Anne De Jaeger, born in 1970, holds a degree in Art History and Archaeology from the Université Libre de Bruxelles. She first collaborated with the Centre de Recherche et d’Étude Technologique of the ULB and worked as a guide and lecturer in several Brussels museums, including the Musée Horta, the Musée des Instruments de Musique, and the Educational Service of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium until 2004. At the same time, she designed tours and lecture series for the non-profit association Arcadia, of which she is an active member, including Cergeco Culture, Institut Horta, and Wolu-Culture, developing in particular themes on the correspondence between the arts, such as Architecture and Music and Art and Music from the Middle Ages to the Present. Since 2003, she has been a professor of Comparative Art History at the Conservatoire de Bruxelles. She also currently teaches Art History and the History of Printed Images at the École Supérieure des Arts LE 75 and at ENSAV La Cambre, and she teaches at HE2BE in the pedagogical section. Her current research focuses particularly on the comparative history of the arts and on the history of printed images. Anne De Jaeger also worked for fifteen years with Musique 3, producing and presenting numerous music programs such as A bon entendeur, Histoire de musique, and Musique et autres muses. She collaborated with the cultural pages and the cultural magazines Tempo and later Hamlet, and she is the author of a radio drama based on Scenes from the Life of a Good for Nothing by Joseph von Eichendorff set to the music of Franz Schubert.