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X-WR-CALNAME:Art History @HKU
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Art History @HKU
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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Asia/Hong_Kong
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0800
TZOFFSETTO:+0800
TZNAME:HKT
DTSTART:20190101T000000
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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:UTC
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:UTC
DTSTART:20190101T000000
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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Asia/Shanghai
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0800
TZOFFSETTO:+0800
TZNAME:CST
DTSTART:20190101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20220119T183000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20220119T193000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222834
CREATED:20220104T025419Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220114T074602Z
UID:9474-1642617000-1642620600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Tiger Tails
DESCRIPTION:This talk is co-organized by HKU Fine Arts and Art History Alumni Association and our Department\, and is supported by HKU Museum Society\nTiger Tails: Harnessing the Ferocity of the King of Animals in Early- to Middle-period Chinese Art\nDate: 19 January 2022 (Wednesday) \nTime: 6:30pm-7:30pm\nVenue: Online via Zoom Webinar / CPD LG.63\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\n \nCONSIDERING THE TIGHTENED SOCIAL DISTANCING MEASURES ON CAMPUS\, THIS EVENT IS NO LONGER A HYBRID EVENT.  \nPARTICIPATION IS LIMITED TO ONLINE-ONLY. (Updated on 14/1/2022) \nAdvanced registration required: Click here *\nPlease join Dr. Roslyn Hammers in a celebratory talk that brings in the felicitous Lunar New Year of the Tiger! Focusing on the representation of the tiger from early days to pre-Ming\, this informal chat will consider the role of the tiger and related feline friends in Chinese painting and other media. The tiger\, initially regarded as a fierce and terrifying foe\, he or she could also be enlisted to serve as a protective guardian with apotropaic properties in art. The tiger appeared as a symbol emblazoned on paintings\, clothing\, doorways\, tomb walls\, and other places\, visually lending his power to those who sought it. This talk will take a lighthearted look at the beauty of the tiger while at the same time consider the reconfigurations of its ferocity\, a quality that is at the core of the tiger’s power and status as the king of the animals. \nSpeaker: Roslyn Hammers\nDr. Roslyn Hammers is an Associate Professor at the Department of Art History\, University of Hong Kong. When she is not working on technological imagery or depictions of people at labor she brings two great passions together\, Chinese art and animals. She teaches on paintings of the Song to Yuan dynasties\, but really wants to get in touch with her inner tiger or canine and break free from the constraints of the human condition. She hopes to use her empathetic response to animals to argue for an exalted position of scaled\, furry\, and feathered beings in this world. The tiger in the year of the tiger is an excellent place to start to work toward this goal. \n*Please note that HKU will introduce enhanced Covid-19 control measures. From 17 January 2022\, anyone wishing to enter the campus will need either to be fully vaccinated or to take weekly self-tests.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/tiger-tails/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Academic Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/20220119-tiger-talk-poster-5-01-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="HKU Fine Arts and Art History Alumni Association":MAILTO:alumni@hkufaaa.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211207T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211207T183000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222834
CREATED:20211124T062205Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211124T085248Z
UID:9391-1638896400-1638901800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Composition\, Repetition
DESCRIPTION:Research Postgraduate Seminar\nComposition\, Repetition: On Materiality\, Ha Bik Chuen’s Prints and Motherboards\nDate: 7 December 2021 (Tuesday)\nTime: 5:00-6:30pm\nVenue: CPD 2.45\, The Jockey Club Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\nSpeaker: Michelle Wong\, PhD candidate\, HKU \nAbstract\nThis presentation introduces the ongoing PhD project on the late Hong Kong-based artist Ha Bik Chuen (b.1925\, Guangdong\, d. 2009\, Hong Kong). A self-taught artist who did not receive any academic training in art\, Ha’s prolific creative output includes works across media as prints\, sculptures\, ink and mixed media paintings\, and collage books that were discovered posthumously. The archive he left behind includes 50 years’ worth of exhibition documentation and ephemera\, including photographs of over 2500 exhibitions that he took inside and outside of Hong Kong. This presentation focuses primarily on Ha Bik Chuen’s prints and print matrices which he called motherboards. It analyses the iconography and the production process of both motherboards and prints\, to explore how Ha as a self-trained artist experimented through composition\, materials and repetition.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/composition-repetition-on-materiality-ha-bik-chuens-prints-and-motherboards/
LOCATION:Classroom 245\, Room 2.45\, Jockey Club Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Academic Talk,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ha-Bik-Chuen-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211111T163000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211111T180000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222834
CREATED:20211102T092237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220505T013112Z
UID:9339-1636648200-1636653600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Ren Hang’s ‘Abject’ Photography
DESCRIPTION:Research Postgraduate Seminar\nRen Hang’s ‘Abject’ Photography: ‘Queer’ Bodies on the Boundaries of Urban Life\nDate: 11 November 2021 (Thursday)\nTime: 4:30-6:00pm\nVenue: Room 3.16\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\nZoom Link: https://hku.zoom.us/j/96670843029?pwd=NHRUeE1ydlZtaEdMRDBpZDNFd1BkUT09\nZoom Meeting ID: 966 7084 3029 | Password: 255140\nSpeaker: Mankit Lai\, MPhil candidate\, HKU \nAbstract\nUrbanization in China has continued expanding in the 21st century and left imprints upon contemporary photographic practices that feature the transforming cityscapes. Contemporary photography in China\, since the mid-1990s\, has turned an inward gaze on the changing lifestyles\, probing into the affective terrains that take agency from the personal and everyday narratives\, rather than just the motifs of demolition\, ruins and high-rises. Ren Hang (1987-2017) was a photographer practising snapshot photography that often stages his encounters with counter-cultural urban youths\, providing distinctive insights into the notions of affect\, intimacy and interrelation. Most of his photographic works depict youthful\, naked models idling around urban and rural sites. Ren featured those nude models as straddling both spatial and psychological realms\, eliciting inquiries into the intricate interrelations between identities\, bodies and the urban society. This seminar argues that Ren’s nude photography brings to the fore intersecting layers of ‘abject’ aesthetics and ‘queer’ identificatory potential. It examines how his works might challenge and destabilize the disciplinary orders\, systems of urban life in contemporary Chinese society.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/ren-hangs-abject-photography/
LOCATION:Classroom 316\, Room 3.16\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Academic Talk,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ren-Hangs-‘Abject-Photography-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211104T123000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211104T133000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222834
CREATED:20211102T090844Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220211T075058Z
UID:9334-1636029000-1636032600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Mapping the Contemporary Art World
