Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Student Art Awards + BFA Reception

Newcomb Art Department | Tulane University

2018 Student Art Awards Night

+ Bachelor of Fine Arts Opening Reception

 
Thursday, April 26, 2018

Award Ceremony: Stone Auditorium, 6:00 pm

Stern Prize Paper – Art History Awards – Studio Art Awards

followed by BFA, Part 2, Opening Reception in the Carroll Gallery, 6:30 pm


Caroline Chase, Rubi Ferras, Megan Wolfkill

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Faculty news: Elizabeth Boone

Elizabeth Boone, professor of art history and Martha and Donald Robertson Chair in Latin American Art, lectured on "Spatial Grammars: The Union of Art and Writing in the Painted Books of Aztec Mexico" and led a workshop on "Reading the Past and the Future in the Painted Books of Aztec Mexico" as part of the Henry King Stanford Distinguished Professors lecture series, January 25-26, 2018. She was a discussant in the Dumbarton Oaks workshop "Future Directions in Pre-Columbian Studies" in Bogotá, March 22-23, 2018.

An expert in the Precolumbian and early colonial art of Latin America, with an emphasis on Mexico, Boone is the former Director of Pre-Columbian Studies at Dumbarton Oaks. Professor Boone has earned numerous honors and fellowships, including the Order of the Aztec Eagle, awarded by the Mexican government in 1990. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Corresponding Member of the Academia Mexicana de la Historia.

Renaissance Society of America Annual Conference

by Shannah Rose, MA Student in Art History,  Wednesday, April 18, 2018

The Renaissance Society of America (RSA) held its 64th Annual Conference on March 22nd – 24th, 2018, hosted by Hilton New Orleans Riverside and sponsored by Tulane’s Latin American Library, the New Orleans Museum of Art, and SEL Studies in English Literature. The largest international society dedicated to the study of the era 1300-1700, RSA is a prestigious platform for scholars of various disciplines in the liberal arts to present current research projects and new directions for their respective fields.

RSA 2018 commenced on March 21st with a concert at the Immaculate Conception Church and receptions at the Latin American Library and the New Orleans Museum of Art. The exhibit featured at the Library included items from its world-renown collection, including original Mesoamerican painted manuscripts as well as some of the earliest products of sixteenth-century Spanish American presses. The conference itself featured a full program of nearly 600 formal papers, roundtable discussions, and plenary sessions delivered by distinguished, junior, and independent scholars, museum professionals, and doctoral students from various countries, institutions, and disciplines.

Notable topics ranged from panels on music and devotional paintings in medieval Ethiopia, to “sacred geographies” in Aztec Mexico; from roundtables on interdisciplinary research on the global Renaissance, to ideas on incorporating the oft overlooked south of Italy in teaching methods. Faculty from Tulane’s Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS) program in particular was well represented: Professor Holly Flora delivered a paper on gender and emotion in a Trecento illuminated manuscript, and Professor Stephanie Porras organized a session on knowledge production in early modern print culture. Doctoral students’ papers were also accepted to the conference: Lucia Abramovich presented on collecting Spanish colonial art at the New Orleans Museum of Art, and Jennifer Saracino presented on cosmography and cartography in colonial Mexico City.

Each year RSA provides a platform for students and scholars alike to share their research and create exciting new connections with colleagues that cross disciplinary, linguistic, and international borders. We are most fortunate to have had the opportunity to welcome the conference in New Orleans, particularly given the city’s cross-cultural and multilingual heritage.

The Renaissance Society of America’s 65th Annual Conference will take place spring 2019 in Toronto, ON.

Thursday, April 5, 2018

BROKEN ENGLISH: Film Screening and talk by Jeanne C. Finley

The Tulane Art Club (formerly known as T/NASA) is pleased to present a film screening and talk by Jeanne C. Finley, interdisciplinary artist from California College of the Arts.

BROKEN ENGLISH
Wednesday April 11, 6:15pm
Stone Auditorium

Jeanne C. Finley will present a screening of experimental non-fiction works and installation projects.  These works, many created in collaboration with John Muse, frequently utilize complex narrative structure and story telling to reflect on the contested past, the turbulent present and the unpredictable future.   Her process often includes documentary strategies such as research and interviews to produce multiple narratives that collide and interweave amid a lush visual and sonic landscape.  The use of layered visual and spoken text, such as subtitles and voice-over serves to uncover contradictory layers of meaning.  Ranging in subjects from her mother’s participation in the invasion of Southern France during WWll, to 16-year-olds today aging out of an orphanage on the steppes of Kazakhstan, these projects explore the physical sites where transformative social events shape individual lives.

www.finleymuse.com