Archive | October, 2018

Silsila fall 2018 Lecture Series, Matters of Mediation/Bodies of Devotion “VOTIVE BODIES: WAX AND BEYOND IN MEDIEVAL MEDITERRANEAN DEVOTIONAL PRACTICES” Ittai Weinryb, Bard Graduate Center

31 Oct

 

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The unique characteristics of wax and beeswax made the material a crucial participant in votive practices. By focusing on the material of wax, the lecture will outline the relations between, site, body, material and materiality in order to further exemplify the relations between devotees and divinities, between the here and hereafter in Christian devotion.
Ittai Weinryb is an associate professor at the Bard Graduate Center. He is the author of The Bronze Object in the Middle Ages (Cambridge 2016) and the curator of the exhibition Agents of Faith: Votive Objects in Time and Place (Bard Graduate Center Galleries, September 14, 2018-January 6, 2019). Weinryb is currently developing two new book projects. The first, entitled Art and Experience in the Age of the Astrolabe, focuses on astrological thinking and its influence on image and object making in medieval Europe. The second, Art and Frontier focuses on the early moments of European colonialism.
Silsila: Center for Material Histories is an NYU center dedicated to material histories of the Islamicate world. Each semester we hold a thematic series of lectures and workshops, which are open to the public. Details of the Center can be found at:
http://as.nyu.edu/content/nyu-as/as/research-centers/silsila.html
Date: Wednesday, November 7th
Time: 6:30-8:30pm
Location: 4 Washington Square North, 2nd floor
RSVP here: https://goo.gl/forms/nlvJQI5RroXEgV432

 

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Human figure votive Famagusta, Turkey, early 20th century.

The Limits of Seljuk Art

31 Oct

Monday, November 5, 2018
6:30 PM in the Lecture Hall
The Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
1 East 78th Street

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The arts of the Caucasus were transformed in the course of the thirteenth century, with the incorporation of many structural and decorative elements that are indebted to Seljuk art. However, it is possible to trace an invisible frontier beyond which those elements are not seen. This lecture will explore the nature of that frontier, and its role in the construction of regional identities.

Antony Eastmond is AG Leventis Professor of Byzantine Art History and Dean & Deputy Director at the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. His most recent book, Tamta’s World (Cambridge, 2017), examined questions of gender, biography and art in eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus on the eve of the Mongol invasions. He also works on Byzantine ivories and the definition of art in the Byzantine periphery.

Followed by a reception.

Supported by the Gulnar Bosch Fund

RSVP

Image Credit: Courtesy of the speaker.

The Institute of Fine Arts provides reasonable accommodations to people with disabilities. Requests for accommodations for events should be requested at least 2 weeks before the date event. Please emailsophie.lo@nyu.edu for assistance.

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The Cabinet des médailles: Luxury and Power from Ancient Rome to Modern France – Lecture at La Maison Française tonight at 7pm

30 Oct

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ROBERTO JUAREZ: INSPIRATION AND PROCESS curated by Professor Edward Sullivan

30 Oct

Review from:  THE JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN

Roberto Juarez: Inspiration and Process

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ROBERTO JUAREZ: INSPIRATION AND PROCESS

On June 4, the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art inaugurated Roberto Juarez Processing: Paintings and Prints 2008 – 2018The exhibition filled the entire space of the museum with studies, prints, and paintings from this late period of the long and productive career of Roberto Juarez (NA 2011). Curated by Edward J. Sullivan, the selected works were carefully chosen with the artist to illustrate the process by which he moves from an idea or concept to a finished work. The show somewhat literally provides a view into the artist’s head, revealing as much about the method of his thinking as it does the procedure that results in a finished work.

Coupled with the catalog, which includes an essay by Sullivan, an interview with Juarez, as well as statements by friends and colleagues, the experience of this exhibition leads the close observer to a better understanding of the creative practice that defines the life of an artist. The major works of this period, the Pater paintings, were produced over a number of years during which Juarez was dealing with the death of his father.

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Left: Roberto Juarez, Body/Pater, 2016, mixed media on canvas, 96 x 96 in.. Right: Trackmaster, 2016, mixed media on canvas, 96 x 96 in., photo courtesy BMoCA

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Left: Roberto Juarez, Glad Container, 2016, mixed media on canvas, 100 x 96 in. Right: Wall of Pater painting studies, photo courtesy BMoCA

Born of an urge to work, the time spent alone in his studio reading, drawing, painting, and looking at other artists’ work allowed his mind to grasp the idea of loss. While these works are not specifically memorials to his father, the process of creating them led the artist to a more profound understanding of his place in life in the absence of his father, Roberto Juarez, Sr. The works in this show are the physical representations of the vector to this comprehension.