DESCRIPTION:Mapping the Contemporary Art World\nDate: 4 November 2021 (Thursday)\nTime: 12:30-1:20pm\nVenue: Hui Pun Hing Lecture Hall (LE1)\, Library Extension Building\, Main Campus\n \nGuest speakers: \nHG Masters (Deputy Editor & Deputy Publisher\, ArtAsiaPacific)\nÖzge Ersoy (Public Programmes Lead\, Asia Art Archive)\nNick Yu (Associate Director\, Blindspot Gallery)\nPaola Sinisterra Tenorio (Textile Specialist\, CHAT)\n \nModerator: Dr. Yeewan Koon
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/mapping-the-contemporary-art-world/
LOCATION:Hui Pun Hing Lecture Hall (LE1)\, LE1\, LG1/F\, Library Extension Building\, Main Campus\, HKU
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Academic Talk,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/20211104-Mapping-the-Contemporary-Art-World-poster-4-speakers-01-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211028T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211028T190000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20211019T035011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211102T092057Z
UID:9296-1635442200-1635447600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Ships of the Silk Road: The Bactrian Camel in Chinese Jade
DESCRIPTION:Ships of the Silk Road: The Bactrian Camel in Chinese Jade\nDate: 28 October 2021 (Thursday)\nTime: 5:30-7:00pm\nLocation: CRT4.04\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\nZoom Link: https://hku.zoom.us/j/97490624001?pwd=ME5qT3Iyck9VekxCSVRJZ2ZNaERXUT09z\nZoom Meeting ID: 974 9062 4001 | Password: 008348\n \nFor hundreds of years\, the Bactrian camel ploughed a lonely furrow across the vast wilderness of Asia. This bizarre-looking\, temperamental yet hardy creature here came into its own as the core goods vehicle\, resolutely and reliably transporting to China fine things from the West while taking treasures out of the Middle Kingdom in return. It took all manner of goods linking China in the East with Rome in the West via Persia for perhaps 1\,000 years. Where the chariot\, wagon and other wheeled conveyances proved useless amidst the shifting desert dunes\, the surefooted progress of the camel – the archetypal ‘ship of the Silk Road’ – reigned supreme. The Bactrian camel was a subject that appealed particularly to Chinese artists because of its association with the exotic trade to mysterious Western lands. In this talk\, Angus Forsyth tells the full historical background to the key role of the Bactrian camels and explores the numerous diverse jade pieces depicting this iconic beast of burden. \nSpeaker: Mr. Angus Forsyth \nAngus Forsyth is an internationally respected collector of\, and authority on\, Chinese jade and a former president of the Oriental Ceramics Society of Hong Kong. He has given long and dedicated study to ancient jades\, with special attention to the Neolithic period\, publishing widely on the topic. His publications include Chinese Jade (1991) and Jades from China (coauthored with Brian McElney\, 1994) and Ships of the Silk Road: The Bactrian Camel in Chinese Jade (PWP\, 2018)\, which was the basis of his talk to RASBJ March 3 “Jade Camels of the Silk Road”.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/ships-of-the-silk-road-the-bactrian-camel-in-chinese-jade/
LOCATION:Faculty Room 404\, Room 4.04\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Ships-of-the-Silk-Road-final.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211016T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211016T120000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20211011T075340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211011T081151Z
UID:9288-1634382000-1634385600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:To hear is to see: Yoshitomo Nara and his love for music
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by Friends of Hong Kong Museum of Art.\n\nTo hear is to see: Yoshitomo Nara and his love for music\n\n\nDate: 16 October 2021 (Saturday)\nTime: 11:00am-12:00pm\nVenue: Lecture Hall\, Hong Kong Museum of Art\, Tsim Sha Tsui\nRegistration: Email to office@friendshkmoa.hk \nThis event is free for HKU students with valid student card. Please specify you are an HKU student in the registration.  \nPlaces are limited and are offered on a first-come-first-served basis. \nSpeaker \nDr. Yeewan Koon is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Art History at The University of Hong Kong. She has published numerous works including Nara Yoshitomo (2020)\, “A Chinese Canton? Painting the Local in Export Art” (2018) and A Defiant Brush: Su Renshan and the Politics of Painting in 19th Century Guangdong (2014). She is the recipient of several research awards including a Fulbright Senior Fellowship\, American Council of Learned Scholars\, and visiting scholarships at Cambridge University and Columbia University. Dr. Koon also works in the contemporary art field as a critic and curator. In 2014\, she was guest curator of It Begins with Metamorphosis: Xu Bing at the Asia Society\, Hong Kong Center\, and was one of the selected curators for the 12th Gwangju Biennale\, 2018. She is currently working on an international exhibition of Hong Kong art for 2021. \nModerator \nMs. Vanessa Wong
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/to-hear-is-to-see-yoshitomo-nara-and-his-love-for-music/
LOCATION:Hong Kong Museum of Art\, 10 Salisbury Rd\, Tsim Sha Tsui\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/WhatsApp-Image-2021-10-11-at-3.27.14-PM.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210724T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210724T123000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210624T080239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220104T025605Z
UID:8266-1627124400-1627129800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Biennales: Theatre(s) of Global Art?
DESCRIPTION:This talk is co-organized by HKU Fine Arts and Art History Alumni Association and our Department\, and is supported by HKU Museum Society\nBiennales: Theatre(s) of Global Art?\nDate: 24 July 2021 (Saturday) \nTime: 11:00am-12:30pm\nVenue: Online via Zoom Webinar/ CPD 2.42\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\n \nRegistration: Click here – open on 28/6/2021\, first come first served\, close on 21/7/2021\nAdvanced registration required \nOver the last 15 years many cities from Beijing to Colombo\, Singapore to Sharjah have jumped on the biennale bandwagon. The Venice Biennale may have set a historical precedent for spectacular art events but what does the more recent proliferation of biennales tell us? Are biennales a new fashionable art trend or a sign of increased awareness of global art practice? Through a consideration of various locations in Asia\, Europe\, and the Americas\, this talk will touch upon some of the key historical and contemporary examples of biennales and how they have impacted the global circuits of art from 1980 to the present. \nSpeaker: Kathleen Wyma\nDr Wyma is visiting assistant professor at the Department of Art History\, The University of Hong Kong. She teaches courses on contemporary global\, modern and South Asian art history\, among which is ARTH2090: Blockbusters\, bonanzas\, and biennales: contemporary art in the global age. Her research focuses on post 1945 Indian art\, with a special interest in post colonialism and the impact of intercultural exchange in an increasing globalized art world.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/biennales-theatres-of-global-art/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2021-2022,Academic Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/20210724-biennale-talk-poster-web-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="HKU Fine Arts and Art History Alumni Association":MAILTO:alumni@hkufaaa.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210629T180000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210629T191500
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210624T092741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210709T021455Z
UID:8271-1624989600-1624994100@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Introducing the exhibition 'So long\, thanks again for the fish'
