Prof. Dr. Maximilian Schich (Tallinn University)
Main Focus
- Quantitative Aesthetics
- Cultural Network Science
- Knowledge Graph Cartography
- Dynamics of Urban Topography and Visual Representation
- Multidisciplinary Mixing
Research Project
Towards a Collaborative Cultural Analysis of the City of Rome
Publications (Selection)
- (with Andres Karjus et al.) "Compression ensembles quantify aesthetic complexity and the evolution of visual art", EPJ Data Science, 12, 1 (2023), p. 21.
- "Cultural analysis situs", ART-Dok eprint (2019). DOI: https://doi.org/10.11588/artdok.00006347
- (with Chaoming Song et al.), "A network framework of cultural history", Science 345, 6196 (2014), pp. 558–562. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1240064
- "Revealing Matrices", in Beautiful Visualization. Looking at Data through the Eyes of Experts, ed. by Julie Steele and Noah Iilinsky, Sebastopol/CA 2010, pp. 227–254. DOI: https://doi.org/10.11588/artdok.00001154
- Rezeption und Tradierung als Komplexes Netzwerk. Der CENSUS und visuelle Dokumente zu den Thermen in Rom, Munich 2009. DOI: https://doi.org/10.11588/artdok.00000700
Curriculum Vitae
Maximilian Schich is currently Professor for Cultural Data Analytics and
ERA Chair holder at Tallinn University. Monographically and through
multidisciplinary collaboration, Max aims to understand the nature of cultural
interaction via a systematic combination of critical and creative aesthetics,
qualitative inquiry, quantitative measurement, and computation. Ongoing
research builds on a background in art history, network science, computational
social science, and an applied experience as a "database pathologist". Max’s
PhD monograph pioneered network analysis in art research, focusing on antique
reception and visual citation. In 2014, "A Network Framework of Cultural
History" in Science Magazine and the Nature video "Charting Culture" made
global impact. Max has studied at LMU Munich, HU-Berlin, and Bibliotheca
Hertziana in Rome. Following a postdoc phase at BarabásiLab in Boston and the group
of Dirk Helbing in Zurich, Max joined UT Dallas as an Associate Professor in
Arts & Technology, becoming a founding member of the Edith O’Donnell
Institute of Art History. In June 2020, Max moved to Estonia to lead the CUDAN
ERA Chair project for Cultural Data Analytics, funded through the European
Commission with 2.5 million Euros until August 2024.