Erin Sassin
Associate Professor of History of Art & Architecture

- Office
- Mahaney Arts Center 211
- Tel
- (802) 443-5830
- esassin@middlebury.edu
- Office Hours
- Fall Term 2025- Monday 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., Wednesday 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. in in MAC 211, and by appointment
Erin Eckhold Sassin is Associate Professor of the History of Art and Architecture at Middlebury College, where she teaches modern architectural history and theory. She received her PhD in the History of Art and Architecture from Brown University in 2012. Her research is closely linked to her teaching interests: she has published articles on gender and design, participatory design and food justice, and the intersection of architecture, power, and ethnicity on the borders of Empire, as well as Acoustic Ecology and the built environment. Her 2020 book, Single People and Mass Housing in Germany (1850-1930)—(No) Home Away from Home, was awarded a 2019 fellowship from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts ().
Her second book, States of Emergency: Architecture, Urbanism, and the First World War (2022), helped to inform an exhibition curated with her students, Middlebury Special Collections staff, and colleague Sarah Rogers at the Davis Family Library (/library/news/wwi-here-and-there-exhibition-davis-family-library; supplemental exhibit materials here: ).
With her students, she has supported initiatives and exhibitions at the Rokeby Museum and the Twilight Initiative, curated an exhibition at Middlebury’s Sheldon Museum, Material Narratives: Ornament and Identity (2025, ), and mounted two exhibitions at the Middlebury College Museum of Art: Bloom and Doom: Vienna 1900 (2016, /museum/exhibitions/2017/bloom-and-doom-visual-expressions-and-reform-vienna-1900) and Weimar, Dessau, Berlin: the Bauhaus as School and Laboratory (2020, ).
Professor Sassin is also a director of the New England Society of Architectural Historians and a member of the board of the Friends of the Middlebury College Art Museum.
Courses Taught
HARC 0100
Intro to Global Visual Culture
Course Description
An Introduction to Global Visual Culture
This course is an introduction to the visual cultures of the world, with an emphasis on how images, objects, and monuments are made, experienced, exchanged, and used by groups of people with diverse religious, socio-economic, and cultural backgrounds. We will focus on themes that have been taken up by different cultures and adapted over time, such as monumentality, the sacred, embodiment, science, and technology. Through a close study of these themes, we will consider how materials, cultures, and histories are transformed and negotiated through making and viewing works of art. In the process, we will challenge the art historical canon by shedding light on marginalized periods, regions, and artworks. 2 hrs. lect./1 hr. disc.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0230
Modern Architecture
Course Description
Modern Architecture
Rotating skyscrapers, green roofs, and avant-garde museums: how did we arrive in the architectural world of the early 21st century? In this course we will survey the major stylistic developments, new building types, and new technologies that have shaped European and American architecture since the late 18th century. Students will learn about the work of major architects as well as key architectural theories and debates. Special emphasis will be placed on the cultural and political contexts in which buildings are designed. 2 hrs. Lect./1 hr. disc.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0338
Gender and the Making of Space
Course Description
Gender and the Making of Space
In this course we will investigate the complex relationship between gender and architecture, examining how the design of the built environment (buildings, urban spaces, etc.) can reinforce or undermine ideas about the respective roles of women and men in society, from the creation of masculine and feminine spaces to the gendered nature of the architectural profession. By looking at both visual evidence and textual sources we will also uncover how the social construction of gender roles and gendered spaces are, and continue to be, inflected by race, class, and sexuality. Not open to students who have taken FYSE 1407. 3 hrs. sem.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0339
Home: The Way We Live
Course Description
Home: The Why Behind the Way We Live
In this course we will examine the development of numerous housing types in America (with references to Europe). The prevalence of the single-family home today and its importance as the symbol of the “American dream” was never a forgone conclusion. In fact, the American home has been the focus of and battleground for cooperative movements, feminism, municipal socialism, benevolent capitalism, and government interventions on a national scale. 3 hrs. sem.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0341
Faust's Metropolis: Berlin
Course Description
Berlin: History, Architecture, and Urbanism in Faust’s Metropolis (in English)
In this course we will investigate the rich and complicated built environment of Berlin. By looking at both visual evidence and textual sources we will uncover how the city has been transformed from a cultural backwater during the early modern period to the current capital of a reunified Germany. By the conclusion of this course, you will be comfortable “reading” buildings and spaces and will be able to navigate both the physical city of Berlin and the many layers of history buried within. 3 hrs. sem.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0364
State of Emergency/Aftermaths
Course Description
The State of Emergency and its Aftermaths: Kitchen Design to Counter-History
In this class we will uncover how architecture and design have mitigated and exacerbated the human tragedy of modern industrialized war in the 20th century. Taking the First World War and its inheritances as a through line to the present-day refugee crisis, we will discover how conflicts have manifested spatially (refugee camps to military installations, villages to capital cities), how design cultures of education, care, and memory emerged from battle and conditions of scarcity, and how war often blurred the meaning of what constitutes “architecture.” Shifting the focus from trenches, monuments, and imperial building projects to the architecture of the everyday, we will think about the politics of food systems and garden design, urban (and rural) recovery and reconstruction efforts, the creation of ephemeral and ad-hoc architectures, the role of mechanization, technology, and governmentality, and the gendered implications of states of emergency.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0368