DESCRIPTION:Five Artists in Conversation: Introducing the exhibition ‘So long\, thanks again for the fish’\nDate: 29 June 2021 (Tuesday)\nTime: 13:00-14:15 Eastern European Time / 18:00-19:15 Hong Kong Standard Time\nVenue: Zoom Webinar \nPanelists: Yeewan Koon (curator) with artists Luke Ching Chin Wai\, Christopher K. Ho\, Tungpang Lam\, Cédric Maridet and Angela Su. \nThe international exhibition So long\, thanks again for the fish explores the theme of contaminations as imperfect encounters and broken chains of relations in a world on the verge of reboot and showcases the works by five Hong Kong artists at the UNESCO World Heritage site of Suomenlinna\, Helsinki. \nThe duration of the panel discussion is approximately 30 minutes and afterwards there is a livestream Q & A session. \nRegister in advance for this webinar:\nhttps://hku.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_stnAIAuaRYqYylk29x7m-Q \nAfter registering\, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. \nFor more information about the exhibition please visit www.hiap.fi/event/so-long or the event facebook page. \n  \nRecording of the event\nClick to watch (posted on 8/7/2021)
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/introducing-the-exhibition-so-long-thanks-again-for-the-fish/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/20210629-Helsinki-conversation-image.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210526T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210526T210000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210308T045528Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210729T034025Z
UID:7273-1622057400-1622062800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:The Gendering of the Cultural Revolution
DESCRIPTION:CGED Research Seminar Series 2020-2021:\nThe Gendering of the Cultural Revolution: The Barefoot Doctor in High Socialist Narrative Feature Film\nDate: 26 May 2021 (Wednesday) \nTime: 7:30pm\nVenue: Zoom\n \nRegistration link: https://hkuems1.hku.hk/hkuems/ec_hdetail.aspx?guest=Y&ueid=73282 \nFrom late 1975 to early 1976\, three films featuring barefoot doctors (chijiao yisheng) as protagonists were released: “Chunmiao” [Spring Shoots]\, “Hongyu” [Red Rain\, or The New Doctor]\, and “Yanming hupan” [By the Side of Goose Crying Lake]. In this presentation\, I trace the rise of the barefoot doctor as a discursive figure of the socialist period\, with the trio of barefoot doctor films as testament to their ubiquity in the cultural imaginary of the period. Provoking powerful praise and dissent even within the explicitly revolutionary context of their own times\, the barefoot doctor’s emergence signified the undertaking of an ambitious\, epoch-defining\, but ultimately failed attempt to reposition medical labor within society. Using studio and film bureau production materials\, I argue that filmic depictions of the barefoot doctor used gender as a site of revolutionary articulation\, as the barefoot doctor sought to transform the medical field into a culture of lay expertise and everyday grassroots healers. Through the embrace of the rural female subject\, I find that these discursive attempts at reorganizing labor and society were ultimately produced through the gendering of revolution itself. \nSpeaker: Angie Baecker\nRespondent: Vivian Sheng\n \nAngie Baecker is a lecturer in the Department of Art History at the University of Hong Kong. Her research focuses on the cultural and material history of Maoist China\, the politics of the aesthetic\, and the postsocialist legacy in contemporary China. She received her PhD in 2020 from the department of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Michigan\, where she wrote her dissertation on the theorization and representation of social reproduction in works of literature\, film\, and art from the Maoist period. She holds a master’s degree in modern Chinese literature from Tsinghua University. She is a 2020 recipient of the Andy Warhol Foundation’s Arts Writers Grant\, and her writing on contemporary art has been published widely in venues including “Artforum”\, “ArtAsiaPacific”\, “frieze”\, “LEAP”\, “The New Statesman”\, and “Vulture”. She previously worked as an art critic and art book editor in Beijing. \nThis seminar is organised by the Faculty of Arts
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/the-gendering-of-the-cultural-revolution/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/AngieBaeckerMay26_edited.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210521T070000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210521T080000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210518T030653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210521T035826Z
UID:7691-1621580400-1621584000@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:The Labor of Good Governance
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by The Huntington Library\, Art Museum\, and Botanical Gardens.\n\nThe Labor of Good Governance: Cultivation Real and Imagined in the Imperial Garden of Clear Ripples in 18th-Century China\n\n\nDate: 21 May 2021 (Thursday)\nTime: 7-8am (HK time) / 4-5pm (PDT) \nEvent Registration: click here \nRoslyn Lee Hammers\, associate professor of art history at the University of Hong Kong\, discusses depictions of rural life produced for an 18th-century Chinese emperor’s residence. The Qianlong emperor (1711–1799) had stone stele carved with scenes of men and women producing rice and silk\, and he situated them in a reconstruction of a village in his Garden of Clear Ripples (Qing Yi Yuan\, now known as the Summer Palace\, Beijing). Hammers explores the appeal of such an unusual arrangement that enabled the emperor to observe both actual productive farmers and the representation of their labor in an imperial setting that united real agrarian work with ideated imagery of it.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/the-labor-of-good-governance/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Labour-of-Good-Governance.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210520T163000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210520T180000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210510T025627Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211102T092644Z
UID:7672-1621528200-1621533600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:From China to France
DESCRIPTION:Research Postgraduate Seminar\nFrom China to France: The Production and Reception of Chinese Paper-making Images in the 18th century\nDate: 20 May 2021 (Thursday)\nTime: 4:30-6:00pm\nVenue: online (click here for the zoom link); Room CPD 2.45 (with a capacity of 20\, first come first served)\nMeeting ID: 965 0195 3034 (password: 469077)\nSpeaker: Summer Xiaomin Wen\, Ph.D. candidate\, HKU \nAbstract\nPaper traditionally is regarded as one of the “Four Treasures of the Study (Wen fang si bao 文房四寶)” and is considered one of the Four Great Inventions of China. Visual representations of paper production flourished in the 18th century Qing (1644-1912) empire. During this time\, a series of independently produced albums dedicated to the production of bamboo paper were initiated and were sent from China to France and other European locations. My research focus on two paper-making albums in the collection of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France\, presently entitled as the Fabrication du Papier (The Fabrication of Paper) and the Art de faire le papier à la Chine (The Art of Making Paper in the Chinese Manner). The former was given to the library by the Sinologist Stanislas Julien (1797-1873) in 1840\, the latter was acquired through an auction of the late French book-dealer and King’s secretary Louis-François Delatour’s (1727-1807) collection. The primary interest of my research is to reconstruct the formation and reception of these paper-making albums to address issues such as the cross-cultural exchanges of technology\, commodities\, visual and material cultures between the Qing empire and France in the eighteenth century. \n 
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/from-china-to-france/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/20210520-seminar-wen-poster-web.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210421T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210421T180000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210419T020000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210729T034249Z
UID:7603-1619024400-1619028000@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Who is Yoshitomo Nara?
