RAVE: Mock CAA Panel

RAVE: Mock CAA Panel

Workshop
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CWAC 157
Add to Calendar 2020-02-05 12:00:00 2020-02-05 13:30:00 RAVE: Mock CAA Panel Mock CAA Panel Savannah Esquiviel, "Colonial Ghosts: Silences and (In)visibilities in Sixteenth Century New Spain" Maggie Borowitz, "'El cuerpo de verdad': the bodily, bodilessness, and the feminist body politic" Tingting Xu, "Penetrating Temporality: Thinking about the Internal Histories of Nineteenth-century Photography" Zsofi Valyi-Nagy, "'Every Bar You've Ever Been Into': Haptics, Memory, and Motional Empathy in Paula Dawson's Holograms" Xi Zhang, "Illuminating Night Gardens: the Visual Culture of Nightscapes in Modern China" Snacks and beverages will be served. The Research in Art and Visual Evidence (RAVE) Workshop provides a forum for University of Chicago graduate students––and the occasional faculty or outside speaker––to present their works-in-progress whose research centers on art or any type of visual and material culture. RAVE provides visually-minded scholars from across the university with the opportunity to receive feedback from art historians, while also ensuring that art historians think broadly and experimentally about their projects. CWAC 157 Department of Art History drupal@seastar.uchicago.edu America/Chicago public

Mock CAA Panel

Savannah Esquiviel, "Colonial Ghosts: Silences and (In)visibilities in Sixteenth Century New Spain"

Maggie Borowitz, "'El cuerpo de verdad': the bodily, bodilessness, and the feminist body politic"

Tingting Xu, "Penetrating Temporality: Thinking about the Internal Histories of Nineteenth-century Photography"

Zsofi Valyi-Nagy, "'Every Bar You've Ever Been Into': Haptics, Memory, and Motional Empathy in Paula Dawson's Holograms"

Xi Zhang, "Illuminating Night Gardens: the Visual Culture of Nightscapes in Modern China"

Snacks and beverages will be served.

The Research in Art and Visual Evidence (RAVE) Workshop provides a forum for University of Chicago graduate students––and the occasional faculty or outside speaker––to present their works-in-progress whose research centers on art or any type of visual and material culture. RAVE provides visually-minded scholars from across the university with the opportunity to receive feedback from art historians, while also ensuring that art historians think broadly and experimentally about their projects.