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With the generous support of the Ellen Bayard Weedon Foundation, the Museum presents four annual lectures on South and East Asian art each year. Please join us for this year's series, all of which are held in the Museum at 5:30 pm. |
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September 27, 2007, 5:30 pm
Poet Prince and River Nymph: The Luoshenfu Scrolls in London
and Peking
by Roderick Whitfield, specialist in Central Asian, Chinese, Korean,
and Buddhist art and Emeritus Professor, SOAS, University of London
November 29, 2007, 5:30 pm, Campbell Hall 160
Gods of the Mt: Hindu Art of Viet Nam
by Nancy Tingley, independent scholar
Parking lot A10 is reversed for this event. It has approximately 35 spaces and the Museum will have attendants distributing parking passes until 6 pm.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008, 5:30 in the Museum
Across Time & Space in Asia: The Arthur M. Sackler Collections
by Trudy Kawami, Director of Research, The Arthur M. Sackler
Foundation
April 3, 2008, 5:30 pm
Kamisaka Sekka: Rimpa Master—Pioneer of Modern Japanese Design
by Donald Wood, senior curator of Asian art at the Birmingham Museum of Art
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Gladys S. Blizzard Lecture
This annual lecture, named in honor of a beloved Museum educator and author of the “Come Look With Me” series of children's books about art, brings a prominent member of the art world to Charlottesville. |
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Gallery Talk by William Christenberry
Friday, October 26, 2007, 4:30 pm
In the Museum |
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Lunchtime Gallery Talks
Join us for these informal presentations on aspects of the special exhibition Landscape of Slavery: The Plantation in American Art. All are held at 1 pm (unless otherwise noted) in the Museum. |
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January 25, 2008
Angela Mack, deputy director for curatorial affairs at the Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina
February 13, 2008
Maurie McInnis, guest curator and associate professor,
McIntire Department of Art
March 12, 2008
Carmenita Higginbotham, assistant professor,
McIntire Department of Art
March 18, 2008
Andrea Douglas, curator of collections and exhibitions
April 9, 2008
Christopher Oliver, M.A. candidate, art history
April 16, 2008
Catherine Malone, Ph.D. candidate, art history
May 15, 2008
Aiesha Halstead, Coordinator, Exhibitions, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
June 8, 2008, 2 pm
Collecting Himalayan Art by Elena Pakhutova, Luzak-Linder Fellow
June 28, 2008, 2 pm
On John Toole: Itinerant Painter
by Christopher Oliver , M.A. candidate, art history
In the Museum |
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Manifest Destiny and American Empire
Natsu Taylor Saito, professor of law at Georgia State University, explores how we reconcile the principles of freedom, democracy, and the rule of law with our fundamental American values. |
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Friday, October 5, 2007, 5:30 pm
In the Museum
Co-sponsored by The Bridge and The Living Education Center for Ecology and The Arts |
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Download press release (pdf) > |
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Cinematic Representations
Carmenita Higginbotham, assistant professor, McIntire Department of Art, and Jane Gaines, professor, Department of English, Duke University, address issues zraised in the films Birth of a Nation and Within Our Gates. |
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Tuesday, October 30, 2007, 5:30 pm
In the Museum
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The Dresser Trunk Project
William Williams, associate professor, School of Architecture and exhibition curator; Craig Barton, chair, Department of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, U.Va.; and Lisa Henry Benham, assistant professor, College of Architecture and Planning, University of Utah—all of whom have created trunks—discuss the issues addressed in The Dresser Trunk Project. |
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Tuesday, November 13, 2007, 5:30
In the Museum |
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Imagining Hale County
U.Va. scholars Grace Hale, Associate Professor, Corcoran Department of History, Richard Guy Wilson, Commonwealth Professor of Architectural History, and graduate student Scott L. Matthews discuss the images and heritage of Hale County, Alabama, a region so central to the work of William Christenberry. |
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Wednesday, December 5, 2007, 5:30 pm
In the Museum
Sponsored by the University of Virginia Council for the Arts |
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Southern Music, American Music
U.Va. music professors Richard Will and Melvin Butler, and Ph.D. candidate Michael Bishop examine Southern heritages in American musics including country, gospel, and rock.
