University of Pennsylvania
Deptartment of the History of Art
Archived News Items
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Norman Badler and Renata Holod receive PISF Award
Norman Badler and Renata Holod are pleased to announce that they have
received one of the awards from the Penn Provost’s Interdisciplinary Seminar
Fund (PISF). This award supports the continuation of successful collaborations
between Art History (ARTH) and Computer and Information Science (CIS) under
the interdisciplinary seminar title “Virtual Heritage”. This seminar exemplifies the
interaction and collaboration between those who study, document, reconstruct
and preserve the past, and those who bring technological expertise and skills to
modeling, simulating and animating structures, artifacts and people.
_______________________________________________________________________
Penn hosts conference in honor of Renata Holod
October 9-10, 2009
Please plan to attend a reception and symposium to honor Renata Holod for her
years as Professor of the History of Art at the University of Pennsylvania and her
contributions to the field of Islamic art, architecture, and visual culture.
We hope you will plan to attend the gala reception on Friday evening October 9th
at the Penn Museum, and “Seeing the Past-Envisioning Islamic Art and Architecture,”
a day-long symposium on Saturday, October 10 in the Chemistry Building,
Carolyn Hoff Lynch Room, located at 34th and Spruce Streets.
Details may be found at: http://www.historiansofislamicart.org/.
_______________________________________________________________________
Welcome Letter from Department Chair Holly Pittman
Fall 2009
Welcome Back!!
The new academic year is upon us and we are excited to welcome new students to campus.
The History of Art department has a busy fall schedule. As always, we will have an Open House
kicking off the year. The Jaffe building will be open on Friday September 4th and Tuesday
September 8th to welcome students with information and refreshments. Faculty and Grad
students will be here to answer your questions.
On September 6th the Penn Reading Project will discuss the monumental painting by Thomas
Eakins, the Gross Clinic. This event launches Penn’s Arts & the City Year celebrating arts and
culture in the region (see: http://www.upenn.edu/provost/artsyear). Our own Professor David
Brownlee and adjunct Professor Kathy Foster, curator at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, as
well as other members of the faculty, will be guiding the students and faculty thorough this
fascinating document.
The weekend of September 11 and 12,is the First Annual Symposium in memory of Anne
d’Harnoncourt, beloved late director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art cosponsored by the
Department of the History of Art and the Center for American Art. The topic is Marcel Duchamp’s
Étant donnés.
And on Friday, September 18, the colloquium series begins with Michael Leja speaking in Jaffe
113 at 3:30 p.m. All of the Penn community is cordially invited. We hope to see you at these events.
Wishing you successful first weeks of the new year,
Holly Pittman
Chair
History of Art
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Dialogues on Animality
A Graduate Student Symposium on October 2-3, 2009
Hosted by the University of Pennsylvania
and Slought Foundation, Philadelphia, PA
Organized by Ruth Erikson and Nathaniel Prottas
If at the heart of the humanities is the question “what does it mean to be human?” this symposium
seeks to explore the role of animals in the history and formation of this question from different
disciplinary viewpoints. The symposium will include graduate student panels on literature,
art history, law and ethics and Darwanism, as well as responses from various faculty.
Akira Mizuta Lippit, Professor of Comparative Literature, East Asian Languages and Cultures
and Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California will deliver the key-note lecture,
"On Autobiography and (Animal) Locomotion." view symposium website >
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Lothar Haselberger's "Mapping Augustan Alexandria" Project will be presented at the
Gold Medal Colloquium for J. Humphrey, AIA Annual Meeting, January 2010
List of Participants:
D. Amoroso-O’Connor
M.M. Andrews
C. Bernhardt
S.G. Bernard
D.P. Diffendale
E.A. Dumser
D. Harris-McCoy
L. Haselberger (speaker)
B.P. Horton
N. Efremov-Kendall
J. Leidwanger
S. McFadden
D.G. Romano
C. Teuchtler
M. Tokumitsu
S. Zink
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Sacred Architecture of Rajasthan by Michael Meister
Prof. Michael W. Meister has recently published a long-awaited study of the medieval
architecture of Rajasthan. "Desert Temples: Sacred Centers of Rajasthan in Historical,
Art-Historical, and Social Contexts" is co-authored by Lawrence A. Babb, John E. Cort,
and Prof. Meister. This study is the fruit of a decade-long collaborative research project
initiated with support from the Getty Foundation.
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The Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminar exhibition,
Louis I. Kahn: The Making of a Room at Arthur Ross Gallery
The Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminar exhibition, "Louis I. Kahn: The Making of a Room",
is now open at the University of Pennsylvania’s Arthur Ross Gallery. Organized around
Louis Kahn's proclamation that "Architecture comes from the Making of a Room,"
it will be on view from February 7 through March 29, 2009. The exhibition can also
be seen at http://www.arthistory.upenn.edu/themakingofaroom.
The exhibition explores Kahn's concept of the room as the building block of architecture,
showing the poetic considerations Kahn's architectural philosophies lent to his development
of interiors. It focuses on his artistic representations of the way he envisioned his buildings
would be used. Thirty-six of Kahn's original drawings, many never before exhibited, support
this concept with plans, elevations, and perspectives of interiors and furnishings.
The exhibition developed from the extensive research that the Halpern-Rogath Seminar
students undertook in the Louis I. Kahn Collection at the University’s Architectural Archives,
and they followed through on all aspects of its execution. The students who have taken part
in this seminar are: Peter Clericuzio, Gregory Katz, Claudia Lauture, John Matthews,
Jordan Pascucci, Gabrielle Ruddick, Sara Smith-Katz, Laura Ventura, and Robert Wainstein.
Louis I. Kahn: The Making of a Room has been organized at the Arthur Ross Gallery in
cooperation with the Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania by students
in the Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminar. It is supported by the Department of the History
of Art thanks to the generous support of Leslee Halpern-Rogath and David Rogath.
Additional funding has been provided by the Friends of the Arthur Ross Gallery.
The seminar, taught by Professor George H. Marcus, is part of the Masters of Liberal
Arts Program of the College of Liberal and Professional Studies.
