Meet the Staff

Denise Allen
Denise Allen joined the staff of the department in 2014. Her area of specialty is Italian Renaissance sculpture, with a focus on the work of Benvenuto Cellini. As a curator at the Frick Collection (2003–2014), she curated six exhibitions dedicated to the art of the bronze statuette, including: Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes from the Hill Collection (2014), Antico (2012), Andrea Riccio (2008), and European Bronzes from the Quentin Collection (2004). Denise was the associate curator of paintings at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (1995–2002). She received her MA from the New York University Institute of Fine Arts in 1984.
Allen, Denise. "Colore Incarnato: Benvenuto Cellini's Ganymede and Living Stones." In Carving Casts & Collectors: The Art of Renaissance Sculpture, edited by Peta Motture, Emma Jones, and Dimitrios Zikos, 176–193. London: Victoria & Albert, 2013.
———. "Crafting a Profession: Cellini's Discussion of Precious Stones and Jewelry in his Treatises." In Marks of Identity: New Perspectives on Sixteenth-Century Italian Sculpture, edited by Dimitrios Zikos and Andrea Bacchi, 42–61. Boston: Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and Periscope Publishing, 2012.
———. "Gold, Silver, and the Colors of Bronze: Antico's Language of Materials in Statuettes and Relief." In Antico: The Golden Age of Renaissance Bronzes, edited by Eleonora Luciano, 139-156. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 2011.

Riva Arnold
Riva Arnold joined the department in 2023 as a Research Associate for Judaica. Riva’s areas of expertise include, Judaica, ritual textiles, synagogue interiors, and ornament. Before joining ESDA, she was an adjunct faculty member at Yeshiva University and the School of Visual Arts. Prior to completing her PhD at the University of Zürich, Riva interned at the Victoria & Albert Museum on the gallery refurbishment for the Medieval & Renaissance Galleries. She has worked on exhibitions and curatorial projects at the Museum of Arts and Design, the Museum of the City of New York, the Jewish Museum, and in the Department of Medieval Art at The Met. Riva received her MA in History of Design and Material Culture from the Royal College of Art in London and BA from the School of Visual Arts.

Roger Arrazcaeta Delgado
Arrazcaeta, Roger and Antonio Quevedo (2007). “La cerámica de aplicacion arquitectonica de la epoca colonial en La Habana”, in Boletin Gabinete de Arqueologia, no. 6, 197-215.
Roura, Lisette, Roger Arrazcaeta y Carlos A. Hernandez (2017). Indios de La Habana. Editorial Ciencias Sociales, La Habana.
Armitage, Ruth A., Roger Arrazcaeta, Sylvia Torres, Suzanne M. Baker and Daniel Fraser (2020). Chemical characterization and radiocarbon dating of the rock art of las Charcas caves, CubA, in Archaemetry.
Arrazcaeta, Roger (Coordinador, 2020). La Habana. Dimension arqueologica de un espacio habitado. Ediciones Bolona/Ediciones Polymita.

Wolf Burchard
Wolf Burchard is curator of The Met’s British Galleries. Prior to joining ESDA in 2019, he was Furniture Research Curator at the National Trust and Curatorial Assistant at the Royal Collection. He earned his MA and PhD in art history from the Courtauld Institute, while co-curating The First Georgians at The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace (2014). He is the author of The Sovereign Artist: Charles Le Brun and the Image of Louis XIV (2016) and curated Inspiring Walt Disney: The Animation of French Decorative Arts (2021) shown at The Met, the Wallace Collection and the Huntington. He is a trustee of the Attingham Trust, sat on the executive committees of the Furniture History Society, the Georgian Group, and on advisory boards at the Château de Versailles and the Mobilier national in Paris.
Burchard, Wolf. "St James's Palace: George II and Queen Caroline's Principal London Residence." In The Court Historian 16,2 (December 2011): 177–203
---., and Christopher Rowell. "The British Embassy at Palais Starhemberg: Furniture from the Congress of Vienna at Mount Stewart." In Furniture History LIII (2017): 191–224.
---., and Christopher Rowell, "Italian Furniture at Attingham Park." In Furniture History LVI (2020): 107-176.

