Birgit Hopfener is Associate Professor of Art History at Carleton University in Ottawa. She is also cross-appointed to the Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art and Culture (ICSLAC) where she currently holds the Ruth and Mark Phillips Professorship.
Her research and teaching is situated in the field of critical global art history with a regional expertise in Chinese art. At Carleton she teaches courses on Chinese art, contemporary art in a global framework and culture theory. Her criticality has been shaped at the disciplinary interstices of art history, cultural theory, image studies (Bildwissenschaft) and Sinology, through engagements with different languages (German, English and Chinese) and different academic systems in Canada, China, Germany and Switzerland.
In her current research the questions “what shapes contemporary art in a global framework?” and “what other genealogies of art constitute contemporary art?” are the starting points to examine what multiple and transculturally entangled historiographies and epistemologies constitute art, and are operative through art’s various agents, institutions and concepts. She is particularly interested in how certain temporal assumptions (temporal regimes and historiographical models) generate and govern worlds, shape art, knowledges, subjects and disciplines respectively.