Rise and Fall of Detroit
Course Description
The Rise and Fall of Detroit: Urban Histories and Architectural Fragments
In this class, we will investigate the rich and complicated built environment of Detroit. By looking at both visual evidence and textual sources we will uncover how the city was transformed from its roots as a trading outpost into an industrial powerhouse and “arsenal of democracy,” and then became synonymous with urban “blight,” racial animus, and ruin tourism. We will orient ourselves to the different neighborhoods of Metro Detroit, diving into the past as we examine the buildings, monuments, and landmarks—both existing and destroyed—that constitute the city. Together, we will create a map of the city, which we will add to and adulterate through the term. This shared work will help serve as the basis for informal discussions and presentations throughout the term. By the conclusion of this course, you will be comfortable “reading” buildings and spaces and will be able to navigate both the physical city of Detroit and the many layers of (contentious) history buried within. An interdisciplinary endeavor, this course draws on writings by architectural historians, landscape historians, art historians, anthropologists, geographers, urban historians, scholars from ethnic studies and cultural studies, among many others. This course is part of the Axinn Center for the Humanities’ Mellon Foundation Public Humanities Initiative.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0369
Design, Ornament & Adornment
Course Description
Design, Ornament, and Adornment: Self-Expression and Dissent
Considering the 20th and 21st century disparagement of ornament and fetishization of minimalism by Western design practitioners and the art world, why, when, and by whom has ornament been celebrated? In this seminar course we will consider how makeup, clothing, and the curation of domestic space are related to social status, commodity culture, religious practices, and broader design cultures (product design, architecture) over a range of cultures and epochs. What constituted “power dressing” in fifteenth century Peru versus Spain? What does historical makeup application (including the use of poisonous Venetian ceruse!) tell us about social status and morality in Elizabethan England? We will read primary and secondary sources, examine material culture and physical spaces, blend pigments, design product components, and work with Special Collections to curate a physical and virtual exhibition.
Terms Taught
Requirements
HARC 0530
Upcoming
Independent Architect. Design
Course Description
Supervised independent work in architectural analysis and design. (Approval Required)
Terms Taught
HARC 0710
Current
Senior Thesis Research Seminar
Course Description
Senior Thesis Research Seminar
In this course students will conceive, undertake research, and plan the organization of their senior thesis in art history or senior museum studies projects. Seminar discussions and workshops will focus on research strategies, conventions in art historical writing, project design, and public presentation skills. (HARC 0301; Approval Required) 3 hr. sem.
Terms Taught
HARC 0711
SNR Thesis: Research/Writing
Course Description
Senior Thesis: Research and Writing
This course is a continuation of HARC 0710 which consists of ongoing, supervised independent research, plus organizing, writing and presenting a senior thesis. (HARC 0301 and HARC 0710).
Terms Taught
Requirements
IGST 0711
Current
Upcoming
Global Envi Changes Snr Thes
Course Description
Global Environmental Change Senior Thesis
(Approval Only)
Terms Taught
Publications
Select Publications and Exhibitions:
Books and Special Issues
Single People and Mass Housing in Germany (1850-1930): (No) Home Away from Home. New York: Bloomsbury Academic Press, 2020. [Supported by a Graham Foundation Grant.]
States of Emergency: Architecture, Urbanism, and the First World War, co-edited with Sophie Hochhäusl. Leuven, Belgium: Leuven University Press, 2022. [Russian-language edition forthcoming with Academic Studies Press in 2026.]
From Ration Cards to Refugee Camps: Architecture, Bureaucracy, and the Global State of Emergency during World One, Special issue of Architectural Histories, co-edited with SE Eisterer, 2024.
Articles and Book Chapters
“Lending an Ear to Architectural History: Meyers Hof (1873-1972),” co-authored with Florence Feiereisen (Middlebury College), in “Sounding Heritage,” a special issue of Change Over Time: An International Journal of Conservation and the Built Environment (University of Pennsylvania Press) 9, no. 2 (Fall 2019): 146-163.
“Sounding Out the Symptoms of Gentrification in Berlin,” co-authored with Florence Feiereisen, in Resonance: A Journal of Sound and Culture (University of California Press). 2, no. 1 (2021): 27-51.
“Critical Service Learning and Participatory Design as a Tool for the Inclusion of Latino Migrants in Rural Communities of Vermont,” co-authored with Silvina Lopez-Barrera, in Public Space/Contested Space, ed. Murphy and O’Driscoll (New York: Routledge, 2021), 78-93.
“Single Women, Public Space, and the German Ledigenheim,” in Women, Femininity, and Public Space in European Visual Culture, 1789-1914, ed. Balducchi and Jensen (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2014), 257-274.
“The Visual Politics of Upper Silesian Settlements in World War I,” in Empires in the First World War: Shifting Frontiers and Imperial Dynamics in a Global Conflict, ed. Jarboe and Fogarty (New York: I.B. Tauris, 2014), 282-299.
Exhibitions and Digital Scholarship
Chief Curator: Material Narratives: Ornament and Identity, Henry Sheldon Museum, May 21, 2025-Jan. 3, 2026.
Co-Curator: WWI: Here and There, Davis Family Library, January-February 2023.
Chief Curator: Weimar, Dessau, Berlin: The Bauhaus as School and Laboratory
Middlebury College Museum of Art, Johnson Gallery, February-April 2020.
Chief Curator: Bloom and Doom: Visual Expressions and Reform in Vienna 1900
Middlebury College Museum of Art, Overbrook Gallery, September-December 2016.
Co-Creator, with Florence Feiereisen, Meyershof Project (ongoing),