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Larry Silver curates prints on a 'Grand Scale'
Prof. Larry Silver has organized a major exhibition, entitled "Grand Scale: Monumental Prints
in the Age of Dürer and Titian," which recently opened at Wellesley College, Davis Museum and
Cultural Center (19 March-8 June 2008). It will travel to the Yale University Art Gallery (fall 2008)
and then the Philadelphia Museum of Art (31 January-26 April 2009).
The exhibition focuses on those multi-sheet composite prints that broke the boundaries of the
single sheet print and its ultimate destination in albums, to provide a frieze of prints in sequence
(often a triumph or procession) or else a full-blown mural image. This phenomenon was employed
for all media (woodcut, engraving, even etching) and in all major centers (Italy, Germany, and the
Netherlands) throughout the sixteenth century. The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with
essays and checklist, distributed by Yale University Press.
The exhibition developed from the extensive research that the Halpern-Rogath Seminar students
undertook in the Louis I. Kahn Collection at the University’s Architectural Archives, and they followed
through on all aspects of its execution. The students who have taken part in this seminar are: Peter
Clericuzio, Gregory Katz, Claudia Lauture, John Matthews, Jordan Pascucci, Gabrielle Ruddick,
Sara Smith-Katz, Laura Ventura, and Robert Wainstein.
Louis I. Kahn: The Making of a Room has been organized at the Arthur Ross Gallery in cooperation
with the Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania by students in the Halpern-Rogath
Curatorial Seminar. It is supported by the Department of the History of Art thanks to the generous
support of Leslee Halpern-Rogath and David Rogath. Additional funding has been provided by
the Friends of the Arthur Ross Gallery. The seminar, taught by Professor George H. Marcus, is
part of the Masters of Liberal Arts Program of the College of Liberal and Professional Studies.
_______________________________________________________________________
Two Mellon Postdocs in 2008-09
The Penn Humanities Forum will host two outstanding art history scholars as
Mellon Postdoctoral Fellows in 2008-2009.
Dr. Paroma Chatterjee received her Ph.D at the University of Chicago, writing a
dissertation on narrative icons in Byzantium and Italy. She has been a visiting
assistant professor at the University of Florida. At Penn, she will continue her
research on Byzantine religious art. Dr. Chatterjee will teach a freshman seminar
in the fall on the depiction of saints in medieval art, and she will offer a 300-level
seminar in the spring.
Dr. Christina Codgell, assistant professor at the College of Santa Fe, wrote her
doctoral dissertation at the University of Texas on the relationship between
modern design the cultural and medical theory of eugenics. This was published
as Eugenic Design: Streamlining America in the 1930s. Her research now
focuses on the influence on contemporary architectural design of eugenics and
related notions about genetics and evolution. In the fall, Dr. Codgell will teach a
freshman seminar on the history of eugenics in the United States, and she will
teach a 300-level art history seminar in the spring.
_______________________________________________________________________
Karen Beckman holds seminar on Silent Slapstick Comedy, March 2
“Car Wreckers and Home Lovers: The Automobile in Silent Slapstick",
Philadelphia Cinema and Media Seminar
Monday, March 2 @ 5:00 pm • Jaffe Building Room 113
Karen Beckman explores the function of the automobile gag through close analysis of
Harold Lloyd's Hot Water and Laurel and Hardy's Two Tars. As she traces critical
responses to these three very different comedians, she focuses in particular on
Lloyd's (a.k.a. "Speedy"'s) association with the tempo of modernity in contrast to Laurel
and Hardy's association with regression, slowness and retardation, qualities which in
turn become associated by critics with misogyny and the specter of homosexuality.
As Beckman revisits these films and the reception of them, she explores the normative
impulse of early film scholarship, and examines the queer potential of slow, stalled,
crashing, and exploding cars.
_______________________________________________________________________
Professor Chris Poggi organizes Futurism Conference:
FUTURISM: RUPTURE + TRADITION
Friday, November 21, 9:30am-6:00 pm and Saturday, November 22, 9:30-1:00 pm
Slought Foundation, the Center for Italian Studies and the History of Art Department at
the University of Pennsylvania are pleased to announce "Futurism: Rupture and Tradition,"
a two-day international conference.
Exploring Futurism in its historical, international and cross-cultural dimension, the conference
will address a range of media, and include papers about the context in which Futurism emerged,
its complex trajectory and alliances during the Fascist period, as well as its legacy among
contemporary artists. This event marks the 100-year anniversary of Marinetti's avant-garde
movement by bringing together some of the foremost scholars of Futurism as well as artists
and performers associated with the movement.
for more information please visit:
http://www.arthistory.upenn.edu/futurism
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Renata Holod organizes international symposium on Islamic art and
architecture October 16-18, 2008.
http://www.arthistory.upenn.edu/HIAA/
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German Films from Three Decades @ Slought Foundation,
October 1 and 2, 2008
Curated by Karen Beckman in collaboration with the filmmakers.
This double program of films by Ute Aurand, Milena Gierke and Renate Sami aims to
introduce U.S. audiences to three German filmmakers from Berlin. Though these films
differ greatly from each other, many of them are marked by shared qualities of intimacy
and tenderness, independent and personal vision and form, intense sensuousness,
and, at times, irresistible humor. They cover three decades of filmmaking, criss-cross
a variety of styles and genres, and demonstrate the differences a camera can make
as they move from Gierke’s Super 8, to Aurand’s Bolex, and Sami’s MiniDV. The
filmmakers will be present at both programs, and invite audiences to join them in
conversation after the screenings.
From the filmmakers:
“The three of us have been working together in the "Filmsamstag" for more than 8 years
programming films once a month in the cinema Filmkunsthaus Babylon in Berlin. Most
of the films we showed had one thing in common: they were made by directors and
filmmakers who were and are obstinately pursuing their own way. This idiosyncratic
approach also characterizes our own films in a way that comprises for instance the kind
of camera Ute and Milena use (Ute the Bolex, Milena the Super8) and the subjects we
choose, which in a way are always close to our respective (particular) lives and biographies.
The films we are going to show oscillate between experimental and documentary. Some are
silent, some have some music, some put silence against sound; there are interviews, there
is poetry, there is a film that consists of one long shot of seven minutes, some are a fast
cascade of carefully edited images and some are edited in the camera. With each program
on our tour, we will try to show some of this diversity.”
