Jan Krulick-Belin

Writer Retired Art and Jewelry Historian

  • Phoenix AZ

I currently freelance lecture on the book, and a variety of art history and jewelry history topics.

Contact

Biography

Jan Krulick-Belin, a museum and art consultant and art and jewelry historian, has more than forty years of experience at such institutions as the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Denver Art Museum, Beaumont (Texas) Art Museum, and Smithsonian Institution. Retired as director of education at the Phoenix Art Museum, she still works with museums, art organizations, and private collectors and served as guest curator at the Sylvia Plotkin Judaica Museum, Phoenix. Visit her online at www.lovebillbook.com.

Industry Expertise

Museums and Institutions
Fine Art
Education/Learning
Jewelry

Areas of Expertise

Fashion and Jewelry
Museum Curation
Jewelry History
Art History
Museum Education
Writing Memoir

Accomplishments

American Book Fest 2017 Best Book Awards

Best New Nonfiction: Finalist\
www.americanbookfest.com

Independent Author Network 2017 Book of the Year Awards

The Outstanding First Non-Fiction: Finalist
www.independentauthornetwork.com

Story Circle Network, Sarton Women’s Book Award

Finalist: Nonfiction
www.storycircle.org

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Education

Museum Management Institute, University of California, Berkeley (Sponsored by the Getty Trust and American Federation of Arts)

Museum Management Certificate

Museum Management

1990

George Washington University

Masters

Museum Education

State University of New York, Binghampton

BA

Art History

Affiliations

  • Phoenix Art Museum , Director of Education 1989 - 2007
  • Assistant Director of Education, Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado 1983-1989
  • Assistant Professor- Art History in Italy Program, University of Colorado, Boulder 1988
  • Curator of Education, Beaumont Art Museum, Beaumont, Texas 1978-1983
  • Special Projects Coordinator, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. 1978
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Testimonials

Former President

https://www.brandeisphoenix.org

Brandeis National Committee, Phoenix Chapter

Jan Krulick- Belin mesmerized our membership at a meeting of over seventy women when she spoke to us about her book, Love, Bill. Her journey in ‘finding' her father and tracing his life during the wars years was a fascinating story-- one that led to an audience that was overwhelmed by her tenaciousness and desire to know the man she lost at an early age. When she read some of the beautiful letters that were written by her father to her mother, we all loved Bill. Jan is a wonderful speaker and her presentation engaged us emotionally and left us raving about the experience for weeks to come.

Commander

Jewish War Veterans Post 619, Sun Lakes, Arizona

“When members of the local Sisterhood group came to our meeting carrying Jan's book I knew that she would have a receptive audience. At the end of our meeting, members of our group came up to me and said, ‘I know that there is a time limit for our speakers, but I wish that Jan could have talked longer.’ For our group, that means it was a big hit.”

Director

https://www.azhumanities.org

Arizona Humanities Council, Phoenix

In presenting her book Love, Bill, Jan Krulick-Belin brings to life the history of a little known part of WWII in North Africa. She captivates the listener as she describes through the lens of the war, the spirit of her father raptured in the love of his wife-to-be. She chronicles through her extensive and impressive research, her father’s experiences through his own photos and beautiful letters. Jan paints a literary canvas of journeys taken by the heart, mind, and body into distant lands. She demonstrates the depths of relationships between several generations as she shares her own stories of discovery. Her gentle, loving care in the telling of her father’s story reflects the pinnacle of the deep bond she grew to know between a father and daughter whose time together was so short in earthly years.

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Media Appearances

Today’s Featured Author – Jan Krulick-Belin

Susan Leigh Noble’s “Into Another World”  online

Today I welcome Jan Krulick-Belin to my blog. Her book, Love, Bill: Finding my Father through Letters from World War II, was released last year. Be sure to read the excerpt after her interview. You can purchase Love, Bill on Amazon.

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Finding My Father Through Letters From World War II

Maria Shriver’s The Sunday Paper  online

So, this Father’s Day, I may not be able to give my father a tie or even a crayon-colored handmade card as I did so long ago. But I can give him a greater gift. I can offer him the daughter that I have become – one that I hope he would be proud of.

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Daddy's Little Girl

Fun, Feisty, Fabulous  online

Love, Bill: Finding My Father through Letters from World War II, stands as a testament to the power of determination, love, family and the unbreakable bond between fathers and daughters.

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Event Appearances

Love, Bill. Her journey in ‘finding' her father

Jewish War Veterans Post 619  Sun Lakes, Arizona

2016-12-18

Love, Bill. Her journey in ‘finding' her father

Co-President of Brandeis Phoenix Chapter  

2017-02-15

Crafting a Memoir

Desert Foothills Library Writers Connection  

2019-01-04

Sample Talks

Say it With Flowers: Victorian Jewelry’s Secret Language

Flowers, plants, and leaves have been a source of inspiration for jewelry makers for more than two millennia. Their beauty and delicacy have long been captured in precious metals, enamels, and colored gemstones. During the Victorian era, however, the latest developments in the fields of science, botany, literature, and art converged with the effects of globalization, industrialization, colonization, Romanticism, and the Suffragette movement to bring new meanings to floral decoration. From sentimentality to sexuality, 19th-century floral jewelry became encoded with its own special language.

Double Dutch and Diamonds: Portraits from the Age of Rembrandt

In this lecture, art history meets jewelry and fashion history to explore 17th-century Dutch portraits. These paintings and the jewels worn by their sitters tell us much about that country’s “Golden Age,” its citizens, and the messages that they wanted the paintings to convey about their lives. At first glance, we see only severe figures clothed in black and white. But upon closer examination, their diamonds and pearls tell a fuller story of a country’s extreme wealth from trade with distant cultures.

Pelicans, Posies and Pearls: Portraits from the Age of Elizabeth I

This lecture is a continuation of the series in which art history meets jewelry history, and will explore portraits from the Renaissance in Northern Europe and Elizabethan England. Learn how Tudor and Jacobean monarchs and their subjects used fashion and jewelry as symbols of power and prestige. From the jewels owned by the Henry VIII’s six wives to Elizabeth’s pearl obsession, what can they tell us about these bejeweled characters?

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Availability

  • Keynote
  • Moderator
  • Panelist
  • Workshop Leader
  • Host/MC
  • Corporate Training