Elizabeth Cleland
Elizabeth Cleland is responsible for post-medieval European textiles. Working at The Met since 2004, she curated Relative Values: The Cost of Art in the Northern Renaissance (2017-22), co-curating Grand Design: Pieter Coecke van Aelst and Renaissance Tapestry (2014-15) and The Tudors: Art and Majesty in Renaissance England (2022-23). She was principal author of Grand Design's award-winning catalogue; co-edited Tapestry in the Baroque: New Aspects of Production and Patronage (2010); co-authored Tapestries from the Burrell Collection (2017) and Renaissance Splendor: Catherine de Medici's Valois Tapestries (2018). She studied at the Courtauld Institute of Art, receiving her MA and PhD as a British Academy scholar.
MetPublications: Selected Publications by Elizabeth Cleland
Academia.edu: Publications by Elizabeth Cleland

Pilar Ferrer
Pilar Ferrer joined the department in 2022 as the Assistant Administrator. She previously interned at The Met in the spring & summer of 2021 as an Adrienne Arsht intern in the Department of Egyptian Art. In ESDA, she provides support to the Curator-in-Charge, executes and coordinates the department’s daily administrative operations, and performs a wide range of clerical and administrative tasks including general office maintenance, external communications, and coordinating staff travel. Pilar works with Kristen Hudson to manage the department’s administrative operations, plan events for the Friends of ESDA, and track departmental spending. She received her BA in art history from Belmont University and MA in museum studies and art history from The City College of New York.

Sarah Gregory
Sarah Gregory joined the department in 2023 as Coordinator for Friends Groups. She oversees the department’s special events, membership renewals, and provides concierge services for ESDA’s Visiting Committee, Wrightsman Fellows, and the Friends of ESDA. Sarah works closely with Sarah Lawrence, Kristen Hudson, and Pilar Ferrer to plan events, facilitate tours, and produce departmental materials. Before joining ESDA, she was an Adrienne Arsht Intern in Development at The Met and a client relations associate at Capital Creek Partners in Austin, Texas. Sarah received her MA from the Institute of Fine Arts in the History of Art and Archaeology and BA in Art History from the University of Texas in Austin with minors in Museum Studies and Business Administration.

Kristen Herdman
Kristen Herdman joined the department in October 2023 to assist with the reassessment and renovation of the Central European Galleries (gallery 533). She holds a BA in Art History, an MA in Comparative Literature, an MA and an MPhil in Medieval Studies, and is a PhD Candidate at Yale University. Kristen comes to the department after working as a graduate research assistant at the Yale Center for British Art and as a curatorial fellow for the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, in New Haven, Connecticut. Her doctoral research focuses on the artistic and intellectual contributions of nuns in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century northern Germany, especially as expressed through manuscripts and large-scale embroideries.

Kristen Hudson
Kristen Hudson joined the staff of the department in the fall of 2014. She previously worked in the Collections and Exhibitions and Education Departments at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia. She received her BA in art history from Vanderbilt University and MA in museum studies from New York University.
Joy Kim
Joy S. Kim joined the department in April 2024 to assist with the preparation of Monstrous Beauty: A Feminist Revision of Chinoiserie exhibition (March – August 2025). Prior to joining ESDA, she was a faculty member of East Asian Studies Department at Princeton University and has also worked as a freelance academic translator. She received her MA and PhD from Columbia University in East Asian History, and she specializes in cultural history of early modern Korea, with a particular interest in representations of class and power.

Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide
Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide is responsible for French and Dutch decorative arts. She was the co-curator of an exhibition at Bard Graduate Center on the origins of French decorative arts at The Met. From 2017-2018, she co-organized the exhibition Visitors to Versailles, (1682–1789), held at the Château de Versailles and The Met. Currently, she is preparing a thematic exhibition about scent. She has lectured and written extensively on various aspects of European Decorative Arts, including new acquisitions such as a pair of candelabra for the surtout de table of the Duc d’Orléans. Her most recent book, How to Read European Decorative Arts, was published in 2023 and is accompanied by an installation in Gallery 521.
She is a graduate of the Free University in Amsterdam and Leiden University.
“Buying from Britain: The Development of a new Market for Riesener,” in Helen Jacobsen et al., Jean Henri Riesener (London: The Wallace Collection, 2020), pp. 83-89.
“Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), Dutch Ambassador to the Court of Louis XV,” in Mark Ledbury and Robert Wellington, eds., The Versailles Effect; Objects, Lives, and After Lives of the Domaine (New York: Bloomsbury, 2020), pp. 193-212)
MetPublications: Selected Publications by Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide