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by The University of Hong Kong Museum Society.\n\nOnline Lecture: “Who is Yoshitomo Nara?” with Dr. Yeewan Koon\n\n\nDate: 21 April 2021 (Wednesday)\nTime: 5-6pm\nVenue: Zoom \nTo register\, please click here \nRenowned for the big-headed girls\, Yoshitomo Nara is one of Japan’s most iconic artists of our time. Inspired by music\, literature\, childhood memories\, Nara explores the themes of isolation\, rebellion\, and spirituality through painting\, sculpture\, ceramic and installation. \nThe HKU Museum Society is pleased to invite Dr. Yeewan Koon\, author of the newly published monograph Nara Yoshitomo (Phaidon\, 2020) to share her research on Nara and her experience of working with the artist.  This talk will be moderated by Catherine Kwai\, Founder and Managing Director of Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery. \nLecture Synopsis \nYoshitomo Nara is an international artist but whose fame sometimes eclipse our understanding of his art. This talk provides an introduction to his practice\, the events that have shaped them\, and the new directions being taken in his artworks. This lecture is also a lesson in looking. We will spend time examining and discussing his works by looking closely at how he paints and to use our discoveries to enrich our understanding of who is Yoshitomo Nara. \nSpeaker \nDr. Yeewan Koon is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Art History at The University of Hong Kong. She has published numerous works including Nara Yoshitomo (2020)\, “A Chinese Canton? Painting the Local in Export Art” (2018) and A Defiant Brush: Su Renshan and the Politics of Painting in 19th Century Guangdong (2014). She is the recipient of several research awards including a Fulbright Senior Fellowship\, American Council of Learned Scholars\, and visiting scholarships at Cambridge University and Columbia University. Dr. Koon also works in the contemporary art field as a critic and curator. In 2014\, she was guest curator of It Begins with Metamorphosis: Xu Bing at the Asia Society\, Hong Kong Center\, and was one of the selected curators for the 12th Gwangju Biennale\, 2018. She is currently working on an international exhibition of Hong Kong art for 2021. \nModerator \nMs Catherine Kwai is the Founder and Managing Director of Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery. She established Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery in 1991\, motivated by a passion for art and her wish to bridge the cultural exchange between China and the West. Kwai Fung Hin reflects the strength and knowledge for the 20th century art in China and Europe. In the past 30 years\, Kwai Fung Hin has organized over 100 exhibitions at the gallery and has collaborated and curated exhibitions with renowned museums and institutes. Kwai Fung Hin has collaborated with international publishing house Rizzoli to publish artists’ monograph. In 2011\, Ms Catherine Kwai was made “Knight of the National Order of the Merit” for her contribution to the arts.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/online-lecture-who-is-yoshitomo-nara-with-dr-yeewan-koon/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/hkums_nara.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20210415T163000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20210415T180000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210408T083811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210408T085423Z
UID:7579-1618504200-1618509600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Pheasants and the Jiangnan Literati
DESCRIPTION:Research Postgraduate Seminar\nPheasants and the Jiangnan Literati: Pheasant Paintings of Wang Yuan (act. c.1300 – 1360)\nDate: 15 April 2021 (Thursday)\nTime: 4:30-6:00pm\nVenue: online (click here for the zoom link)\nMeeting ID: 975 8542 7572 (password: 020106)\nSpeaker: Leung Ge Yau Candy\, Ph.D. candidate\, HKU \nAbstract\nBirds have a long history of serving as motifs to represent auspicious meaning in visual representations in Chinese culture. Colourful paintings with phoenixes\, cranes and a variety of birds expressing good wishes of longevity and fortune adorn the walls of tombs and palaces of the imperial and aristocratic families of the Tang (618-907) and Song (960-1279) dynasties. At times\, different species of birds are presented in background settings with specific seasonal flowers to make up rebuses carrying ideas of prosperity in paintings. In this seminar\, through the examination of the motif of the pheasant in textual and visual representations\, I seek to explore the meanings of pheasants beyond readings of rebuses and representations of auspiciousness. I closely examine three pheasant paintings of the Yuan painter Wang Yuan 王淵 (act. c. 1300 – 1360) to propose that the artist depicted the bird paintings in a specific way to appeal to regional elite patrons. He deployed contrasting brushwork to create images of a paradise for recluses that draws upon features of Jiangnan gardens and land. In this talk\, I discuss how some educated elites in Yuan-era Jiangnan sought to showcase their knowledge and cultural accomplishments\, establishing in part their literati identity through the appreciation and possession of pheasant paintings. \n 
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/pheasants-and-the-jiangnan-literati/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/20210415-seminar-leung-candy-web-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210307T143000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210307T163000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210308T063157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210729T035021Z
UID:7279-1615127400-1615134600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Marginalisation and Empowerment
DESCRIPTION:CGED Research Seminar Series 2020-2021:\nMarginalisation and Empowerment: Voices of Hong Kong Women\nPanel 2: Visual Storytelling: Photography as Empowerment\n\nDate: 7 March 2021 (Sunday) \nTime: 2:30-4:30pm\nVenue: Zoom \nThis seminar is co-organised by the Committee on Gender Equality and Diversity (CGED)\, Faculty of Arts\, The University of Hong Kong (HKU)\, and the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) as a concurrent event of the photo exhibition “The Way We Are” at G/F\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, HKU\, from 6-23 March 2021. \nIn 1989\, American scholar and civil rights advocate Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the term “intersectionality” to capture how various forms of inequality often operate together and exacerbate each other\, arguing that neither sexism nor racism alone could account for experiences of oppression among African American women. \nThirty years on\, the concept remains a useful and relevant lens to understand the marginalisation of women in different cultural contexts. Focusing on carers\, non-Chinese youth\, migrant workers and new arrivals from mainland China\, this seminar examines how gender\, ethnic identity and socio-economic status continue to intersect and inform the challenges facing underrepresented women in Hong Kong today\, and their implications for public policy. It also explores the history and potential of art – photography in particular – as a medium of empowerment and catharsis. \nModerator: Roslyn L. Hammers \nThis seminar is co-organised by the Faculty of Arts and Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC)
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/marginalisation-and-empowerment-voices-of-hong-kong-women/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/07032021.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210120T100000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210120T110000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210114T040016Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210419T020235Z
UID:7111-1611136800-1611140400@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Yoshitomo Nara | No longer just a girl with a knife: Art after Fukushima
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).\n\nArt & Conversation: Yoshitomo Nara | No longer just a girl with a knife: Art after Fukushima\n\n\n\n\nDate: 20 January 2021 (Wednesday)\nTime: 10-11am (HK time) \nWebinar Registration: click here \nThis series takes viewers through three different periods in Nara’s career\, including his early art practice\, questions narratives of “Japanese-ness” at the turn of the century\, and the impact of the 2011 Great Tohoku disaster on Nara’s art. Presented by Yeewan Koon\, Chair of the Department of Art History at the University of Hong Kong and author of Yoshitomo Nara\, the first truly authoritative monograph on the artist in more than a decade.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/yoshitomo-nara-no-longer-just-a-girl-with-a-knife-art-after-fukushima/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/20210120-lacma-koon.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210113T100000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210113T110000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210111T104514Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210419T020220Z
UID:7098-1610532000-1610535600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Yoshitomo Nara | Nara\, kawaii\, and the "Superflat" concept
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).\n\nArt & Conversation: Yoshitomo Nara | Nara\, kawaii\, and the “Superflat” concept\n\n\n\n\nDate: 13 January 2021 (Wednesday)\nTime: 10-11am (HK time) \nWebinar Registration: click here \nThis series takes viewers through three different periods in Nara’s career\, including his early art practice\, questions narratives of “Japanese-ness” at the turn of the century\, and the impact of the 2011 Great Tohoku disaster on Nara’s art. Presented by Yeewan Koon\, Chair of the Department of Art History at the University of Hong Kong and author of Yoshitomo Nara\, the first truly authoritative monograph on the artist in more than a decade.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/art-conversation-yoshitomo-nara-nara-kawaii-and-the-superflat-concept/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/20210113-lacma-koon.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210106T100000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20210106T110000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20210104T073415Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210419T020201Z
UID:7044-1609927200-1609930800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Yoshitomo Nara | Who is that big-headed girl?