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Multiple Modernities at the PMA
On view through December 7 at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, "Multiple Modernities: India,
1905-2005" explores a century of modern art in South Asia. The exhibition, showcasing twenty-
five drawings, prints, and watercolors, was organized by a Halpern-Rogath curatorial seminar
taught by Professor Michael Meister and PMA curator Darielle Mason. The students were
Beth Citron, Nachiket Chanchani, Neil Ghosh, Jenna Levy, and Nyssa Liebermann.
_______________________________________________________________________
Professor Maxwell Wins SAH Founders Award
Professor Robert Maxwell has won the prestigious Founders Award of the Society of
Architectural Historians, which recognizes the best article published by an emerging
scholar in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians during the previous two
years.
Professor Maxwell won the award for the article "Romanesque Construction and the
Urban Context: Parthenay-le-Vieux in Aquitaine," which appeared in the March 2007
issue of the Journal.
The award jury wrote:
In making a case for why some less famous monuments can be worth fresh and serious
consideration, Robert Maxwell analyzes the design, construction, and sculptural decoration
of the Romanesque church of Parthenay-le-Vieux within a context illuminated by archival
documentation. Meticulously detailed, solidly argued, and judiciously illustrated, his article
displays a sound knowledge of both the church itself and earlier studies. Maxwell has
produced a study that not only sheds light on a particular structure in its historical and
geographical setting but also points the way to a new, more complete understanding of
its period.
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Welcome Class of 2012
Welcome New Students!
Dear Class of 2012,
Welcome! We hope that Penn's world-famous History of Art Department will be among the first
places that you discover when you get to campus. Our home is the lovely Jaffe Building, right
next to the main library. Stop in between 10am and 4pm on Tuesday, September 2 or Wednesday,
September 3 if you'd like to learn more about our courses or simply to visit one of the prettiest
places on campus. We'll have coffee, cold sodas and light snacks.
Although our home base is comfortable and small-scale, the History of Art Department is ready
to introduce you to all of the exciting world of the visual arts. We think that "learning to look" is
an essential part of modern education, because visual signs and symbols are now
the predominant medium of communication. Our prize-winning teachers will demystify this
kind of visual communication while also introducing you to the artistic creativity of almost
every period in history. We can also help you explore the art our own time, in part through
our collaboration with the exciting programs in Visual Studies and Cinema Studies.
History of Art courses make the greatest possible use of the artistic riches that surround us;
we regularly visit the architecture of the region and the treasures in Penn's and Philadelphia's
museums. Some of our seminars organize exhibitions in those museums and galleries; others
travel to the places that they study.
This fall, we offer four courses that are specifically designed for new undergraduate students
and that satisfy the Sector Requirement of the College:
ARTH 001 is a sweeping, interdisciplinary survey of the "built environment" that introduces
students to the field of architecture. Professor Lothar Haselberger, trained as an engineer
and archaeologist as well as a historian, will reveal the secrets of the Taj Mahal, the Pyramids,
Pantheon, the soaring Gothic cathedrals, St. Peter's, St. Paul's, and a sampling of the
masterpieces of modern architecture.
ARTH 101 looks at all the arts of Europe, from the birth of visual communication in prehistoric
times up to the dawn of the Renaissance. Professor Robert Ousterhout, a historian of medieval
architecture, will take students into the painted caves of southern France, up the Nile valley,
onto the Acropolis in Athens, into the forum in ancient Rome, along the route that led medieval
pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela, and up to the top of Brunelleschi’s dome for Florence
cathedral.
ARTH 104 introduces the vast variety of art created in South Asia—in the modern nations of
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. From prehistory until the present, this enormous territory has
been both the incubator of distinctive, new artistic ideas and a participant in the global exchange
of visual culture. The instructor is Professor Michael Meister.
ARTH 108 (Film History) is cross listed with Cinema Studies and introduces that exciting field of
study with a broad survey of the new medium, from its invention until the present. The instructor is
Professor Peter Decherney.
We are also delighted to offer two Freshman Seminars. "Sinners (Revised and Edited): Images
of Saints in the Middle Ages" (ARTH 100.301) will be taught by Dr. Paroma Chatterjee. She will
lead students through an investigation of how saints, whom Ambrose wittily defined as "sinners
revised and edited," were represented in the middle ages. Dr. Jonathan P. Binstock (Senior Vice-
President, Citigroup Art Advisory Service) will teach a Spiegel Freshman Seminar devoted to
"Contemporary Art and the Retrospective" (ARTH 100-302). Binstock, an accomplished curator,
will lead an exploration of the latest trends contemporary art through a series of case-study
examinations of “retrospective” exhibitions (which review the life work of artists).
Freshmen are also welcome in all our 200-level courses, especially if they already have more
specialized interests.
Please stop by or call us if you have any questions. Our phone number is 215-898-8327.
Sincerely, Holly Pittman. Professor and Chair
_______________________________________________________________________
Penn In The World: Twelve Decades at the University of Pennsylvania Museum
This exhibition has been organized by nine undergraduate and graduate students from
an interdisciplinary Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminar in Penn’s department of the
history of art. Penn In The World tells the still-evolving story of Penn Museum, its
majestic building and the grand, often groundbreaking international work carried out
by the archaeologists, anthropologists, other scholars and educators within. Using
historic photographs, original documents, architectural drawings, and a selection of
about 30 artifacts from more than a dozen of the Museum’s most renowned expeditions
—as well as short footage from the 1950s TV program “What in the World,” and an
interactive research kiosk—Penn In The World weaves together the diverse narratives
of the Museum’s long history. It runs May 8 through September 28, in the Museum’s
William B. Dietrich Gallery.
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Karen Beckman interviews Werner Herzog at Slought Foundation
In October 2007, the Program in Cinema Studies brought Werner Herzog to Penn for 2 days,
during which time he visited undergraduate classes, met with graduate students, and conducted
two public interviews. Listen to his conversation with Karen Beckman at the Slought Foundation here:
http://www.slought.org/content/11393/
_______________________________________________________________________
Professor Julie Nelson Davis discusses her new book in SAS Research Frontiers
Professor Davis was recently interviewed about her new book, Utamaro and the Spectacle of Beauty,
for the School of Arts and Sciences' electronic journal, Research Frontiers.