In a recent conversation with the artist, he expressed great enthusiasm for an exhibition of Edo Period painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I subsequently went to see the show, The Poetry of Nature. I immediately understood his enthusiasm. The spare, sometimes enormous paintings are defined as much by what they depict as by the ingeniously choreographed empty space surrounding the primary elements of each work. In these recent Pater paintings, as in his large murals, Roberto Juarez, with the assured confidence of a mature and accomplished artist, organizes his visual thoughts with the skill of an Edo calligrapher. That skill is an exciting thing for a viewer to realize, and a thrilling thing for an exhibition to capture.

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Roberto Juarez, Body/Pater, 2016, mixed media on canvas, 96 x 96 in.

 

Roberto Juarez Processing: Paintings and Prints 2008 – 2018 was presented at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art from June 7 – September 16, 2018.

Clayton Kirking, former Chief of Art Information Resources for the New York Public Library, is an independent writer and curator. His areas of interests include Latin American/Latinx art, Mexican cuisines, and culinary history.

Submit your writing to Ink & Image

26 Oct

Ink & Image Journal Poster (1)

Attention Department of Art History Students:  Career Insights – this Friday, October 26th, 5:30 – 8:30 PM at the Metropolitan Museum of Art!

25 Oct

Ever wondered what it’s like to work in a museum? Speak with staff from many different backgrounds about their jobs, and find out how to apply your skills toward a museum career. Meet with administrators, curators, conservators, educators, designers, photographers, scientists, writers, and more. Open to all undergraduate and graduate students; those at early stages of their studies are particularly encouraged to attend. Museum admission is included.

Our thanks to alumna Cristina Garza (Art History ’10) for alerting us about this program and sending this information.

 

 

 

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Alumni Lecture

25 Oct

Poster-Alumni-Lecture

“REMEMBERING MEDINA AND INVOKING THE PROPHET THROUGH THE IMAGES OF THE DALA’IL AL-KHAYRAT” Hiba Abid, Collège de France

24 Oct

a6ee63ba-a7ca-4e41-bd4f-fb0a98d33596Silsila fall 2018 Lecture Series, Matters of Mediation/Bodies of Devotion

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Images of the grave and the minbar of the Prophet Muhammad in the Mosque of Medina in a copy of the Dalā’il al-Khayrāt of al-Jazūlī (INV. 12382) from the Royal Library of Morocco, Rabat.

The Dalā’il al-Khayrāt (Guide to Goodness) written by the Moroccan sufi al-Jazūlī (d. 1465), was perhaps the most popular devotional text in the Islamic world and the most copied after the Qur’an itself. The images included in most surviving copies of the text have often been considered by Islamic art historians as simple schemes accompanying the prayer book’s descriptive section on the tomb of the Prophet Muhammad in the Mosque of Medina. However, the study of several manuscripts produced in North Africa from the 16th down to the 19th century, has shown that these illustrations were used by most readers to recall and to accomplish a virtual visit to the Prophet’s burial place, but also to reach his holy presence.
Dr. Hiba Abid earned her PhD in Islamic Art History and Codicology at the École Pratique des Hautes Études (Paris) under the supervision of François Déroche (Collège de France) in 2017. Her dissertation was dedicated to the manuscript tradition and the iconography of a Sufi prayer book, the Dalā’il al-Khayrāt of al-Jazūlī (d. 1465), in North Africa from the 16th to the 19th centuries. She is now a post-doctoral fellow at the Collège de France (Paris), working on the ERC-SICLE project, devoted to the intellectual and cultural history of the Saadian dynasty in Morocco (1554-1660), through the study of the Sultans’ library nowadays kept at the El Escorial Library in Spain.
Silsila: Center for Material Histories is an NYU center dedicated to material histories of the Islamicate world. Each semester we hold a thematic series of lectures and workshops, which are open to the public. Details of the Center can be found at:
http://as.nyu.edu/content/nyu-as/as/research-centers/silsila.html
Date: Wednesday, October 31st
Time: 6:30-8:30pm
Location: 4 Washington Square North, 2nd floor
RSVP here: https://goo.gl/forms/E38KCclXEb57wnXg2
*Since space is limited, it is essential to RSVP. If for any reason you have rsvp’d and cannot attend, please use the RSVP form to let us know.
** As a reminder this is the same evening as the NYC Halloween parade and many areas along Sixth avenue will be closed. We recommend accessing Silsila via the R or W train to 8th Street NYU or the 6 train to Astor Place. 

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From Oxford, Professor Geronimus did it too!

23 Oct

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Our student, Whitt, did it!

23 Oct

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