History of Arts and Architecture HARC

Queer Bauhaus

An illustrated lecture by Dr. Elizabeth Otto, executive director of the Humanities Institute and associate professor of modern and contemporary art history and visual studies at the University at Buffalo. She shares her research on the roles queer identities and gender fluidity played in the development of Modernism’s legendary art school. Free

   

Mahaney Arts Center 125

Open to the Public

Public Lecture by Jun Nakamura -The Diachronic Print: Rembrandt’s Posthumous Interlocutors

Prints are a unique medium in that, through the repeated printing of a plate or block, prints index their own histories. Most of the prints that we have today from plates made in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were likely pulled by hands not belonging to the artists who engraved, etched, and cut the plates themselves. Many, in fact, were printed posthumously, sometimes with interventions being made to the plates before reprintings by later artists and printers.

Virtual Middlebury

Free

Shan Zeng '19, Lecture and Gallery Talk: Sacred Ropes

Shimenawa, or “enclosing ropes”, are used to construct sacred space in the worship of kami (Shinto gods). Shan Zeng ’19 will discuss the history of shimenawa in a short talk based on her thesis work. The talk will be followed by light refreshments and a visit to the Reiff Gallery of Asian Art to view the newly installed shimenawa there.

Mahaney Arts Center 125

Open to the Public

Manifestaciones en Periodo de Caza/Demonstration During Hunting Season

In this performance and artist talk, the renowned artistic duo better known as Las Nietas de Nonó will share the visceral motivations of their creative work and artistic practices in recent struggles for equity, visibility, and political change in Puerto Rico and beyond. 

Ilustraciones de la Mecánica takes up the history of medical experimentation and the pharmaceutical industry in Puerto Rico. It considers in particular the violence inflicted on Black women’s bodies in the name of medical research.

Adirondack Coltrane Lounge

Open to the Public

Unintentionally Awesome Design Strategies and the Future of Accessibility

Sustainable architecture in the 21st century tends to work without explicit attention to disability. In this public lecture, Johnna S. Keller, RA discusses ways that architecture can consciously consider both sustainability and accessibility as creative design challenges, thus promoting a socially just and ecologically restorative environment.

Co-sponsored by Middlebury’s Advisory Group on Disability Access and Inclusion, Architecture Studies/History of Art & Architecture, Franklin Environmental Center, and the Program in Environmental Studies.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Open to the Public

The Archaeology of Borderlands: Cultural Encounters along the Great Walls in the Late Warring States Period

A talk by Dr. Nicola Di Cosmo, Luce Foundation Professor in East Asian Studies at the Institute of Advanced Study
In Chinese history, borderlands have often been politically contested. But frontiers have also been places of cultural encounters, transmission, and negotiation. This talk explores the material remains of these contacts from the “other side” of the Great Wall, and argues for a new interpretation of the Chinese impact on the borderlands, the cultural contacts that took place, and their long-term consequences.

Mahaney Arts Center 125

Open to the Public

Emperor and Poet: Mansa Musa, Al Saheli, and the Unlikely 1325 Friendship that Built Timbuktu and the Mali Empire

Lecture by Suzanne Preston Blier, Allen Whitehill Clowes Professor of Fine Arts and of African and African American Studies, Harvard University. In 1325, Emperor Mansa Musa of Mali was the world’s richest man by far. He and his new court architect Al Saheli—a Granada-born poet and lawyer—built Timbuktu into an important architectural and university center at the moment of transition from the medieval world to the modern era. Free

Mahaney Arts Center 125

Open to the Public

Ancient Asian Gold Technology

Unique among Asian art materials, gold is both a color and an artistic medium. Donna Strahan, head of conservation and scientific research at the Freer|Sackler Galleries of Art, Smithsonian Institution, investigates materials and methods of manufacture of Asian gold objects. Free

Mahaney Arts Center 125

Open to the Public