Lori Verderame

Lori Ann Verderame /ˌvɜːrdəˈrm/[2] (born January 11, 1965), known professionally as Dr. Lori, is an American appraiser of antiques, collectibles, and fine art; she is also a television personality, public speaker, author, and former professor and curator. Verderame refers to herself as "America's appraiser" and "the Ph.D. antiques appraiser".[3] She has been noted for her humorous, glib, conversational, and educational style of appraisal on her road shows.[4]

Lori Verderame
Verderame in 2009
Born (1965-01-11) January 11, 1965[1]
Alma materUniversity of Michigan (B.A.)
Wesleyan University (M.L.S.)
Pennsylvania State University (Ph.D.)
OccupationAntiques appraiser, television personality
WebsiteDrLoriV.com

Verderame has been featured on The Curse of Oak Island, Auction Kings, and Strange Inheritance (where she discovered, authenticated, and appraised George Washington's wallet), as well as making appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, The Today Show, Anderson Live, CBS News, and Inside Edition. From 2008 to 2009 she hosted Comcast Tonight. She writes a syndicated column, "Arts & Antiques by Dr. Lori". Her road show, Dr. Lori's Antiques Appraisal Comedy Show, visits 150 to 200 events a year.[5] She maintains a YouTube channel that shows clips from her road show and television appearances, and she reports appraising over 20,000 objects a year.[6]

Early life

Lori Ann Verderame was born in New Haven, Connecticut on January 11, 1965.[7]

Verderame attended Hamden High School in Hamden, Connecticut, graduating in 1983.[8] Verderame graduated from University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, where she received a Bachelor of Arts degree in World History in 1987. She graduated from Wesleyan University, where she received a Master of Arts degree in Liberal Studies degree with a focus on Art History in 1989. From 1988 to 1992, she worked as a museum educator at the Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven, CT. In 1996, she graduated from Pennsylvania State University's College of Arts and Architecture with a Ph.D. doctorate in Art and Architectural History. [9]

Verderame taught art and architectural history at Pennsylvania State University; she also taught at the State University of New York College at Cortland from 1993 to 1994. She worked as a curator at the Allentown Art Museum in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

Touring and television

Lori Verderame presents "Dr. Lori's Antiques Appraisal Comedy Show" traveling around the United States and overseas appraising objects in an educational and entertaining manner. The show is presented live; audiences bring their objects for appraisal as part of the unscripted comedic appraisal stage show.[10]

Verderame has been featured on The Tonight Show and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.[11] She has appeared on Anderson Live with Anderson Cooper,[12] Daytime, The Balancing Act on Lifetime, Inside Edition, ABC, CBS, NBC, and FOX.[13] From 2011 to 2013, Verderame was the art and antiques appraiser on Discovery's TV show Auction Kings. She appeared on episodes of FOX Business Network's Strange Inheritance. She is a cast member as the artifacts and antiquities expert on History's The Curse of Oak Island.

Verderame has produced and co-hosted (with Carol Erickson) the series Value This! with Dr. Lori. She hosts and co-produces the weekly series What's It Worth? with Dr. Lori with Steinman Communications and LNP Media Group[14] and is a YouTube content creator. She currently is a cast member and co-host on Treasure Hunt Tuesdays on the national daytime talk show The Doctor and the Diva on the DABL and YouToo America networks.

Works

Verderame has written more than thirty books.[15] Her works include:

  • It's a Fine Line: The Art of Bruce Johnson (Susquehanna Art Museum, Harrisburg, PA 2003)
  • Art History's Heroes: Masters of Contemporary Realism (Martin Art Gallery, Allentown, PA 2003)
  • Women Artists: Past & Present (2002) with Jennifer Olson-Rudenko (Martin Art Gallery, Allentown, PA)
  • A Thin Line—a Broad Brush: The Art of Bruce Johnson (Susquehanna Art Museum, Harrisburg, PA, 2002)
  • Valley Arts: Illuminating the Dark Continent (2001)
  • West African Art: Selections from a Private Collection (Martin Art Gallery, Allentown, PA, 1998)
  • African Art: Bucks County Artmobile (Bucks County Community College, Newtown, PA, 2000)
  • African Art (Hicks Art Gallery, Newtown, PA, 2000)
  • Bucks County Artists (Hicks Art Gallery, Newtown, PA, 2000)
  • Beauty, Ritual, Culture: The Arts of West Africa (Tacoma County College Gallery, Tacoma, WA, 1999)
  • Seasons of Symmetry: The Universal Aesthetics of Jeanne Wilkinson" (2001)
  • Pennsylvania Impressionism: The Lehigh Valley Legacy (2001)
  • Fine Arts: Simplicity in Modern Photography (2001)
  • Seymour Lipton: An American Sculptor (Palmer Museum of Art, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 2000)
  • Seymour Lipton: Post-War America in Three Dimensions (Martin Art Gallery, Allentown, PA, 2001)
  • The Rediscovery of Allan R. Freelon (Martin Art Gallery, Allentown, PA, 2000)
  • Contemporary American Art in the Muhlenberg Collection (2000)
  • The Founder of Sculpture As Environment: Herbert Ferber (1906–1991) (1998)
  • Muhlenberg Masterpieces: Selections from the Permanent Collection of Muhlenberg College (1997)
  • Milton Avery: Paintings and Works on Paper (1996)
  • The Sculpture of Seymour Lipton: Themes of Nature in the 1950s (1996)
  • Frank Lind: A Sea Change
  • Ron Hand: Potter (Martin Art Gallery, Allentown, PA, 2004)
  • Women of the Land: Selected Photogravures from the North American Indian by Edward S. Curtis
  • Herbert Ferber: The Founder of Sculpture as Environment (Colgate University, Hamilton, NY, 2000)
gollark: I also go for the common thing of having giant battery buffers but also overengineering power generation enough that they never actually get used.
gollark: I mostly work with RF, so my stuff uses, generally... NuclearCraft fission/fusion systems, weird closed-cycle power systems using trees and whatnot, solar panels, that sort of thing.
gollark: Addons?
gollark: Because I once blew up an entire base that way with Gregtech.
gollark: You've never blown up a machine from feeding it 128EU/t instead of 32 or something?

References

Sources

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