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).\n\nArt & Conversation: Yoshitomo Nara | Who is that big-headed girl?\n\n\n\n\nDate: 6 January 2021 (Wednesday)\nTime: 10-11am (HK time) \nWebinar Registration: click here \nThis series takes viewers through three different periods in Nara’s career\, including his early art practice\, questions narratives of “Japanese-ness” at the turn of the century\, and the impact of the 2011 Great Tohoku disaster on Nara’s art. Presented by Yeewan Koon\, Chair of the Department of Art History at the University of Hong Kong and author of Yoshitomo Nara\, the first truly authoritative monograph on the artist in more than a decade. \n\n\n\n  \n 
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/yoshitomo-nara-who-is-that-big-headed-girl/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/20210106-lacma-koon.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201214T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201214T110000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20201217T063954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201217T063954Z
UID:7004-1607940000-1607943600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:The Laboring of Art
DESCRIPTION:Art History Seminar:\nThe Laboring of Art: The Rise of Socialist Amateur Art Practice and the Arrival of the Contemporary in the People’s Republic of China\nDate: 14 December 2020 (Monday) \nTime: 10:00am\nVenue: Zoom\n \nRegistration required. \nThis talk takes up the question of amateur art practice during the socialist period (late 1940s to late 1970s) in China\, and its attempt to convert the rarified practice of processional\, academy-trained artists into an everyday praxis. Known variously as yeyu meishu chuangzuo\, qunzhong meishu huodong\, gongnongbing meishu\, and nongmin hua\, amateur art practice originated from small art study groups held at industrial and agricultural labor sites\, where rural farmers and industrial workers met to create images depicting their labor and lifestyles. I argue that socialist amateur art practice not only changed the class and labor relations that had previously defined the fine arts\, but also converted the expert and professional cultures of the fine arts into a grassroots practice of the everyday. By creating new publics for art appreciation\, and by centering art production outside the academy\, amateur art practice challenged the dominance of the art academy as a legitimizing site of training\, and evacuated concepts of artistic genius and technical accomplishment. I end the talk by connecting the amateur art activity of the socialist period with the experimental art practices of the Reform period\, asking how the mantle of avant-garde practices was passed from the revolutionary guard to its political and cultural dissidents. \nSpeaker: Angie Baecker  \nAngie Baecker is a lecturer in the Department of Art History at the University of Hong Kong. Her research focuses on the cultural and material history of Maoist China\, the politics of aesthetic\, and the postsocialist legacy in contemporary China. She received her PhD in 2020 from the University of Michigan\, and holds a master’s degree in modern Chinese literature from Tsinghua University.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/the-laboring-of-art/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Baecker-seminar-2.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20201210T163000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20201210T180000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20201202T024127Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201202T061634Z
UID:6971-1607617800-1607623200@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Watermoon Avalokiteshvara Paintings and their Viewers and Producers in East Asia
DESCRIPTION:Research Postgraduate Seminar\nWatermoon Avalokiteshvara Paintings and their Viewers and Producers in East Asia\nDate: 10 December 2020 (Thursday)\nTime: 5:30-6:30pm \nVenue: 7.58\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\n \nOnline attendance via Zoom is possible (click here for the zoom link)\nMeeting ID: 979 3264 4258 (no password required) \nAbstract\nEver since its earliest inception in the metropolitan capitals of Luoyang and Chang’an of Tang China (618-907 CE)\, Watermoon Avalokiteshvara as a subject matter of depiction had spread to different polities of East Asia in the following centuries. Polities such as Wuyue (907-978 CE) and Song (960-1279 CE) in China continued to produce Watermoon Avalokiteshvara images\, making stylistic and iconographic innovations that reflect the different preferences of the day. This image was also spread to Japan and Korea. By the 14th century\, both Kamakura Japan (1192-1333 CE) and the Koryo Kingdom (918-1392 CE) in Korea had become important centres for consuming and producing images of Watermoon Avalokiteshvara. \nIn this presentation\, I first argue how one should view Watermoon Avalokiteshvara paintings in the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms (907-979 CE) and Song periods alongside contemporaneous art historical development. Most relevant to this discussion is landscape painting’s development as genre. I then revisit the Koryo examples and argue for a multi-identities perspective of viewing them both as representative of Koryo national style and within the context of the larger Yuan imperium (1271-1368 CE). This transnational perspective can also garner better understandings of what I termed Sino-Japanese examples found in 14th century Kamakura Japan. This presentation concludes with a close reading of two enigmatic examples of Watermoon Avalokiteshvara in the Nara National Museum and the Rijksmuseum collections in Japan and the Netherlands. I shall argue how these works are results of transnational exchanges. \nSpeaker\nMr. Konstance Chuntung Li is a final year doctoral student at the Department of Art History\, University of Hong Kong. He holds a M.St. in Archaeology from the University of Oxford. His current research has received generous support from the Japan Foundation and is a comprehensive study that examines Watermoon Avalokiteshvara paintings in East Asia from the 9th to the 14th centuries. At present\, Mr. Li is also a member of the National Gallery Singapore’s Language Panel.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/watermoon-avalokiteshvara-paintings-and-their-viewers-and-producers-in-east-asia/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/20201210-rpg-seminar-konstance-li-poster-finalized_v2.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201125T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201125T183000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20201028T071954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201112T025444Z
UID:6805-1606325400-1606329000@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:“On the Museum's Ruins” An introduction to Douglas Crimp (1944 – 2019)
DESCRIPTION:Art History Lecture Series:\n“On the Museum’s Ruins”\nAn introduction to Douglas Crimp (1944 – 2019)\nDate: 4\, 11\, 25 November 2020 (Wednesday)\nTime: 5:30-6:30pm \nVenue: CPD-2.16 (Run Run Shaw Tower)\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\n \nRegistration required. Please email maah@hku.hk. \nOn the occasion of this year’s translation to Chinese of Douglas Crimp’s seminal book On The Museum’s Ruins (1993)\, the Department of Art History offers an introductory course the discursive field of Douglas Crimp (1944-2019)\, the art historian\, critic\, curator and AIDS activist\, who generated some of the most enduring\, foundational texts on postmodern art\, queer theory\, and institutional critique. \nGuest Lecturer Professor: Inti Guerrero (Hong Kong) \nInti Guerrero is the Estrellita B. Brodsky Adjunct Curator at Tate Modern (since 2016). He has curated exhibitions and symposia in institutions globally\, and has published in journals including Afterall (Central Saint Martins). In Hong Kong\, he has curated and co-curated exhibitions at Para Site and Asia Art Archive. \n  \nSeminar Readings \nDAY 1: 4 November 2020 (Wednesday)\n[Chinese] Crimp\, Douglas. “On the Museum’s Ruins.” In On the Museum’s Ruins\, trans. Y. Tang\, 33-50. Nanjing: Jiangsu Phoenix Fine Arts Publishing Ltd\, 2020.\n[English] Crimp\, Douglas. “On the Museum’s Ruins.” In On the Museum’s Ruins\, 44-60. Cambridge: MIT Press\, 1993. \nDAY 2: 11 November 2020 (Wednesday)\n[English] Crimp\, Douglas. “Pictures.” October 8 (Spring 1979): 75-88. \nDAY 3: 25 November 2020 (Wednesday)\n[English] Crimp\, Douglas. “The Boys in my Bedroom.” In Melancholia and Moralism: Essays on AIDS and Queer Politics\, 151-163. Cambridge: MIT Press\, 2002.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/on-the-museums-ruins-an-introduction-to-douglas-crimp-1944-2019/
