Sarah Beckmann

A photo of Sarah Beckmann
E-mail: sbeckmann@humnet.ucla.edu Office: Dodd Hall 200E

Assistant Professor

Fields of Interest: Roman Sculpture, Domestic Archaeology, Late Antiquity, Non-elite Populations

Research

I am a Roman archaeologist specializing in domestic art and archaeology. I am currently at work on my monograph, which re-investigates the villa phenomenon of the late antique period (mid-3rd to 5th c. CE). I treat the diverse material culture packages of villas in the western provinces as evidence for regional variations on late antique elite culture. Also and at the same time, my book project examines villa sites from the bottom up, so to speak, to bring greater attention to non-elite populations traditionally left out of archaeological discussions. In 2022-23, my research is supported by a fellowship at the American Academy in Rome, where I am the Andrew Heiskell Rome Prize fellow in ancient studies.

Other research interests include the sculpture habit of late antiquity, and especially portrait traditions in provincial contexts; representations of women and enslaved children in domestic arts; and creation of ascetic space in the Levant, ca. 4th-5th c. CE. At present I work primarily with archival material and with the recovery and analysis of legacy data, but I have excavated throughout the Western Mediterranean in Greece, Italy, and France, and am always happy to chat about opportunities in the field.

I received my BA in Classical Languages from Carleton College in 2007 and my Ph.D. in the Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World from the University of Pennsylvania in 2016, where I wrote a dissertation that investigated statuary assemblages found in the late antique villas. As a doctoral student I was the recipient of the AIA’s Archaeology of Portugal Fellowship (2014-15), and a Fulbright scholar in France (2015-16). I joined the faculty at UCLA in 2018, where I now teach courses in Roman visual and material culture at both the undergraduate and graduate level. I welcome questions from students at any level who are interested in pursuing material culture studies or incorporating material analysis into their own work! I am also happy to discuss career options outside of the academy with students pursing a Classics or Ancient Studies degree. Finally, I’m Faculty-in-Residence, so be sure to say hello if you catch me on the Hill!

Selected Publications