Cinta Krahe Noblett holds a PhD from Leiden University (2014), a Master’s in Art and Archaeology of China from the School of Oriental and African Studies (1990), SOAS, University of London, and a degree in Geography and History from the Complutense University of Madrid (1989).She is a professor of East Asian Art at the Autonomous University of Madrid (2019-2024), and teaches on the Master’s in Art History in the Early Modern Period: Classical Tradition and Globalized World at UAM, as well as in the postgraduate course on Expert Valuation of Works of Art and Antiques at the University of Alcalá (2021-22).
She has served as curator for the exhibition Orientando la Mirada: Arte Asiático en colecciones públicas madrileñas at the Conde Duque Cultural Centre, Madrid (2009), and was responsible for the cataloguing and exhibition of Chinese porcelain from the Nao San Diego at the Naval Museum of Madrid (2001).
She is a member of the East Asian Art Research Group (GIA) at the Complutense University of Madrid and the DeRehis group at the University of Castilla-La Mancha. She has participated in various research projects, such as *EurAsian Objects: Art and Material Culture in Global Exchange, 1600-1800* at Heidelberg University (2014), and is Principal Research Fellow for the project Mapping Philippine Material Culture: Locating Philippine-made Objects from the 16th–mid 20th c. in Spain (Phase II) (A Digital Humanities Project) at SOAS, University of London (2020-2024).
She was a visiting professor at Peking University (November 2019). Among her publications are the books Chinese Porcelain in Habsburg Spain (Centro de Estudios de Europa Hispánica, Madrid, 2016) and La China Imperial 1506-1795 (Editorial Síntesis, Madrid, 2017). Additionally, she has authored numerous articles in both national and international scientific publications.
She is currently part of a multidisciplinary team working on the publication of a book titled La cerámica en la pintura del Museo Nacional del Prado, edited by the Spanish National Research Council, and her new line of research focuses on 18th-century Eastern art for a publication funded by the Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica on Oriental Art and Chinoiserie in 18th-century Spain.
She has served as curator for the exhibition Orientando la Mirada: Arte Asiático en colecciones públicas madrileñas at the Conde Duque Cultural Centre, Madrid (2009), and was responsible for the cataloguing and exhibition of Chinese porcelain from the Nao San Diego at the Naval Museum of Madrid (2001).
She is a member of the East Asian Art Research Group (GIA) at the Complutense University of Madrid and the DeRehis group at the University of Castilla-La Mancha. She has participated in various research projects, such as *EurAsian Objects: Art and Material Culture in Global Exchange, 1600-1800* at Heidelberg University (2014), and is Principal Research Fellow for the project Mapping Philippine Material Culture: Locating Philippine-made Objects from the 16th–mid 20th c. in Spain (Phase II) (A Digital Humanities Project) at SOAS, University of London (2020-2024).
She was a visiting professor at Peking University (November 2019). Among her publications are the books Chinese Porcelain in Habsburg Spain (Centro de Estudios de Europa Hispánica, Madrid, 2016) and La China Imperial 1506-1795 (Editorial Síntesis, Madrid, 2017). Additionally, she has authored numerous articles in both national and international scientific publications.
She is currently part of a multidisciplinary team working on the publication of a book titled La cerámica en la pintura del Museo Nacional del Prado, edited by the Spanish National Research Council, and her new line of research focuses on 18th-century Eastern art for a publication funded by the Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica on Oriental Art and Chinoiserie in 18th-century Spain.