LOCATION:CPD-2.16\, CPD 2.16 (Run Run Shaw Tower)\, Centennial Campus\, HKU
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Lecture-series_On-the-Museums-Ruins-05-01-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20201117T183000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20201117T193000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20201111T180023Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210726T094726Z
UID:7106-1605637800-1605641400@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:HKUFAAA: Knowing Botticelli
DESCRIPTION:This talk is organized by HKU Fine Arts and Art History Alumni Association (HKUFAAA).\n\nKnowing Botticelli\n\n\nDate: 17 November 2020 (Tuesday)\nTime: 6:30pm-7:30pm\nVenue: Online (Zoom) \nSpeaker: Dr. Sim Hinman WAN\nMedium: English \nCost: Free\nRegistration: required\, before 17 November noon (register now)\nZoom Meeting ID: 964 4575 6433\n(URL and password will be sent in an email confirmation) \nWelcoming all alumni and friends\, this online talk aims to complement the current exhibition “The Hong Kong Jockey Club Series: Botticelli and His Times– Masterworks from the Uffizi” (open until 24 Feb 2021) at Hong Kong Museum of Art. It will provide a historical context for audience to further understand and appreciate those masterpieces on display. It will also cover some other paintings by this extraordinary Florentine artist and comparisons will be drawn among them. \n 
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/knowing-botticelli/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/20201117-HKUFAAA-Knowing-Botticelli-poster-web-01-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="HKU Fine Arts and Art History Alumni Association":MAILTO:alumni@hkufaaa.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20200909T183000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20200909T193000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20200825T081852Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200825T084051Z
UID:6647-1599676200-1599679800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:An Unexpected Masterpiece
DESCRIPTION:Art and its Histories: Scholars in Lecture\nAn Unexpected Masterpiece: Luo Ping’s Ghost Amusement Scroll\nDate:  9 September 2020 (Wednesday)\nTime: 6:30-7:30pm\nRegistration: Click here to join the Free Facebook Live Webinar \nThis lecture introduces one of the most unusual iconic works in Chinese art history. It is a painting that by all counts should not be a “masterpiece.” It is a painting of ghosts (rather than a landscape)\, it is a handscroll of smaller paintings in uneven sizes mounted together (therefore somewhat ad hoc)\, and it was made by an artist seeking patrons after years of being under his charismatic teacher’s shadow. It also collected over 160 admiring colophons. So why did this painting garner such attention? Why is Luo Ping’s Ghost Amusement Scroll important? This lecture given by HKU’s Dr. Yeewan Koon in conversation with Orientations Magazine publisher Yifawn Lee looks at how Chinese paintings are mediators of intimate relationships\, whether between painters and their audiences or between masters and disciples\, and why the strange world of ghosts captured the imagination of an eighteenth-century Chinese art world. \nArt and its Histories: Scholars in Lecture is a series of public lectures organized by the Art History Department\, The University of Hong Kong and presented in collaboration with Asia Society Hong Kong Center\, Friends of Hong Kong Museum of Art\, and the University of Hong Kong Museum Society. The programs aim to deliver current art-historical thinking in an accessible manner presented by specialists in the field. The series is part of the Art History Department’s broader dedication to promoting the importance and relevance of art history in Hong Kong. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nSpeaker:  \nDr. Yeewan Koon is Chair of the Department of Art History at The University of Hong Kong. Her primary research is on Chinese painting and she is currently completing a study on the “self-knowing” copy in the sixteenth century. Koon’s academic interest also expands into contemporary art in Asia with a recent monograph of Yoshitomo Nara\, and curatorial work at the Gwangju Biennale (2018) and a forthcoming exhibition on Hong Kong art in Helsinki (2021). She is the recipient of numerous awards including from the American Council of Learned Scholar\, and as Fulbright Senior Fellow. \nYifawn Lee is the publisher and editor of Orientations\, a scholarly magazine for collectors and connoisseurs of East and Southeast Asia\, the Himalayas and South Asia founded in 1969. After finishing her studies\, she worked in finance and later joined Orientations in 2008. In 2014\, she founded Asian Art Hong Kong as a platform to provide art-related lectures and events. In 2018\, she helped organize ‘The Blue Road: Mastercrafts from Persia’ at Liang Yi Museum and ‘From Two Arises Three: The Collaborative Works of Arnold Chang and Michael Cherney’ at The University Museum and Art Gallery of the University of Hong Kong. She currently sits on the advisory board of Liang Yi Museum and on the executive committee of the Friends of Hong Kong Museum of Art. \nCo-presented by: \n                  
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/an-unexpected-masterpiece/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:2020-2021,Lecture Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/20200909-artanditshistories-koon.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Department of Art History":MAILTO:art.history@hku.hk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20200610T183000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20200610T200000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20200529T025929Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T123559Z
UID:4382-1591813800-1591819200@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Writing Nara Yoshitomo
DESCRIPTION:Writing Nara Yoshitomo: A Conversation with Author Yeewan Koon\nDrink Reception 6:30pm\nDiscussion 7:00pm\nClose 8:00pm \nYeewan Koon\, author of Nara Yoshitomo (Phaidon\, 2020)\, will join us in an evening conversation together with Elaine Kwok and Alexandra Seno to discuss this first-ever monograph on the internationally acclaimed artist\, which has been described by New York Magazine as “a definitive work”. In this talk\, Koon shares her experience of working with Nara\, how she set about to understand his practice\, and how she looks at some of his most iconic works. \n>> Watch the 30 seconds promo \nAdmission\nOffline (join in person\, registration required): Members $100; Non-members $180\, Price includes a free copy of Life is Only One: Yoshitomo Nara 2015 Exhibition Catalogue by ASHK. \nOnline (via Facebook/ Youtube): free admission \nSpeakers\nYeewan Koon is Associate Professor and Chair of the Fine Arts Department at the University of Hong Kong. She has received awards from Fulbright\, American Council of Learned Scholars and as Mary Griggs visiting scholar at Columbia University. Her interest in how art scrutinises social and human values led to her book A Defiant Brush: Su Renshan and the Politics of Painting in 19th century Guangdong (2013). She has also curated exhibitions including It Begins with Metamorphosis: Xu Bing at Asia Society\, Hong Kong Centre (2014)\, and Faultlines as part of the 12th Gwangju Biennale (2018). She is currently completing her work on the conceit of copies in Ming China\, and planning the first group show of Hong Kong art in Finland. \nAs Director\, Chairman’s Office and Auctioneer\, Elaine Kwok is responsible for business development and top client relationships in Asia. Before joining the Chairman’s Office\, Kwok ran Christie’s Education in Asia\, a programme she started in 2010 to inspire collectors and enthusiasts to engage with the art world. In 2018 Kwok sold Wood and Rock by Su Shi for US$60 million\, the most expensive work of art that Christie’s has ever sold in Asia. Kwok became the first Christie’s auctioneer to pass the China auctioneer license exam in 2015. A Hong Kong native\, she holds a BA from Harvard University\, an MA from School of Oriental and African Studies\, University of London\, and an MBA from Stanford University. \nAlexandra Seno is Head of Development at Asia Art Archive. An art critic for RTHK Radio 4\, she has served on the executive committee of the Oriental Ceramics Society of Hong Kong\, the board of Para Site Art Space\, and as adviser to non-profits Spring Workshop in Hong Kong and Calle Wright in Manila. She has written about culture and the economics of culture for publications including the New York Times\, the Wall Street Journal\, Newsweek Magazine\, The Art Newspaper and Architectural Record Magazine. \n\n\n\n>> Watch the recording of the event\n\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/writing-nara-yoshitomo/