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Friday, January, 25, 2008, 4 pm
In the Museum
Final Friday Reception
follows, 5:30 - 7:30 pm |
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Writing the South
Area writers read and discuss selections by Southern writers. |
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Friday, March 28, 2008, 4 pm
In the Museum
Final Friday Reception
follows, 5:30 - 7:30 pm |
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The Goddesses Return: A Symposium on the Repatriation to Italy
of Acrolithic Sculptures from Morgantina |
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Saturday, February 2, 2008
Auditorium of the Harrison Institute/Small Special Collections Library |
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Morning Session: William A. P. Childs, Princeton University, presiding |
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10:00 |
Welcome and Remarks |
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Elizabeth Turner, Interim Director, University of Virginia Art |
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Beatrice Basile, Soprintendente dei Beni Culturali e Ambientali della Provincia Regionale di Enna |
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Carmela Bonanno, Sezione archeologica, Soprintendenza ai Beni Culturali e Ambientali della Provincia Regionale di Enna |
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10:30 |
Malcolm Bell, III, University of Virginia, The Acroliths from Morgantina |
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11:00 |
Carla Antonaccio, Duke University, Cults and Sanctuaries at Archaic Morgantina |
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11:30 |
Clemente Marconi, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, The Art Historical Significance of the Acroliths from Morgantina |
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12:00 |
John Herrmann, Jr., Curator Emeritus, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Marble from Thassos: Exportation and Sculpture from Archaic and Classical Times |
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Lunch 12:30 - 2:00 pm |
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Afternoon Session: 2:00 - 4:00 pm: Round table discussion on museums and antiquities |
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Magnus Fiskesjö, Department of Anthropology, Cornell University |
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Kimerly Rorschach, Director, Nasher Museum of Art, Duke University |
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Susan Taylor, Director, The Art Museum, Princeton University |
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Moderator: Malcolm Bell, III, University of Virginia |
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The afternoon session will be followed by a reception at the University of Virginia Art Museum. |
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The organizers of the symposium are grateful to David Summers for his reconstruction drawing of the acrolithic sculptures. |
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Landscape of Slavery: The Plantation in American Art Exhibition Symposium
Thursday and Friday, March 13-15, 2008 |
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| March 13, 5 pm |
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Keynote Address by Richard J. Powell, John Spencer Bassatt Professor of Art and Art History, Duke University
Landscape/Escape:
Subjugation and Agency in Nineteenth-Century Images of African Americans |
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| March 14, 9:30 am - 12 noon |
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David Miller, Associate Professor, Department of English, Allegheny College
'That dark struggling, darkly vegetating swamp of human souls':
Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Southern Landscape
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Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, Associate Professor, History of Art, University of Pennsylvania
Topsy at the Dressing Table:
Visual Apocrypha and Uncle Tom's Cabin |
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| March 14, 2 - 5:30 pm |
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Kymberly Pinder, Associate Professor, Art History, Theory and Criticism,
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Mixing Myths: Multiracial Artists Talk Back to Slavery
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Tim Barringer, Paul Mellon Professor, History of Art, Yale University
Emancipation and the Plantation:
Utopian and Dystopian Visions of the Sugar Economy in Jamaica, 1834-38
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Walter Johnson, Professor of History and African and African American Studies, Harvard University
Cotton's Dominion:
Body, Landscape, and Ecology in the Mississippi Valley |
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| March 15, 9 am - 12:30 pm |
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Rebecca Ginsburg, Assistant Professor, Department of Landscape Architecture,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
The View from the Woods: Plantation Landscapes from the Perspective of Fugitives
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Erskine Clarke, Professor of American Religious History, Columbia Theological Seminary
The Landscape of the Lowcountry in Black and White:
Overlapping and Competing Views and Memories
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Stephanie E. Yuhl, Associate Professor, History, College of the Holy Cross
Landscapes of Longing: The Plantation Aesthetic in Sight and Sound |
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