March 23, 2016 – Nguyen Tan Hoang

Associate Professor of English and Film Studies, Bryn Mawr College

“Wer Aesthetics in Contemporary Queer Thai Cinema

This talk explores queer film aesthetics deployed by artists and filmmakers in Thailand in response to censorship measures. The paper articulates a local Thai manifestation of camp that I call “wer” aesthetics. I read “wer” aesthetics as a complicit critique of Thai nationalism and a manifestation of a regional film aesthetics.

Hoang

April 13, 2016 – MariNaomi

Author and artist
“My Life in Comics”
Creator and curator of the Cartoonists of Color and the LGBTQ Cartoonists databases.
From her beginnings of self-publishing personal zines as a hobby to a career of publishing award-winning books, Eisner-nominated comics memoirist MariNaomi will discuss her experience of using the graphic medium for memoir storytelling and connecting with a greater community.
MariNaomi

April 20, 2016 – Stephanie Moser

Chair of Archaeology, University of Southampton

“Truth and Beauty in the Artistic Engagement with Antiquity: British History Painters and the Representation of Ancient Egypt”

In the second half of the nineteenth century a flourishing tradition of history painting emerged as a result of the intense engagement with the material culture of the ancient world. In Britain key historicist artists, such as Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Edward Poynter and Edwin Long, produced highly evocative visions of antiquity, which were densely populated with archaeological references. This talk explores how these artists responded to the fast growing collections of antiquities in museums and how their paintings had a profound impact on the conception of the past.

SMoser

October 6, 2015 – Between Worlds: Cyprus in Late Antiquity

Henry Maguire
Professor Emeritus, Johns Hopkins University, History of Art
“The Gods, Christ and the Emperor in the Late Antique Art of Cyprus”

Charalambos Bakirtzis
Director, Anastasios G. Leventis Foundation, Cyprus
“Sea Routes and Cape Drepanon: Excavations at Agios Georgios tis Pegeias, Cyprus”

Tuesday, October 6th, 6:00 PM
University of Pennsylvania
104 Jaffe Building

Sponsored by the Center for Ancient Studies at Penn.

Between Worlds poster

October 1, 2015 – Anthony Cutler Special Lecture

Evan Pugh University Professor in Art History
Penn State University

“Looking for the Exotic in Byzantium and Early Islam”

Thursday, October 1st, 4:30 PM
Bryn Mawr College, Thomas Library 224

Co-sponsored by the Center for Visual Culture, Middle East Studies Program, Department of History of Art, and the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology

Light refreshments served. Free and open to the public.

TCutler

September 29, 2015 – Words Adorned: Andalusian Poetry & Music

A talk by scholars Dr. Huda Fakhreddine & Dr. Lital Levy
Co-presented by University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations (NELC)

TUESDAY
SEPT. 29, 2015 | 7 PM
FREE ADMISSION
University of Pennsylvania
Houston Hall, Ben Franklin Rm
3417 Spruce St, Philadelphia
INFO
www.albustanseeds.org
info@albustanseeds.org
267-809-3668

Words Adorned-Poster-9-29-15

4th Annual Tri-Co Student Film Screenings and Festival

The 4th Annual Tri-Co Film Festival is next week! From a record number of submissions, a selection of student films from Bryn Mawr, Haverford, and Swarthmore Colleges will be showcased Thursday, May 7th at 7pm at the Bryn Mawr Film Institute.
TriCoFilmFest_PosterFinal

Can’t make the festival? End of semester screenings for individual classes will take place across the three campuses April 29th-May 10th, 2015.

TriCo_Screenings(Magnolia)_v2

Don’t miss all the opportunities to see innovative student work and support the Tri-Co visual culture community!

Hilary Brashear, 2015 Director
Dani Ford, 2015 Associate Director
tricofilmfest@gmail.com

April 1, 2015 – Matthew Affron

Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of Modern Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art

“Reality and Simulacrum in the Art of Joseph Cornell”

The invention of collage and related artistic practices produced distinctly 20th-century forms of illusionism. This talk will consider Cornell’s contribution to this historical development by examining his involvement during the 1930s and 40s with photography, film and, devices for the artificial duplication of reality.

Affron