LOCATION:Asia Society Hong Kong Center\, 9 Justice Drive\, Admiralty
CATEGORIES:Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/20200610-koon-nara-book-launch.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200421T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200421T193000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20200415T073604Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201217T063831Z
UID:3567-1587493800-1587497400@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Rome and her Legacy
DESCRIPTION:Art and its Histories: Scholars in Lecture\nRome and her Legacy: Classical Art in the 21st Century\nDate:  21 April 2020 (Tuesday)\nTime: 6:30-7:30pm\nRegistration: Click here to register via Zoom (With a limit of 25 guests)\nClick here to join the Free Facebook Live Webinar \nAccording to legend\, on this date\, April 21st\, 753 BCE\, the semi-divine twin brothers\, Romulus and Remus\, founded the settlement that was to become the majestic city of Rome. This event spawned a mighty empire and nurtured a visual culture that left a lasting imprint on the subsequent civilizations and (art) histories of the western hemisphere. What better way to acknowledge such a birthday than to investigate and interrogate its continued legacy? Today\, some 2\,772 years later\, remnants of Roman art and architecture are stillbeing discovered meters below the modern cities of Europe\, Africa and the Near East\, as well as in the deserts and forests of over 40 countries whose modern borders now fall within the territory once controlled from Rome. With a particular focus on wall paintings\, this talk details some of these recent discoveries so as to introduce revitalized assessments of “Classical” art for the new millennium. \nArt and its Histories: Scholars in Lecture is a series of public lectures organized by the Department of Fine Arts\, HKU and presented in collaboration with Asia Society Hong Kong Center\, Friends of Hong Kong Museum of Art\, and The University of Hong Kong Museum Society. The programs aim to deliver current art-historical thinking in an accessible manner presented by specialists in the field. The series is part of the Fine Art Department’s broader dedication to promoting the importance and relevance of art history in Hong Kong. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nSpeaker: Susanna McFadden \nSusanna McFaddenis Assistant Professor and MA coordinator in the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Hong Kong. She holds a PhD in Art History from the University of Pennsylvania and specializes in the art\, architecture\, and archaeology of the Roman and late antique Mediterranean\, with a particular emphasis on the medium of wall painting. She has been a fellow in residence at the American Academy in Rome (2009-2010) and the Getty Research Institute (2016) and since 2005 has been a member of the New York University sponsored team excavating the late Roman site of Amheida in Egypt’s Dakhleh Oasis. Recent publications include essays on the wall paintings from Amheida and a multi-disciplinary exploration of the Tetrarchic era wall paintings in Egypt\, The Art of Empire: The Roman Frescoes and Imperial Cult Chamber in Luxor Temple (Yale University Press\, 2015)\, which won the 2017 Archaeological Institute of America’s James R. Weisman Book Award.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/rome-and-her-legacy-classical-art-in-the-21st-century/
CATEGORIES:Lecture Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/0421-Susanna-McFadden1024_1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200118T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200118T133000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20200109T064447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200622T083051Z
UID:388-1579343400-1579354200@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Colloquium on Pearl River Delta\, Art\, and Global Exchange in Maritime Trade History
DESCRIPTION:Colloquium on Pearl River Delta\, Art\, and Global Exchange in Maritime Trade History\nDate: 18 January 2019 (Saturday)\nTime: 10:30am-1:30pm\nVenue: Hong Kong Museum of Art \nDr Yeewan Koon will give a paper “The Dilemmas of the Portrait Gift” at this colloquium. This paper looks at the use of portraiture by the Manchu official Qiying (1787-1858) who was sent by the Daoguang Emperor (r.1820-1850) to Guangdong for the negotiations of the Nanjing Treaty after the Opium War (1839-1841). By looking at the different practices involved in the gifting of portraits in Europe and China\, the paper will highlight the problems of communications and exchanges between Britain and China during this period. It will also show how Guangdong’s leading merchants were instrumental in these discussions and how they were active players in Guangdong’s local community and Qing politics. Later\, she will join other speakers Dr. John D. Wong and Prof. Ching May Bo in a panel discussion led by Dr. Roslyn Hammers. \nSupported by the Lo Kwee Seong Foundation\nCo-hosted by Hong Kong Museum of Art and the Oriental Ceramic Society of Hong Kong \n \nRead more about the event.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/colloquium-on-pearl-river-delta/
LOCATION:Hong Kong Museum of Art\, 10 Salisbury Rd\, Tsim Sha Tsui\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Online-1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200111T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200111T113000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20200304T065716Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200622T083454Z
UID:2292-1578736800-1578742200@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Catholic Realism in the Qing Court
DESCRIPTION:Art and its Histories: Scholars in Lecture\nCatholic Realism in the Qing Court: Qianlong’s Jesuit Painters\nDate: 11 January 2020 (Saturday)\nTime: 10:30am (light breakfast reception begins at 10:00am)\nVenue: Asia Society Hong Kong Center\, 9 Justice Drive\, Admiralty\nRegistration: Register via Asia Society Online Ticketing\nOne of the greatest cases of Sino-European cultural interaction before 1911 took place in the Qing court when emperors Kangxi\, Yongzheng\, and Qianlong hosted and patronized a number of Jesuit artists and artisans from Europe. The Jesuits were trying to impress the emperors with supposedly superior scientific knowledge in order to help spread Christianity in China\, while the emperors integrated the missionaries’ foreign painting techniques into court art to extend their own political ends. \nThis talk presents two cases of this remarkable cultural exchange\, analyzing the techniques and effects of realism in illusionistic wall paintings designed by the famous Italian brother Giuseppe Castiglione (Lang Shining\, 1688-1766) and in military portraits by the more obscure French brother Jean-Denis Attiret (Wang Zhicheng\, 1702-68). Both artists worked directly for the Qianlong emperor (r.1736-95)\, faithfully serving his imperial ideology\, and both achieved a degree of intercultural fusion rarely seen anywhere else. \nArt and its Histories: Scholars in Lecture is a series of public lectures organized by the Department of Fine Arts\, HKU and