I am currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Privacy Studies, University of Copenhagen and the Royal Danish Academy. My research focuses on privacy and representation in early modern noble and monarchial court architecture, with case studies in England, Denmark and the Low Countries. I am the author of several articles on architectural history, ranging from Burgundian residences to eighteenth-century palaces and digital methodologies for historical research.
Since 2019 I am the project manager of the International Training Network PALAMUSTO, which gathers palace museums, heritage institutions and universities from 5 different countries to investigate the court residence as a phenomenon of cultural exchange, not only in the past but also today and in the future.
In 2018 I co-curated an exhibition on Noble Living for which I wrote several articles and a catalogue, both aimed at a broader audience.