Solomon Residency

...now browsing by tag

 
 

Gender Studies in Art History Residency

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Beginning this upcoming Spring semester the Women’s Studies Department will transition into Skidmore’s new Department of Gender Studies. The interdisciplinary program will employ both gender queer and feminist theory and scholarship to analyze the experiences, perspectives and contributions of men, women and intersexed people and the systems of gender relations in various cultural settings and time periods.

As part of this transition the 2009 Solomon Residency will focus on the roles of gender studies in art history. The three day residency will feature two free and open to the public lectures.

At 5:30pm on Wednesday Henry Drewal will give a lecture titled “Spirit Spouse: Art and Gender Identity in the Worship of Mami Wata” in the Tang’s Payne Presentation Room. Then on Thursday, again at 5:30pm at the Tang, Patricia Simons will present her lecture, “Sex in the Kitchen: The Social Iconography of Male Bodies in Renaissance Art and Culture.”

More information on the events is available from the Saratogian.

Art History Welcomed To Adult Table By Other Depts.

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

The Alfred Z. Solomon Residency brings two eminent art historians to campus this week not only to address students and faculty, but also to celebrate the separation of the Art History Department into an independent academic department. Formerly of the Art Department, Art History makes this leap of maturity just in time to sit at the adult table during the annual “Departmental Thanksgiving Dinner.”

“Although future Solomon Residency events will likely feature artists and critics as well as art historians, the first will spotlight scholars Robert S. Nelson of Yale, speaking Thursday, Nov. 20, on “New Canons and Protocols of Art and Art History,” and James Elkins of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, who will address “The Future of Art History” on Friday, Nov. 21. Both lectures will take place at 6:30 p.m. in the Payne Room at the Tang Museum; a reception will follow the Friday lecture.” <via Scope>