For the complete text, see:
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/home/SASFrontiers/davis.html
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March 26 - April 3, 2008 • The Penn Cinema Distinguished
International Scholar Series Presents Laura Mulvey
Schedule:
Wednesday, 3/26/08 7:00 pm
Introduction and Q&A by Mulvey
Screening of Agnès Varda's /Cinevardaphoto/
International House, 3701 Chestnut Street
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Thursday, 3/27/08 5.30 pm
Screening of DV on Visual Pleasure essay followed by public Q&A
Institute for Contemporary Art, 118 S. 36th Street
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Monday, 3/31/08, 5:30 pm
Lecture on City Girls, Flappers, and Feminist Film Theory
Slought Foundation, 4017 Walnut Street
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Tuesday, 4/01/08, 7:00 pm
Intro and Q & A by Laura Mulvey
Public screenings of Riddles of the Sphinx / Frida Kahlo & Tina Modotti / Amy!
International House, 3701 Chestnut Street
_________________________________________________________
Wednesday, 4/02/08, 5:00 pm
Pedagogy workshop: Laura Mulvey on teaching formal film analysis;
William Boddy on teaching Television Studies
401 Fisher-Bennett Hall, 3340 Walnut Street
_______________________________________________________________________
"Photography By Other Means" lecture by Kaja Silverman,
Class of 1940 Professor of Rhetoric and Film,
University of California, Berkeley
SACHS FORUM EVENT
Thurs. 2/28/08 5:30pm @ Institute of Contemporary Art
Renowned cultural critic Kaja Silverman will explore the work of Gerhard Richter, who does
not view the photographs with which he works as "cultural constructions," as we have become
habituated to doing. They constitute, rather, "solicitations from the past, blasted out of the continuum
of time;" they "drop" on his "doormat," like "nature." In her talk, Kaja Silverman will explore how
Richter responded to two such solicitations: one embodied by a group of concentration camp
photographs, and the other instantiated by a series of photographs documenting the arrest,
imprisonment and deaths of three members of the German terrorist group, the RAF. Richter found
the concentration camp photographs—which he published side by side with some pornographic
photographs in the Atlas—to be “unpaintable.” Although for eleven years he feared that the same
might be true of the RAF photographs, he ultimately succeeded in painting them.
The result is the monumental work, October 18, l977, now owned by MoMA.
What made it possible for Richter to produce this work was a complex and ever-expanding
network of figural relations, which had at its center Paul Klee's Angelus Novus, and Richter's
three paintings of his daughter, Betty. Already in l988, this constellation reached backward in
time to include the concentration camp photographs published in the Atlas. Since then, it, has
grown to include Richter's great abstract triptych, January, December, and November, as
well as a date etched in black in our own memories: September 11, 2001.
Silverman will present her talk in two parts. In the first, she will show that analogy was already
the basis of Richter's aesthetic in the mid-sixties, when he painted his early photo-pictures.
It was through this form of relationality that he brought together painting and photography.
Analogy also plays a decisive role in his later abstract work, rendering the latter richly referential.
Initially, Richter created analogies in which similarity predominates over difference. Later, however,
he became interested in ones in which difference predominates over similarity. Silverman will end
the first of her presentations with the most notorious of these latter analogies: that linking the
concentration camp photographs to the pornographic photographs.
In her second presentation, which will follow closely from her first, Silverman will argue that
Gerhard Richter began working with another kind of analogy in l977, when he produced his
first two Betty paintings. He did so in the wake of the events documented in the RAF photographs.
It was this new kind of analogy, which has many of the properties of what Benjamin calls
"Messianic time," that permitted him to elaborate the figural network described above, and that
renders it so open to the future.
This event is sponsored by the Sachs Forum in Contemporary Art, a public program of special
lectures, panels, and other events related to contemporary art and culture. It is organized by ICA
and the History of Art department at the University of Pennsylvania.
________________________________________________________________
Larry Silver Inaugurates Penn's Hebrew University Exchange
Larry Silver spent the Fall 07 semester as the Roberta and Stanley Bogen Visiting
Professor at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem on a new Penn faculty exchange
program. Several Israeli scholars have already visited the University of Pennsylvania
through the program, but Professor Silver was the first Penn faculty to return the exchange.
His teaching in Jerusalem included a pair of courses: History of Prints (in conjunction with
the Israel Museum print room), and a Rembrandt lecture-discussion. He returned to Penn
to teach Art History 002 and a seminar on princely courts (with Art History's Julie Davis)
this semester.
_______________________________________________________________________
Penn Meets East Meets West... In Venice!
Professor Julie Davis is leading students to the Biennale in Venice this fall for a
Spiegel Freshman Seminar titled "Contemporary Art in East Asia and the World."
The seminar investigates issues that confront artists from East Asia working in
today's contemporary art world. Prof. Davis is encouraging students to reflect
on the terms that constitute the definition of the "contemporary" and investigate
how related concepts may – and may not – pertain to artists working outside the
European and American contexts. The centerpiece of the course is a five-day
trip to Venice to examine first-hand the engagement and representation of
East Asian artists at the Biennale--the most venerable contemporary art exposition
in the world--and to evaluate the creative, intellectual space accorded them
in the international market.
_______________________________________________________________________
Penn Students Invade Normandy!
During Fall Break, Professor Robert A. Maxwell will lead students to Normandy and
southern England as part of a site seminar called "1066." The seminar is studying the
artistic production in the period immediately before and after the Norman invasion.
The class will explore monuments first-hand to asses the quality and nature of this
cultural clash, investigating what "conquest," "colonialism," and "national identity"
meant to Normans and Saxons. The class will study sculpture and architecture at
Bayeux, Caen, Jumieges, London, Winchester, Canterbury; castles at Dover and
Falaise; illuminated manuscripts at Rouen and Winchester; and of course the
greatest testimony to the Norman invasion, the Bayeux Tapestry (all 229 feet of it!).
The class, part of the Department's site seminar series, is generously sponsored
by an anonymous donor.
_______________________________________________________________________
Upcoming Changes in the History of Art Major
This fall, several important changes in the History of Art undergraduate major
are expected to go into effect.
