March 5, 2014: Martha Ward

Associate Professor of Art History, Department of Visual Arts, University of Chicago

“Scanning and Seeing:  Art Installations in Interwar France”

The surprising nostalgia for densely hung exhibitions that developed among some French museological circles in the 1920s and 30s has much to tell us about interpreting display practice.  This talk considers critical commentary and exhibition practice in relationship to new  methodologies at the time, especially as concerned with the role of attention, memory and materiality in art historical understanding.

MWard

March 19, 2014 – Mey-Yen Moriuchi

Assistant Professor of Art History, La Salle University

“Resonating Casta within Costumbrismo

In colonial Mexico, the miscegenation of the indigenous, African and European populations produced diverse offspring that challenged racial and ethnic purity and disrupted social stability. During this period and the post-Independence era, the visual arts played a critical role in depicting how race was understood scientifically and culturally. This lecture will examine the racialized social spaces represented in eighteenth-century casta and nineteenth-century costumbrista painting and explore the resonances between the two genres.

Mey-Yen

March 26, 2014: Brian Wallace

Curator and Academic Liaison for Art and Artifact Collections, Bryn Mawr College

“Traits of the Artist: Narrative and Form in Early and Current Works of Carolee Schneemann”

What distinguishes Carolee Schneemann’s investigations—and what characterizes the varied and interconnected works that constitute them—is their insistent challenge to powerful cultural mechanisms that define a mind-body split. With drawing, painting, installation, performance, writing, and hybrid media, Schneemann mourns, and, at the same time, celebrates, a kind of founding cultural tragedy—the sundering of shape and story—that is central to the narratives and forms of her work and thought.

BWallace

April 2, 2014: Andrew Uroskie

Associate Professor of Modern & Contemporary Art
Director of the M.A./Ph.D. Program in Art History & Criticism
Department of Art History and Criticism, SUNY Stonybrook

“The Past inside the Present: The New York Film Festival and Selma Last Year (1966)”

This talk will consider Selma Last Year,” a largely forgotten multimedia installation that took place during the Winter of 1966 as part of the New York Film Festival’s fleeting interest in Expanded Cinema. A collaboration between the street theater producer Ken Dewey, Magnum photojournalist Bruce Davidson, and Minimalist composer Terry Riley, this groundbreaking media installation juxtaposed large scale projected images, an immersive audio collage, small scale photographic prints, 16mm documentary film, and a delayed video feedback loop to create a series of intentionally disjunctive environments. During the Festival’s Expanded Cinema Symposium, Annette Michelson would explicitly dismiss Dewey’s work as a “revivial of the old dream of synaesthesia”— insisting upon a Modernist conception of medium-specificity as the only legitimate grounds for aesthetic radicalism. While the success of the “Structural Film” in the years immediately following might be taken as evidence for Michelson’s position, I contend that Dewey’s prescient concern for what would come to be known as “site-specificity” would prove the more enduring model for critical media aesthetics in the decades to come.

Andrew V. Uroskie is Associate Professor of Modern & Contemporary Art, and Director of the MA/PhD Program in Art History & Criticism at Stony Brook University in New York. His book, “Between the Black Box and the White Cube: Expanded Cinema and Postwar Art,” was recently published by the University of Chicago Press.

AUroskie

April 9, 2014: Karl Kirchwey

Professor of the Arts, Director of the Creative Writing Program
Department of English, Bryn Mawr College

“Rome as Palimpsest: Image and Poem in the Eternal City”

In one of his sonnets in “Les Antiquitez de Rome” (1558), Joachim Du Bellay describes Rome as a ruined city, corpse-like but galvanically brought back to life as each generation incorporates fragments into its own constructions. The landscape, architecture and art of Rome have been built up, destroyed and rebuilt for some three thousand years, providing a fertile source of inspiration to poets, who not only write the city’s art (in part by means of ekphrasis) but also over-write it, responding to the rich tradition of art that precedes them. This colloquium will present images and work from a new book entitled “Stumbling Blocks: Roman Poems” by Creative Writing Program Director and Professor of the Arts Karl Kirchwey.

