CYA Alumnus returns to 'where it all started' to teach! shapiro cover edited
05 Jul 2019

CYA Alumnus returns to ‘where it all started’ to teach!

Alumnus Alan Shapiro (’69), Professor of Classics and W. H. Collins Vickers Professor of Archaeology Emeritus at Johns Hopkins, came back to CYA this summer to teach The Dawn of Greek Art, From Homer to the Persian Wars. The course explores the early development of Greek art against the backdrop of the formative period of Greek civilization: the Rise of the Polis, the Age of Colonization, and the emergence of Athens as a cultural and artistic center.

Alan Shapiro tells us he is happy to be back ‘where it all started’ and share his love of archaic Greek art with a new generation of students who might one day follow a path like his.

His class met entirely on-site, taking advantage of the rich collections of Athens and Attica, where Archaic Greek art can be studied in original works as nowhere else in the world.

Students also participated in two memorable field trips to Delphi and the Cycladic islands of Paros and Naxos. They even had the rare opportunity to go to the islet of Despotiko, catch up with fellow CYAers from the Despotiko Field School and find out about the latest developments on the excavation of the sanctuary of Apollo.

Here are a few photos from the field trip:

CYA Alumnus returns to 'where it all started' to teach! shapirone

Professor Shapiro and students at ‘Portara’, the Great Marble Door, at sunset (Naxos)

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CYA students taste traditional delicacies at a local taverna (Paros)

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‘The Dawn of Greek Art’ class in full force on the island of Despotiko

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When one CYA summer course meets another, on the small island of Despotiko!