Dr. Sarah J. Chicone is Lecturer and Assistant Director of the Museum Studies Graduate Program at Johns Hopkins University. She has been lead curator, developer, and designer for contemporary art, history, anthropology, and natural history exhibitions. Sarah has a breadth of experience in both large and small exhibition projects, and has worked in a variety of capacities that range from Director of Exhibits for a small natural history museum to a content developer/ coordinator for an exhibition design firm. As an archaeologist, museologist, and educator, her academic and professional interests include material culture studies, informal education, cultural heritage, exhibition design and display, and global museum initiatives and partnerships, as well as the archaeology of working class poverty, and public archaeology.
Dr. Richard A. Kissel is Director of Public Programs at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, where he leads public education and manages the development, design, and production of exhibitions. He is a vertebrate paleontologist, science educator, and author with more than 20 years of experience within the museum field. From the deserts of Texas to the forests of Germany, he has traveled the globe to excavate and study the remains of dinosaurs and other ancient beasts. Richard is a featured scientist online at NOVA’s scienceNOW, and he was the lead curator and a developer for Evolving Planet—The Field Museum’s 27,000-square-foot exhibition on the history of the Earth and its life. Richard has authored scientific articles, popular pieces, and children's books on paleontology and the nature of science, and his artwork has been featured in exhibitions, scientific and popular articles, and the New York Post. He is also an instructor for the Museum Studies Graduate Program at Johns Hopkins University.