Wolfram Koeppe
Wolfram Koeppe joined The Met in 1992 after working at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. He lectures and teaches, is involved in The Met's media programs, and is known for his development efforts. Among his exhibitions are the award-winning Extravagant Inventions: The Princely Furniture by the Roentgens (2012). Its catalog became a rare book and a video clip of the Berlin cabinet went viral on YouTube with more than 15 million hits. He organized Art of the Royal Court: Treasures in Pietre Dure from the Palaces of Europe (2008; voted "Exhibition of the Year" by Apollo Magazine) and Making Marvels. Science and Splendor at the Courts of Europe (2019-20). Many of his acquisitions are included in The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide (2012).
Koeppe, Wolfram. Extravagant Inventions: The Princely Furniture of the Roentgens, with contributions by Reinier Baarsen, Mechthild Baumeister, Daniela Meyer, Hans Michaelsen, Hans-Werner Pape, Tamara Rappe, Bertrand Rondot, Tamara Schechter, Achim Stiegel, and Bernd Willschied. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012.
---., Art of the Royal Court: Treasures in Pietre Dure from the Palaces of Europe, edited with Anna Maria Giusti with contributions by Cristina Acidini, Rudolf Distelberger, Detlef Heikamp, Jutta Kappel, Florian Knothe, and Ian Wardropper. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2008.
---., Ed., Making Marvels. Science and Splendor at the Courts of Europe. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2019.

Sarah E. Lawrence
Sarah E. Lawrence joined the department in 2019. Before coming to ESDA, she was the Dean of the School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons School of Design, and previously the Director of the MA program in the History of Decorative Arts and Design at the Cooper Hewitt Design Museum. While at The Jewish Museum, she curated Crafting a Jewish Style: The Art of Bezalel, 1906–1996, and at the Cooper Hewitt, she curated Piranesi as Designer, a collaboration with the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. In her scholarship, Dr. Lawrence's focus has been Renaissance material culture, and she has a particular interest in the Period Room as a site for meaningful intervention. She received her MA and PhD from Columbia University.

Iris Moon
Iris Moon joined the department in 2017 and is responsible for European ceramics and glass. Her research on European decorative arts and architecture has been supported by the Decorative Arts Trust, the Paul Mellon Centre, and the Clark Art Institute. Alongside curatorial work at The Met, where she is currently organizing an exhibition on Chinoiserie, women, and the porcelain imaginary, she teaches at The Cooper Union. She is the author of Melancholy Wedgwood (2024), Luxury after the Terror (2022) and co-editor with Richard Taws of Time, Media and Visuality in Post-Revolutionary France (2021). She earned her PhD at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
academia.edu: Publications by Iris Moon

Elyse Nelson
Elyse Nelson oversees the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century European sculpture collection. In addition to curating permanent gallery displays, she co-curated Fictions of Emancipation: Carpeaux Recast (2022-23) and co-edited its accompanying catalogue. She studied at Yale (B.A.), the Courtauld Institute of Art (M.A.), and The Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, where she is completing her doctoral thesis on Canova’s British patronage. She was a Jane and Morgan Whitney Fellow and Research Associate in the department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts before joining the Met’s curatorial staff in 2019.
MetPublications: Selected Publications by Elyse Nelson
Nelson, Elyse. “Cherished Gifts in Clay.” In Canova: Sketching in Clay, edited by C.D. Dickerson III and Emerson Bowyer, 253-61. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2023.
___. “Making the ‘Little Rodin Gallery’: The Rodin Collection at The Met.” In Rodin in the United States: Confronting the Modern, edited by Antoinette Le Normand-Romain, 117-125. Williamstown: Clark Art Institute, 2022.
Juan Stacey
Juan Stacey joined the Museum in 2006 and has served in his current role since 2012. He oversees the safe movement of the department's collection within the building and helps to maintain the integrity of both the objects and the galleries. He holds a BFA with a concentration in drawing and painting from the University of Georgia and a certificate in collections management from the New York University School of Continuing Professional Studies.
Denny Stone
Denny Stone works with the department's curators and conservators to oversee the physical and documentary care of the collection. She joined the department in 2006 after holding positions in collections management, registration, and conservation in numerous New York City institutions. Prior to shifting her focus to the management of collections, she was curator of costumes and textiles for the San Diego History Center. She has been adjunct faculty in many graduate programs teaching museum studies and the history of fashion and jewelry.
Stone, Denny. "Memories I have seen, heard, suffered, and enjoyed: the memoirs of Charles A. Fries." In Capturing the Light, Visions of the Land: San Diego Landscape Painters, Journal of San Diego History 47, no. 3 (Summer 2001).
———. Elegant Fantasy: The Jewelry of Arline Fisch. San Diego: San Diego Historical Society Arnoldsche, 2000.
Sam Winks
Sam Winks is an art handler in the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts.