RAVE x VMPEA: Nancy P. Lin

RAVE x VMPEA: Nancy P. Lin

Workshop
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CWAC 152
Add to Calendar 2019-05-08 16:30:00 2019-05-08 18:00:00 RAVE x VMPEA: Nancy P. Lin May 8 Nancy P. Lin, PhD candidate, Department of Art History "Going Outdoors: Keepers of the Waters and Experiments in Site-Based Art Practice in the 1990s" Respondent: TBD *No pre-circulated paper. Joint event RAVE x VMPEA 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. The Visual and Material Perspectives of East Asia (VMPEA) workshop is oriented toward the study of material or visual objects from East Asia. It explores the possible use of recent theories of art, history, and material and visual culture in the study of East Asia. Presentations of studies of objects, sites, visual materials, and built environments cover a variety of historical periods and geographic locations within East Asia. Flexible in how the methodologies are defined, this workshop does not limit itself to art history, but also includes archeology, anthropology, and a wide range of fields of visual studies, such as film, museum studies, and visual culture etc. The workshop is about half student and faculty presentations and about half outside speakers. CWAC 152 Department of Art History drupal@seastar.uchicago.edu America/Chicago public

May 8

Nancy P. Lin, PhD candidate, Department of Art History

"Going Outdoors: Keepers of the Waters and Experiments in Site-Based Art Practice in the 1990s"

Respondent: TBD

*No pre-circulated paper.

Joint event RAVE x VMPEA

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.

The Visual and Material Perspectives of East Asia (VMPEA) workshop is oriented toward the study of material or visual objects from East Asia. It explores the possible use of recent theories of art, history, and material and visual culture in the study of East Asia. Presentations of studies of objects, sites, visual materials, and built environments cover a variety of historical periods and geographic locations within East Asia. Flexible in how the methodologies are defined, this workshop does not limit itself to art history, but also includes archeology, anthropology, and a wide range of fields of visual studies, such as film, museum studies, and visual culture etc. The workshop is about half student and faculty presentations and about half outside speakers.