

Robin Veder teaches courses in art history, visual culture, cultural history, interdisciplinary humanities, and American studies. Prior to joining the Penn State Harrisburg faculty in 2004, she taught at CSU, Sacramento and University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She has conducted collections research and curated exhibits for the National Park Service’s Historic American Landscape Survey, the Smithsonian Institution’s Horticulture Services Division, Montpelier, the Stonewall Jackson House, and the Virginia Historical Society. She earned her Ph.D. and M.A. from the American Studies Program at The College of William and Mary, and her B.A. in Inter[disciplinary]-Arts is from San Francisco State University. She grew up in San Jose, California.
Dr. Veder’s teaching and research share two main concerns: 1) the production, perception, and interpretation of the arts and other visually communicative objects, as well as image-making techniques, and culturally learned ways of processing and interpreting visual information; and 2) how Americans and Europeans employ the idea of "nature" for cultural (ideological, economic, social, political) ends. Her research focuses on transatlantic culture, with emphasis on the period of 1780-1940.
She has published articles and curated exhibits on a wide range of topics including garden history, picturebook illustrator Brian Selznick, Southern "Lost Cause" memorials, tableaux vivants, and neoclassical mourning iconography. Dr. Veder is currently investigating how exercise and dance contributed to the aesthetics of modern art.
A local consultant physician and surgeon will join three Penn State Harrisburg faculty experts to give a public “Six-Month Checkup of the Obama Administration” at noon Wednesday, Nov. 4.
The presentation in the Gallery Lounge of the Olmsted Building on campus is free and open to the public. For information, phone 717-948-6315.
Penn State Harrisburg’s Learning Center peer tutor training program has earned a five-year recertification from the College Reading and Learning Association. With this certification, Penn State Harrisburg remains one of only seven certified colleges in the capital region.
The certification provides recognition and positive reinforcement for the tutors’ successful work and sets a standard of skills and training for tutors.
A unique and powerful art exhibit addressing the Holocaust by acclaimed Israeli artist Ardyn Halter will be on public display in the Schwab Family Holocaust Reading Room of Penn State Harrisburg’s library November 15 through April 15.
Entitled The Family I Never Knew, the prints and paintings “depict the Shoah (Holocaust) from the point of view of the second generation and also those were born after (it),” Halter explains.