Zsuzsanna Gulácsi

[1][2][3] She is a specialist of Manichaean art, in addition, her research also focuses on the artistic heritage of other Silk Road religions such as Buddhism and East Syriac Christianity, with special attention to Manichaeism.

[1] Gulácsi went to the United States in 1990 in pursuit of a postgraduate education in Central Eurasian Studies and Art History and studied at Indiana University Bloomington.

From 1999 to 2003, she taught history of Central Asian art at Sophia University in Tokyo, Japan.

Then she joined the faculty of the Department of Humanities, Arts, and Religion at NAU in 2003.

[5][6] In 2017, she was invited by Frantz Grenet as a guest lecturer at Collège de France.