Kirchwey

April 16, 2014 – Bernard O’Kane

Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture
The American University in Cairo

“The Writing on the Walls: The Importance of Epigraphy in Medieval Cairo”

We have in Cairo an unbroken sequence of inscriptions on major and minor religious monuments from the 9th century onwards. The size of this corpus enables us to discuss a wide variety of topics, and in particular the ways in which religious monuments advertised their presence through the medium of writing, an art form that has been regarded as the most intrinsically Islamic of them all. Areas that could be analyzed include the visual aesthetics of texts, their relative lengths, the sizes of the scripts used, issues of legibility or the lack of it, and the make-up and design of the inscriptions from their textual contents to the non-literary uses that they served.

Attention could be drawn to them in various ways, through their size, through repetition, and through the care taken with their calligraphy and with intrinsic or surrounding decorative details. Evaluations of what was legible and what was not problematic because of the lack of the painted colors that have been lost. But even so today they still provide a feast for the eye, so we can be sure that their impact in medieval times was much greater.

O'Kane

Ninth Biennial Graduate Group Symposium-October 4 & 5, 2013

HOME: DEPARTURE AND DESTINATION

October 4-5, 2013

The Bryn Mawr Community is warmly invited to the Ninth Biennial Graduate Group Symposium.  This event brings Bryn Mawr’s Graduate Group together with graduate students from around the country to present research and examine ideas around “Home” from the perspectives of Archaeology, Classics, the History of Art, and beyond.  Kostis Kourelis, Assistant Professor at Franklin and Marshall College, will start off the symposium with Friday’s Keynote Talk: “The Membrology of Home: Tales from the Archaeological Underground.”

This week, and throughout the Symposium weekend, a complementary exhibit of domestic items from the Bryn Mawr Special Collections will be on view in the Kaiser Reading Room, Carpenter Library.

For more information, including times and locations, please visit our new site:

http://www.brynmawr.edu/gradgroup/gradgroupsymposium/

Andrew Hare Lecture – Monday, September 9

“After the Disaster: Japan’s Ongoing Efforts to Conserve Cultural Properties”

A special lecture by Andrew Hare, Supervisory Conservator, East Asian Painting Conservation Studio, Department of Conservation and Scientific Research, Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Monday, September 9
4:15-5:00
Beardsley 316
Swarthmore College

Reception to follow at the Wister Center, Swarthmore College

This event is open to the public and is sponsored by the BMC 360° Program, Department of Art, Japanese Section, Department of Modern Languages and Literatures, and Asian Studies

Hare 9.9.13 Lecture Flyer

April 12 – Michelle Ortíz Film Screening & Panel Discussion on Immigration

“Aquí y Allá”:  Migration, Art, and Social Justice
Friday, April 12, 7:00 pm
Bryn Mawr College, Thomas Library 224

*Refreshments offered prior to talk at 6:30pm*

“Aquí y Allá” is a short documentary chronicling a transnational public art project that connected Mexican immigrant students in Philadelphia with youth in Chihuahua, Mexico to create a permanent mural in South Philadelphia. Following the film screening, the panelists will discuss the immigrant rights movement and the critical role art plays in the struggle for social justice.

Panelists:
Michelle Angela Ortíz
Creator, Director, and Lead Artist of the “Aquí y Allá” Mural Project

Erika Almirón
Executive Director of JUNTOS, a Latino immigrant community-led non-profit organization in Philadelphia

Amada Armenta
Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology
University of Pennsylvania

Moderator:
Jennifer Harford Vargas
Assistant Professor, Department of English
Bryn Mawr College

Reception following panel in the Thomas London Room.
Free and open to the public.

Made possible by the generous support of the Bryn Mawr College Center for Visual Culture, the departments of English, History of Art, Spanish, and Growth and Structure of Cities, the Dean of Graduate Studies, the Pensby Center, the Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research, the Center for Social Science, the Program in Latin American, Latino, and Iberian Peoples and Cultures, and the 1902  Lecture Fund.  Additional support provided by Enlace and the Intercultural Center, Swarthmore College.

Ortiz Event