Archaeology News and Announcements

from Brown University's Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World

Tag: art history

Call for Papers | Collecting Her Thoughts: Lightning Talks on Women Art Collectors Across Time

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Boston University’s departments in History of Art & Architecture and Archaeology are currently open for submissions for their conference entitled “Collecting Her Thoughts: Lightning Talks on Women Art Collectors Across Time.”

In his introduction to 19’s 2021 issue on women collectors, Tom Stammers writes that “the renewed study of female collectors promises to reconfigure the history of art and the history of gender alike.” Across time, women’s access to the social and financial resources necessary to collect art has been different from that of their male counterparts, often more limited. Both because of and in spite of these limitations, women have served as art patrons, developed ideologically and materially expansive collections, and promoted art in public arenas. Yet, women collectors have been systematically excluded from museum and curatorial studies, perhaps in part because their collections and practices may manifest differently.

For this graduate student colloquium, we seek brief, 10-minute lightning talks that take up the theme of women art collectors. How does the study of female collectors challenge and expand existing museum studies scholarship? Who were these women, and why did they collect? How might a private or domestic collecting practice differ from a public-facing curatorial project?

Possible subjects include, but are not limited to:

  • Women collectors, women archaeologists, women’s collecting circles
  • Women’s roles in taste-making and national identity formation
  • Museum formation, overlooked contributions to museum studies
  • Domestic collecting and decoration, revisiting the “separate spheres” phenomenon
  • Women’s philanthropy, collecting as activism
  • Feminist curatorial practice
  • Intersectional perspectives of women collectors and museum practice
  • Barriers or opportunities for women’s art acquisition
  • New methodologies or approaches to collection, revising gendered collecting terminology

The coordinators welcome submissions from graduate students in the disciplines of art history, archaeology, literary studies, queer and gender studies, history, English, cultural studies, anthropology, sociology, philosophy, museum studies, and related fields. Projects at all stages, including works in progress are welcome, as this will be a space for community and conversation.

Submission Information

Submit a 150-word abstract and a current CV to dadonato@bu.edu by April 26, 2024. The organizers will be in touch by May 3. Unfortunately, they are not able to provide financial support for travel.

This colloquium is organized by Danarenae Donato, Ilaria Trafficante, and Toni Armstrong at Boston University. It is supported by Boston University’s History of Art and Architecture Department, Archaeology Department, and the Women’s and Gender Studies Department.

Classics Symposium Talk | Europa and the Bull in Modern and Contemporary Art

 

The Brown University Department of Classics is hosting a Symposium Talk with their current Critical Classical Studies Postdoctoral Fellow, Cicek Beeby. The talk is entitled, “Female Body, Political Body: Europa and the Bull in Modern and Contemporary Art.” Dr. Cicek Beeby was a former Postdoctoral Fellow of the Joukowsky Institute (2021-2023), where she researched marginalized bodies of Ancient Greek and Roman art, including women, people with disabilities, and racialized groups.

The talk will take place on Friday March 1, 2024 at 12pm EST. It will be hosted in the Macfarlane Seminar Room, at 48 College Street, Providence, RI 02906. No registration is required.

List Visiting Artist Talk: Summer Wheat

The Department of Visual Art at Brown University is presenting a Marjorie Cutler sponsored lecture by Summer Wheat.

Summer Wheat (b. 1977, Oklahoma City, OK) is known for her vibrant paintings, multifaceted sculptures, and immersive installations that weave together the history of materiality, figuration, and abstraction in both fine art and craft milieus. Each series engages individual and collective human experiences drawn from historical and contemporary sources, mediated through a variety of references ranging from ancient art and medieval tapestries, to etchings from the Renaissance, to modernist abstractions. Wheat’s work examines various manifestations of labor, leisure, commerce, and class through the depiction of numerous figures and archetypes such as farmers, hunters, beekeepers, gardeners, weavers, bankers, and movie stars. The artist’s densely populated “scapes” envision worlds where time seems to have collapsed and every person, regardless of social status, occupies a shared/equal space, in which both labor and leisure are paths to healing humanity. Using a tongue-in- cheek type of humor inspired by comic strips, Wheat subverts conventional hierarchical structures and stereotypes to create more expansive depictions of daily life throughout history.

Date: Wednesday, February 7, 2024

Time: 6:00pm

Location: List Art Building, room 120 at 64 College Street, Providence, RI

Register here.

“Context and Meaning XXII: Scandal” Student Conference

Join the Queen’s University Art History Department for their Graduate Student Conference “Context and Meaning XXII: Scandal.” It will take place online and in person on February 3-4, 2023. The Keynote Speaker will be John Geoghegan at 1:15-2:15pm on Friday 3, 2023. Register for the conferenc eat gvca.ca.

Lectures from the American Research Institute in Turkey

The American Research Institute in Turkey is hosting two lectures this November that are available to the public,

“New Studies on the Cape Gelidonya Shipwreck”

Online Seminar: with Emre Kuruçayırlı, Boğaziçi University
Date: November 10, 2023
Time: 7:00 pm Istanbul, 11:00 am New York
Please register at https://aritweb.org/events/
A collaboration with Koc University Maritime Archaeology Research Center (KUDAR), Institute of Nautical Archaeology, and American Research Institute in Turkey – ARIT

Ottoman Art in America:  A Century Long Artistic Relationship Between Türkiye and the United States”

A lecture by ARIT Istanbul Director Dr. Zeynep Simavi,
Date: November 13,2023
Time: 6:00 pm Istanbul, 10:00 am New York
Please register at https://aritweb.org/events/

Rutgers Art Review: Graduate Journal of Research in Art History Volume 39

The Rutgers Art Review is excited to announce their publication of volume 39 of their Graduate Journal of Research in Art History, which can be accessed here. It is edited by Brittney Bailey, Jessica Mingoia, Sara Varnese, and Margo Weitzman. It includes two essays:

“Before-and-After Portraiture: Photography and Time at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School ”
By María Beatriz H. Carrión

“The Quiet Landscapes of Carrie Mae Weems’s The Louisiana Project”
By Kaila T. Schedeen

It also includes two exhibition reviews:

“The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Chroma: Ancient Sculpture in Color – telling (not engaging) the history of polychromy”
By Tyler Henegan

“On Duality and Juxtaposition: The de la Torre Brothers at the Cheech”
By Emma Oslé

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