Mgr.

Jakub Bulvas Stejskal

Ph.D.

FFA, KTDU – Assistant professor

Jakub.Bulvas.Stejskal@vut.cz

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Mgr. Jakub Bulvas Stejskal, Ph.D.

Curriculum vitae

Education and academic qualification

  • 2007 – 2014 PhD (Thesis Title: Second Nature: A Contribution to the Social Philosophy of Art)
  • Department of Aesthetics, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic
    Supervisor: Prof. Vlastimil Zuska
  • 2009 – 2010 Visiting PhD researcher
    Department of German, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom
    Supervisor: Prof. Andrew Bowie
  • 2007 – 2008 Visiting PhD student
    Department of Philosophy, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
    Supervisor: Dr Gary Kemp
  • 2007 Mgr. (Master degree)
    Department of Aesthetics, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic

Career overview

  • 2024 – … Assistant Professor, Deparment of Art History and Theory, Faculty of Fine Arts, Brno University of Technology
  • 2021 – 2024 MASH Junior research group leader, Department of Art History, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic
  • 2020 – 2021 – Nomis Fellow, eikones – Center for the Theory and History of the Image, University of Basel, Switzerland, https://eikones.philhist.unibas.ch/de/nomis/past-fellows/jakub-stejskal/
  • 2017 – 2020 Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter (Research Associate), Institut für Philosophie, FreievUniversität Berlin, Germany
  • 2017 Visiting Assistant Professor (spring semester), Department of Aesthetics, Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic
  • 2015 – 2017 Postdoc International Fellow, Dahlem Humanities Center, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany https://www.fu-berlin.de/en/sites/dhc/nachwuchs/Fellows/Jakub-Stejskal/index.html
  • 2011 – 2015 Lecturer, Department of Aesthetics, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague

Scientific activities

I have been working on topics at the intersection of philosophical aesthetics, art history, archaeology, and anthropology of art since I completed my PhD thesis (2014), which had focused on investigating the links between post-Kantian aesthetics and social philosophy. Most of my published work can conveniently be classified as a philosophically informed critical analysis of the theoretical commitments underpinning anthropologists, archaeologists, and art historians’ claims about and interpretations of culturally/temporally remote art. Recently, I have been exploring these questions with respect to the growing use of digital models in museum settings. I have also been working on a new theory of monumentality.