The changes will not affect rising seniors (class of 2008), but rising
sophomores (class of 2010) will be governed by the new rules, and rising
juniors (class of 2009) may choose between the current major and the new major.
The changes involve the distribution requirement, outside course electives, and
the comprehensive exam. There is also a new methodology seminar.
> Click here for more details
_______________________________________________________________________
Conversation: Richard Serra and Lynne Cooke
Thursday, October 25, 5:30 PM
Meyerson Hall B1, 201 South 34th Street
A conversation between sculptor Richard Serra and curator Lynne Cooke, who collaborated
on the recent retrospective of Serra’s sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art.
More information at:
http://www.icaphila.org/events/
_______________________________________________________________________
Welcome! Open House on August 31 and September 4
August 2007
Dear Class of 2011 and other new students,
Welcome! We hope that Penn's world-famous History of Art Department will be among
the first places that you discover when you get to campus. Our home is the lovely Jaffe
Building, right next to the main library. Stop in between 10 and 4 on Friday, August 31,
or Tuesday, September 4, if you'd like to learn more about our courses or simply to visit
one of the prettiest places on campus. We'll have coffee and cold sodas.
Although our home base is comfortable and small-scale, the History of Art Department
is ready to introduce you to all of the huge and exciting world of the visual arts. We think
that "learning to look" is an essential part of modern education, because visual signs and
symbols are now the predominant medium of communication. Our prize-winning teachers
will demystify this kind of visual communication while also introducing you to the artistic
creativity of almost every period in history. We can also help you explore the art our own
time, in part through our collaboration with the exciting programs in Visual Studies and
Cinema Studies.
History of Art courses make the greatest possible use of the artistic riches that surround us;
we regularly visit the architecture of the region and the treasures in Penn's and Philadelphia's
museums. Some of our seminars organize exhibitions in those museums and galleries;
others travel to the places that they study.
This fall, we offer many courses that are specifically designed for new undergraduate
students:
ARTH 001 is a sweeping survey of the "built environment" that introduces students to the
interrelated fields of architecture and art history. Professsor Lothar Haselberger, trained as
an engineer and archaeologist as well as a historian, teaches ARTH 1, and he’ll do his best
to reveal the secrets of the Taj Mahal, the Pyramids, Pantheon, the soaring Gothic cathedrals,
St. Peter's, St. Paul's, and a sampling of the masterpieces of modern architecture.
ARTH 109 (Film Analysis & Methods) is cross listed with Cinema Studies and introduces that
exciting field of study. The instructor is Dr. Meta Mazaj
VISUAL STUDIES 102 (Two Dimensions: Form and Meaning) is an introduction to the field of
Visual Studies and an exploration of the basic concepts of two dimensional studio practice and
visual communication. Students work with such traditional drawing materials as charcoal and
pencil as well as new media, including digital photography. The instructors are Colette Copeland
and Professor Jackie Tileston.
_______________________________________________________________________
Professor Holod Awarded a Collaborative Research
Grant from the Getty Foundation for the Study of a Medieval Kurgan
Renata Holod, Professor and Warren Woodfin, Visiting Scholar in the History of Art
Department, University of Pennsylvania, together with Oleksander Halenko (Institute
of History of Ukraine, Kyiv), Vitaly Otroshchenko and Yuri Rassamakin (Institute of
Archaeology, Kyiv, and the excavators of the kurgan) have formed a team to study the
burial of a Qipchak khan in the Pontic steppe of southern Ukraine. The grave goods
are a luxurious assemblage of gold - embroidered silk costumes, preciousmetal objects,
ceramicvessels, paradearmor and horse trappings. Clustering around a late twelfth -
early thirteenth century date, they are of diverse origins: products of Islamic Syria,
Byzantine Asia Minor, Kievan Rus’, and Western Europe. With the support of a Getty
Collaborative Research Grant, our research seeks to understand how this array of
artifacts arrived in the possession of this steppe leader, and how they were interpreted
as expressions of power on the borders between the Mediterranean and Eurasian worlds.
For more information on the project, see: www.chingul.org.ua
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Crimes of Omission at ICA: April 20 - August 5, 2007
A "crime of omission" is defined as the failure to act upon a legal duty or responsibility.
In this exhibition, the title refers to artistic strategies that remove visual traces of a crime
or draw attention to injustices that typically go unnoticed. Viewers may initially overlook
the criminal references in the works, allowing them
to have an extended engagement
with these contemporary artworks that will be presented as open-ended questions
rather than foregone conclusions. "Crimes of Omission" will be on view in ICA's Project
Space from April 20- August 5, 2007.
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Sachs Program in Contemporary Art Begins
The ambitious program established by Katherine Stein Sachs and Keith L. Sachs
to support the study and appreciation of contemporary art at Penn kicks off in September
2006 with the arrival of Dr. Richard Meyer as the Sachs Visiting Professor. Dr. Meyer, who
received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, is a renowed specialist in
twentieth-century American art, cultural studies, and the history of photography. He is
particularly interested in how discourses of gender and sexuality have shaped modern
art and criticism. His book, Outlaw Representation: Censorship and Homosexuality in
Twentieth-Century American Art (2002) won the Eldredge Prize, the book-of-the-year
award of the National Museum of American Art. The University of Southern California,
where Dr. Meyer has taught since 1996, has awarded him the Raubenheimer award for
outstanding teaching, research, and service.
At Penn, Professer Meyer will teach History of Photography (ARTH 293) in the fall, a
graduate-level seminar in the spring, and a year-long curatorial seminar at the Institute
of Contemporary Art (ICA). Professor Meyer is also coordinating the Sachs Forum in
Contemporary Art, a collaboration between the ICA and the Department of the History of
Art to sponsor special lectures, panels and other events.
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New in 2006-07: Sachs Forum in Contemporary Art/ Spring Events
The Sachs Forum in Contemporary Art, made possible by the generous support of Katherine Stein
Sachs and Keith L. Sachs, is a year-long program of special public lectures, panels, and book
launches, highlighting contemporary art and culture. The Forum is a collaboration of Penn's Institute
of Contemporary Art and Department of the History of Art and is coordinated by Sachs Visiting
Professor Richard Meyer.
