I work as a as policy advisor for the Research Institute of Child Development
and Education (RICDE) and Research priority Area Yield.
Originally I am a Mediterranean Archaeologist specializing in Etruscan
architecture. After my graduation I studied a year in Rome with a grant from the
Netherlands Institute in Rome and a semester in Oxford with a NWO travel grant.
The aim was to publish a collection of Etruscan architectural terracottas,
but due to a conflict between the Italian and British government about
the ownership of the collection, the research was complicated and I had to wait
for a solution to the conflict. A preliminary publication appeared in
1997 (published as M. de Reuver, Archaic frieze plaques in the
Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, Deliciae Fictiles II 1997, pp.
63-69). Finally in 2010 the collection and reconstruction of the roofsystem was
fully published in ‘The architectural terracottas from Caprifico’, in D. Palombi
(ed.) Il tempio arcaico di Caprifico di Torrecchia (Cisterna di Latina). I
materiali e il contesto, Roma 2010.
In the mean time I worked as a project assistant at the Rijksmuseum van
Oudheden in Leiden and as an exhibition coordinator at World Press Photo. I also
worked free lance as a restaurator of metal objects (weaponry, coins, jewelry),
ceramics and glass archaeological objects and as an illustrator for
archaeological publications (ink drawings).
In Leiden I investigated how and where archeology was presented in education
(primary and secondary), and the quality of educational material for museums.
The outcome was published by Archeologisch informatie centrum as M. de Reuver,
Archeologie op school : het aanbod in basis- en voortgezet onderwijs (72
pp.). This research instigated my interest in education and communication.
Also in my work as an exhibition coordinator for WPPh I was particularly happy
with the educational aspect of their mission to support and advance high
standards in photojournalism and documentary photography worldwide and to strive
for the free exchange of information.
In this respect my switch from archaeology to the field of education and
child development seemed logical and I started as a research secretary for the
Graduate School of Teaching and Learning at the UvA. From this position I grew
into my current job as a policy advisor at the Research Institute of Child
Development and Education.
I still work as free lance illustrator for archaeological publications.