Tuesdays, September 8, 2015; October 20, 2015; November 10, 2015; February 2, 2016; March 8, 2016; and April 19, 2016, 7–8:30 pm
7–8 pm, Lecture
8–8:30 pm, Conversation with Participants
Tickets and Scholarships
In the highly successful Director’s Lecture Series of 2013–2014 and 2014–2015, discussion focused on the “history and evolution of museums” and the “birth and rise of the avant-garde.” We now turn our attention to the topic of artistic genres—the categories that defined art of the past and that continue in various guises in the present. The series is designed by Peggy Pierce Elfvin Director Dr. Janne Sirén and presented by Dr. Sirén, as well as Deputy Director Dr. Joe Lin-Hill and Senior Curator Dr. Cathleen Chaffee.
This season’s six lectures will provide a unique opportunity to learn about the traditional genres that constitute the thematic ecosystem of visual art: history painting, portraiture, genre painting, landscape painting, animal painting, and still life. These lectures shed light on the hierarchy and evolution of each of these genres, which were codified in the Renaissance and have been shifting since the Enlightenment. We will focus particularly on their evolution in the works of artists of the modern era. Why did history painting once play such an important role in art and politics, and what led to its decline and eventual rebirth in new forms? What purpose did portrait painting once serve, and what types of revolutions has it undergone since the advent of photography, film, and video? What is really the subject of still life and animal paintings?
The 2015–2016 Director’s Lecture Series defines the categories that form the architecture of art history and explores their dramatic transformations under the hand of artists from the eighteenth century to the present day. Through a discussion of artists as diverse as Raphael and Rauschenberg, Poussin and Picasso, Andy Warhol and Ai Weiwei, the 2015–2016 Director’s Lecture Series will consider what a close look at the codification and continual reinvention of art historical genres can tell us about ourselves and the society in which we live.
Each lecture will be followed by a question-and-answer conversation between the lecturer and participants. AK Café will be open before each lecture for dinner and a reception will follow the final lecture.