MIGRATION OF FORM
Roger M. Buergel, Artistic Director, Documenta 12
Thursday, January 11, 5:30 pm, Logan Hall, 402
WAY OUT ON A NUT
Douglas Crimp, Fanny Knapp Allen Professor of Art History,
Rochester University
Thursday, February 1, 5:30pm, ICA Auditorium
POSTPONED: PHOTOGRAPHY BY OTHER MEANS
Kaja Silverman, Class of 1940 Professor of Rhetoric and Film,
Univeristy of California
The Sachs Forum lecture by Professor Kaja Silverman, planned
for Thursday, March 22 at the ICA, will be rescheduled for next fall.
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Usable Pasts? American Art from the Armory Show
to Art of This Century
March 23 and 24, 2007
Nine speakers ranging from recent Ph.D.s to established scholars will present new research and
fresh perspectives on art in the United States between the landmark Armory Show of modern art in
1913 and the 1942 opening in New York of Peggy Guggenheim's influential Art of This Century gallery.
The symposium will take place on the Penn campus and at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
http://www.caareviews.org/reviews/1060
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Modern Indian Works on Paper:
Post-Independence Art from a Private Collection
Assisted by several art history majors, Professor Michael Meister has curated an exhibition
of modern artworks from India as part of his ARTH 301 seminar "Art in Contemporary India."
Premiering at the Penn's Arthur Ross Gallery, the traveling exhibition features 64 modern
and contemporary owned by Umesh and Sunanda Gaur (named among the “Top 100 collectors”
by Arts & Antiques Magazine). The exhibition runs from January 13 til March 11, 2007 and is
supported by the Department of the History of Art and the South Asia Center. For more
information, visit: Modern Indian Works on Paper: Post-Independence Art from a Private
Collection.
For more information on the exhibition, see: http://www.upenn.edu/ARG/
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Dramatic Impressions:
Japanese Theater Prints from the Gilber Luber Collection
at the Arthur Ross Gallery, March 17—May 6, 2007
Guest curated by Frank Chance and Julie Nelson Davis with support from the Luber Foundation.
This exhibition showcases selected woodblock prints from the Gilbert Luber collection showing the
dramatic expression of the kabuki actor on stage. In addition to featuring an exceptional group of
finely produced Osaka actor prints from the early nineteenth century, the exhibition will also include
remarkable actor studies produced by the modern artist, Natori Shunsen (1886-1960), between
1916 and1929. The exhibition examines how both early modern and modern print designers
developed a vocabulary of visual forms recreating the effects of staging, pose, make-up and costume.
A catalogue will accompany the exhibition.
For more information about the exhibition, see:
http://www.upenn.edu/ARG/ • Dramatic Expressions Penn Press Catalogue
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Dr. Kinga Araya is Mellon Postdoc in 2006-07
Video and performance artist Kinga Araya, who earned her Ph.D. in art history and visual arts
in 2004 from Concordia University, has been awarded a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in the
History of Art by the Penn Humanities Forum. Dr. Araya's art has been showcased in more than
a dozen solo exhibitions in Canada, Spain, and Poland. Her work often explores exile and identity.
The installation artist Krysztof Wodiczko and conceptual artist Adrian Piper have been the subjects
of her scholarship, and she has written widely on performance art. At Penn, Dr. Araya will teach a
freshman seminar each semester, beginning with "Postmodernity and Performance: Walking in
Metropolis".
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Acting Modern: A symposium for the exhibition Dramatic Expressions
The Center for East Asian Studies and the Department of the History of Art are also co-sponsoring
a symposium in conjunction with the exhibition, to be held March 31, 2007. The papers will engage
issues concerned with Osaka print production and subjects; the Shin-hanga revival of woodblock
printing in the early twentieth century; the 1923 Great Kantô earthquake; and Kabuki in the twentieth
century; among others. There will also be a collector’s and curators’ forum on the exhibition.
Speakers will include: C. Andrew Gerstle, SOAS, University of London; Sarah Thompson, MFA Boston;
Kendall Brown, CSU Long Beach; Gennifer Weisenfeld, Duke; Shirley Luber, Philadelphia; and
Yoshie Endô, Frank L. Chance, and Julie Nelson Davis from the University of Pennsylvania.
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Byzantinist Robert Ousterhout Joins Faculty
Professor Robert G. Ousterhout will move to the Department of the History of Art in January
2007. A leading archaeologist and historian of Byzantine art and architecture, Dr. Ousterhout
has taught at the University of Illinois since 1983, where he has chaired the program in Architectural
History and Preservation. The church of the Chora monastery in Istanbul, now known as the Kariye
Camii, has been a major focus of Professor Ousterhout's attention and the subject of two books and
numerous articles. His recent books include the magisterial Master Builders of Byzantium (1999) and
Byzantine Settlement in Cappadocia (2006). Cappadocia remains at the center of his research.
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New in 2006-07: Sachs Forum in Contemporary Art
The Sachs Forum in Contemporary Art, made possible by the generous support of Katherine Stein Sachs
and Keith L. Sachs, is a year-long program of specialpublic lectures, panels, and book launches, highlighting contemporary art andculture. The Forum is a collaboration of Penn's Institute of Contemporary Art and Department
of the History of Art and is coordinated by Sachs Visiting Professor Richard Meyer.
Fall events include:
"Felix Gonzalez-Torres: America, Then and Now"
Lecture by Nancy Spector
Thursday, September 14, 5:30 PM, at the ICA
"Art, Sex, and Censorship in the 1970s"
Conversation of Anita Steckel with Richard Meyer
Thursday, October 19, 5:30 PM, at the ICA
"Fugitive Artist: The Early Work of Richard Prince"
Lecture by Michael Lobel
Thursday, November 30, 5:30 PM, at the ICA
download flyer
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"Trouble in Paradise" at the University of Pennsylvania Museum
Class-Curated Show of Polynesian Clubs runs April 29 through December 31, 2006 in the second
floor Dietrich Gallery of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology,
3260 South Street in Philadelphia. Intricately carved and uniquely designed Polynesian war clubs
made in the 19th century are the focus of Trouble in Paradise: The Art of Polynesian Warfare, a
special exhibition researched by sixteen University of Pennsylvania student co-curators--undergraduates
in the Art History 301 Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminar led by Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, Associate
Professor of History of Art.
