Marcia Hall


Marcia Hall, who usually publishes as Marcia B. Hall, is an American art historian, who is the Laura H. Carnell Professor of Renaissance Art at the Tyler [School of Art and Architecture] of Temple University in Philadelphia. Hall's scholarship has concentrated on Italian Renaissance painting, mostly of the sixteenth century, and especially Raphael and Michelangelo.

Biography

Marcia Brown was born in Washington, D.C. in 1939 to Charles Edward Brown, a business executive, and Frances Peebles .
She attended Wellesley College, graduating in 1960. In 1961 she married Charles Arthur Mann Hall, then the Dean of Wellesley's Chapel. She earned an MA from Radcliffe College in 1962 and won a Fulbright Fellowship in 1963 to research her dissertation on the renovations in the late 16th century to Santa Maria Novella and Santa Croce, supervised by Sydney Joseph Freedberg at Harvard University. She is also the first scholar to discover the rood screen in both churches once removed by Giorgio Vasari during the Counter-Reformation. She earned her PhD from Harvard in 1967. She has been teaching art history class relates to Italian Renaissance at Temple University since 1973.
Her visiting fellowships include the Institute for [Advanced Study, Princeton], and twice at I Tatti, Florence.

Works