Lausanne, Switzerland, June 9–10, 2022.. Rochat, Y., Metrailler, C. & Piotrowski, M. (eds.). Aachen: Sun Site Central Europe (RWTH Aachen University), Vol. 3602. p. 63-84 22 p. (CEUR Workshop Proceedings; vol. 3602).

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

  11. 2022
  12. Published

    Taking Care of History: Toward a Politics of Provenance Linked Open Data in Museums

    Rother, L., Koss, M. & Mariani, F., 19.12.2022, Perspectives on Data. Lew Fry, E. & Canning, E. (eds.). Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 31 p.

    Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearchpeer-review

  13. Published

    Uncanny Provenance: Art History and its Double

    Rother, L., 12.2022, In: Texte zur Kunst. 2022, 128, p. 84-97 14 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review