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Petruccioli Workshops in Urban History:
Professor ATTILIO PETRUCCIOLI
Dean, Faculty of Architecture
Politechnic University of Bari, Italy
Friday, October 27th, 2006, 3:30–5pm
Learning From the Urban Mediterranean Fabric:
Antanka, Tartous, Algiers
Saturday, October 28th, 2006, 10-12:30 pm
Approaches to the Urban Fabric:
The Typological School of Bari
Both events at The Department of the History of Art
Jaffe Building, University of Pennsylvania, room 201
– light refreshments will be served –
Download PDF for more information.
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Penn-Princeton Conferences in Medieval Art
The University of Pennsylvania and the Index of Christian Art (Princeton Univ.) are jointly organizing two back-to-back conferences that highlight the art and thought of the Medieval period:
Representing History, 1000-1300: Art, Music, History (October 28th and 29th 2006), held at the University of Pennsylvania is interdisciplinary conference in Medieval Studies. This conference brings art history and music into dialogue with historical studies to draw out the strategies shared by these fields in the realm of historical “representation.”
Romanesque Art and Thought (October 26th and 27th 2006), held on the Princeton University campus explores the art of the Romanesque period. Papers consider the historiography of the period, methodological questions, and case studies of Romanesque masterpieces.
For mor information:
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/medieval/
http://ica.princeton.edu/conferences.html
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Sachs Chair in Contemporary Art
The University of Pennsylvania invites applications and nominations for the new Katherine Stein Sachs and Keith L. Sachs Professorship in Contemporary Art. The position is tenured and will begin in the fall of 2006. See the University press release at http://www.upenn.edu/pennnews/article.php?id=863
The Sachs Professor will join a department with six other modern specialists, strong collaborative ties to the university's Institute of Contemporary Art, and a large commitment to programs in this field. In addition to research, responsibilities include the full range of undergraduate and graduate instruction, advising, and administrative service.
PhD and strong record of teaching and scholarship are required. Curatorial interest or experience is desired.
Send a letter of application, curriculum vitae, and a few sample publications to:
Professor David Brownlee
Department of the History of Art
University of Pennsylvania
Jaffe Building
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6208
The review of applications will begin on November 1, 2005, and continue until the position is filled. Women and minorities are especially encouraged to apply. The University of Pennsylvania is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
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Two New Americanists: Michael Leja and Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw
This fall the Department welcomes two distinguished scholars of American art, upholding the tradition launched by Emeritus Professors John McCoubrey and Elizabeth Johns. Professors Michael Leja and Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw will join Adjunct Professor Kathleen Foster, the McNeil Curator of American Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, in mounting a program of scholarship and teaching that will bring Penn to the forefront in American art studies
Michael Leja, previously the Sewell Biggs Professor and Chair of the Department of Art History at the University of Delaware, is one of the nation's leading scholars of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American art. His first book, "Reframing Abstract Expressionism. Subjectivity and Painting in the 1940s" (1993), moves freely across media and from high art to low while interrogating the philosophy and psychology of New York painting in the generation of Jackson Pollock. It won the Eldredge Prize
in American Art. "Looking Askance. Skepticism and American Art from Eakins to Duchamp" (2004) explores the seemingly native skepticism with which Americans have viewed art and other visual phenomena, tracing this back to P.T. Barnum's gallery of faked oddities and forward to the making and reception of Marcel Ducamp's "readymades" in New York. Leja's powerful analysis disrupts notions about the separation of art and audience. In fall 2005 he will teach ARTH 298 (American Art 1865-1968).
Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, a wide ranging scholar of American, and African-American art, comes to Penn from Harvard, where she was Assistant Professor of the History of Art and Architecture and of African and African American Studies.
"Seeing the Unspeakable: The Art of Kara Walker" (2004), her first book, places the work of a controversial contemporary artist within a long artistic tradition and also reads it in terms of today's racial politics. Next year, her exhibition "Portraits of a People: Picturing African Americans in the Nineteenth Century" will be mounted at the Addison Gallery of American Art in Andover, Massachusetts,with an accompanying book of the same title. With Richard Powell of Duke University, she is co-editing the Encyclopedia of African American Art and Architecture, to be published by Oxford University Press in 2007. At Penn this fall, Professor Shaw will teach ARTH 588 (Proseminar in American Art).
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Two Mellon Postdocs Visit in 2005-2006
Two outstanding scholars have been awarded Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowships and will be joining the Department for the academic year 2005-06.
Dr. Lynn Ransom comes to Penn from curatorial positions at the Walters Art Museum of Baltimore and the Free Library of Philadelphia, working in the Manuscripts departments of both institutions. Dr. Ransom earned her doctorate from the Univ. of Texas-Austin specializing in Gothic manuscripts. While a member of the Humanities Forum, she will be pursuing research on the imagery of Franciscan meditational manuscripts and teaching Freshman seminars on the book arts.
Dr. Stephen Petersen is a specialist of contemporary art. He was awarded his doctorate at the Univ. of Texas-Austin, writing a dissertation on the work of Lucio Fontana and Yves Klein, and has taught at the Universities of Delaware and Pennsylvania. While at Penn's Humanities Forum, he will teach courses on contemporary American and European art (including an on-site seminar at the Venice Biennale) and pursue research on the exchange of words and images in post-WWII art.
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Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminars
Leslee Halpern-Rogath and David Rogath have given the Department's program of curatorial seminars an enormous boost. Their generosity will support five of these popular and unusual ourses over the next few years.
In curatorial seminars, undergraduate and graduate students work with faculty to study a subject and mount an exhibition in one of the University's galleries. The first Halpern-Rogath Curatorial Seminar will be taught 2004-2005
by Professor George Marcus. The subject is the work of Charles and Ray Eames, who were central figures in American design in the 1940s and 1950s, creating seminal designs for furniture, films and multi-media exhibitions. The course
will explore their achievements and create an exhibition for installation in the Arthur Ross Gallery in the summer of 2005.
A second Halpern-Rogath seminar is scheduled for spring 2005, when Professors Larry Silver and Michael Cole will teach a course on the printmaking work of Renaissance and Baroque artists who are better known as painters. Students will study this important but rarely considered material and help to prepare an exhibition called "The Painter-Etcher," which will be assembled from major collections in the United States and hung in the Ross Gallery in spring 2006.
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The Passing of Dr. Paul Watson
Dr. Paul Watson, associate professor emeritus of the history of art and assistant dean of advising in the College, died
on May 15 at the age of 65 from complications after a fall. Dr. Watson—a native of Toronto—received his B.A. from the University of Toronto in 1962, and earned a Ph.D. in art history from Yale University in 1970. He joined Penn’s faculty
in 1968 as an instructor, teaching Italian, medieval and Renaissance art, became assistant professor in 1970 was appointed associate professor in 1976. He became emeritus in 2000. He also served as undergraduate chair of his department from 1997 and continued his engagement with undergraduates in retirement as College advisor.
A specialist in the Italian Renaissance, he was one of the first scholars to investigate the domestic paintings known as cassoni, betrothal chests decorated with subjects from classical mythology or poetic allegory. He also innovated the study of painted birth salvers in a pioneering article, and made numerous connections between Italian pictures and texts by classical and Renaissance authors. His research into Italian secular art culminated in the publication of his opus magnum, The Garden of Love in Tuscan Art of the Early Renaissance (Philadelphia: Art Alliance Press, 1979),
in which he explicated a range of paintings and prints that linked late medieval courtly love subjects to Renaissance Florence. He retained a strong interest in the connections between Boccaccio and later Renaissance painting, which resulted in numerous publications. A number of studies on Raphael, particularly his Vatican fresco of “Parnassus,” remained an abiding scholarly fascination.
In his latter years of teaching, Dr. Watson’s academic focus on Italy shifted from the secular to the sacred, in which he brought both his extensive knowledge and deep commitment to the Roman Catholic Church to bear on the analysis of Renaissance art and architecture.
He is survived by his daughter, Amanda; and a sister, Jean Smith. Donations may be made to St. Agatha-St. James Church and may be designated to repair its stained glass windows.
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60-Second Lectures
Professors Karen Beckman and Renata Holod answered the School of Arts and Sciences' challenge to deliver a public address in just one minute. See and hear their 60-Second lectures!
October 5, 2005
Karen Beckman
Elliot and Roslyn Jaffe Assistant Professor of Film Studies, Department of History of Art
"Crash"
September 29, 2004
Renata Holod
Professor, Department of History of Art
"Site of Sight, Right of Sight, and Rite of Sight: Exploring the Cultures of Seeing"
Transcript:
Cultures of seeing. For 30 years at Penn I’ve been investigating cultures of seeing, from the ground up and from the air down. And basically I’ve come to an understanding that cultures of seeing, that is, to see, consist of three parts. And they are simply described as the right to sight, the site of sight, and the rite of sight. Okay? Rite of sight, last one, r-i-t-e, how it is that you go about seeing, and how various societies structured this seeing. The site of sight. Where a thing is often influences what we actually learn about it, how we actually take it in. And the first one, which is the right to sight. Today we assume that everybody saw everything at every time. And of course we know that it’s not true. So there are varieties of treasures hidden in treasure houses and museums that actually at their own time of making were never seen more – by more than a handful of people. I want you to think about this.
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Lothar Haselberger Wins the Abrams Teaching Award
The highest teaching honor of the School of Arts and Sciences has been awarded to Lothar Haselberger, Morris Russell and Josephine Chidsey Williams Associate Professor. Professor Haselberger, who serves as undergraduate chair of History of Art, is praised by faculty and students alike for his courses in ancient architectural history. A colleague writes, "In his teaching he combines [his scholarly] gift with energy, imagination, and vision, charging his students with an irrepressible enthusiasm and inviting both graduates and undergraduates to join him as junior colleagues in research and publication."
Created in 1983, the Ira H. Abrams Memorial Award for Distinguished Teaching recognizes teaching that is intellectually challenging and exceptionally coherent and honors faculty who embody high standards of integrity and fairness, have a strong commitment to learning, and are open to new ideas.
From the SAS press release, 26 April 2004
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Karen Beckman is the First Jaffe Professor
Dr. Karen Beckman has been named the first holder of the Elliot and Roslyn Jaffe Professorship. A specialist in the history of photography, film, and other new media, Professor Beckman will offer crucial support to the new program in Cinema Studies. Dr. Beckman completed her B.A. in English from Cambridge University and studied German philosophy and literary theory at Göttingen before earning her Ph.D. at Princeton with a dissertation that won the Council of Graduate Schools' Distinguished Dissertation Award. Having held a two-year Whiting postdoctoral fellowship, Dr. Beckman has served most recently as assistant professor of English and Film Studies at the University of Rochester. Her first book, VANISHING WOMEN (2003), was the runner up for the 2004 Katherine S. Kovacs Award, the "book of the year" prize of the Society of Cinema and Media Studies.
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Elective Affinities: 7th International Conference on Word & Image Studies
The University of Pennsylvania hosts the 7th International Conference on Word & Image Studies (23-27 September 2005) sponsored by the International Association of Word-Image Studies. The conference, organized under Goethe’s notion of “elective affinities” explores the apparently contradictory and hostile positions that words and images may assume when brought into close relation. As one of the characters in Goethe’s book objects, such affinities are problematic and “are only really interesting when they bring about separations.”
The History of Art Department is playing a leading role at this international assembly. Faculty participants include Profs. Renata Holod, Ann Kuttner, Robert A. Maxwell, Michael W. Cole, Christine Poggi, and Karen Beckman, who are chairing sessions organized around Ancient, Islamic, Medieval, Renaissance, Modern, and Contemporary works. Several faculty, as well as graduate students, are also presenting papers at the conference. Professors Peter Stallybrass (Penn) and Yve-Alain Bois (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton), and author Art Spiegelman will offer keynote lectures.
The following graduate group members are part of the organising committee: Catriona MacLeod (conference chair), John Dixon Hunt, and Liliane Weissberg. Julie Schneider (School of Design) is the conference co-chair.
For more information please visit: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/affinities
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