presented in collaboration with Asia Society Hong Kong Center\, Friends of Hong Kong Museum of Art\, and The University of Hong Kong Museum Society. The programs aim to deliver current art-historical thinking in an accessible manner presented by specialists in the field. The series is part of the Fine Art Department’s broader dedication to promoting the importance and relevance of art history in Hong Kong. \nSpeaker: Greg Thomas \nProf. Thomas teaches various aspects of European and American art and architecture from the 18th to 20th centuries\, as well as the first-year survey of western art. A specialist in 19th-century French art\, he has published Art and Ecology in Nineteenth-Century France: The Landscapes of Théodore Rousseau (Princeton\, 2000) and Impressionist Children: Childhood\, Family\, and Modern Identity in French Art (Yale\, 2010). Recent research has focused on artistic interactions between Europe and China in the 18th and 19th centuries\, part of a long-term study of the Chinese palace of Yuanming Yuan. He has published two major articles on Yuanming Yuan and its looting (in Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide\, Autumn 2008; and in Art History\, February 2009)\, along with other essays on landscape painting and ecology\, Impressionism\, and French and British engagement with Chinese culture. He is also the assistant editor of the 13-volume Wuming (No Name) Painting Catalogue\, (Hong Kong University Press\, 2010)\, which surveys the Wuming group of painters active in Beijing in the 1970s.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/catholic-realism-in-the-qing-court-qianlongs-jesuit-painters/
LOCATION:Asia Society Hong Kong Center\, 9 Justice Drive\, Admiralty
CATEGORIES:Lecture Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/castiglione.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20191204T180000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20191204T193000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20191201T062606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200622T082023Z
UID:157-1575482400-1575487800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Rembrandt at the Rijksmuseum
DESCRIPTION:Rembrandt at the Rijksmuseum\nDate: 4 December 2019 (Wednesday)\nTime: 6:30pm (reception begins at 6:00pm)\nVenue: Laundry Steps\, Taikwun\nTo RSVP\, contact f.ho@taschen.com\nThe Department of Fine Arts and Taschen Books present a wonderful evening on Rembrandt with Duncan Bull\, curator from Rijksmuseum. Taschen Books is also kindly hosting a special Dutch snacks and cocktails reception before the conversation starting at 6pm. So come\, enjoy a cocktail\, peruse some art books\, learn about Rembrandt! Our teachers including Dr. Hammers and Dr. Lastra will also be there joining in the festivities at Taikwun. \n 
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/rembrandt-at-the-rijksmuseum/
LOCATION:Taikwun Laundry Steps\, Laundry Steps\, Taikwun\, 10 Hollywood Road\, Central\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:Conversation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/gif:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/20191204-Taschen.gif
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191031T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191031T183000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20200312T043711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200528T064410Z
UID:2618-1572541200-1572546600@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:A Tale of Two Books
DESCRIPTION:A Tale of Two Books: Negotiating Art and Commerce in William Alexander’s Visions of Late 18th-Century China\nDate: 31 October 2019 (Thursday)\nTime: 5:00pm\nVenue: Room 7.58\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus \nThe period 1790-1830 was a golden age for Egnlish illustrated books\, during which a great variety of colour printed images were reproduced and circulated to an emerging middle-class readership. Costume books\, a pictorial genre from early-modern Europe that depicts the dress and manners of people\, were revived at this time to collect and categorize new information of foreign countries found in the process of Britain’s global expansion. Meanwhile\, the country experienced an efflorescence of visual arts\, fueled by the rise of watercolor landscape\, the emergence of a polite society\, and the dynamic interchange between painting and print. \nThis talk focuses on two picture books by Willian Alexander\, The Costume of China (1805) and Picturesque Representation of the Dress and Manners of the Chinese (1814)\, which grew out of the traditions of travel book\, ethnographic art\, and street cries in the context of Britain’s first diplomatic mission to China. As official draughtsman to the Macartney Embassy (1792-1794)\, Alexander recorded the social and cultural life under Emperor Qianlong’s reign in pen-and-ink drawings\, which he transformed into picturesque printed vignettes of Chinese landscape\, architecture\, technology and people. By examining these two publications within a larger culture of book reading and collecting in Britain\, this talk argues that Alexander negotiated artistic individuality\, commercial pressure\, and publishers’ agendas in the making of his books to engage an urban elite audience with growing scientific knowledge of China before the First Opium War. \nSpeaker: Zhu Wenqi \nMs. Zhu received her BA from the Department of Fine Arts\, the University of Hong Kong\, and is currently an MPhil candidate there. Her interests include the representation of East Asia in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century illustrated books\, newspapers\, periodicals\, and other forms of printed images in Europe and America\, as well as cross-cultural art exchange in general. Her research is partially funded by the Andrew Wyld Research Support Grants administrated through the Paul Mellon Center for Studies in British Art.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/a-tale-of-two-books-negotiating-art-and-commerce-in-william-alexanders-visions-of-late-18th-century-china/
LOCATION:Faculty Room 758\, Room 7.58\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://arthistory.hku.hk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Echo-Zhu-seminar-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20191030T170000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20191030T180000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20191024T042607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200622T080554Z
UID:145-1572454800-1572458400@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:Conversation on Technology\, Art and Narrative
DESCRIPTION:Conversation on Technology\, Art and Narrative: In Conversation with New Media Artist Cao Shu\nDate: 30 October 2019 (Wednesday)\nTime: 5:00-6:30pm\nVenue: CC Lounge\, MB150\, Main Building\, HKU \nSpeaker: Cao Shu \nCao Shu mainly works in new media art in Hangzhou. His artworks focus predominantly in the mediums of animation and installation. More recently. Cao Shu works on the relationship between digital existence and memory\, multi-view narrative in space\, and viewing in CG rendering technology. In 2017\, Cao Shu attended the Atelier Mondial artist residency program supported by the Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia. In 2019\, he has attended Koganecho Japan Art Festival Residency. His works have won such awards as the New Narrative Award from A Long Week of Short Films\, and the Beijing International Short Film Festival Award for Outstanding Artistic Achievement. Recent exhibitions include “Koganecho Bazaar 2019” (Yokohama\, Japan\, 2019)\, “The Exhibition of Annual of Contemporary Art of China 2018” (Beijing Minsheng Art Museum\, Beijing\, China\, 2019)\, “Fiction Art” (OCT Contemporary Art Terminal\, Shenzhen\, China\, 2018)\, “Pity Party” (SLEEPCENTER\, New York\, USA\, 2018)\, “Presence – Young Artist Exhibition” (China Academy of Art Museum\, Hangzhou\, China\, 2018)\, DOK Leipzig (Leipzig\, Germany\, 2018)\, Hamburg “China Time” International Art Festival (Die Sammlung Falckenberg Hall\, Hamburg\, Germany\, 2016).
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/conversation-on-technology-art-and-narrative-in-conversation-with-new-media-artist-cao-shu/
LOCATION:Common Core Lounge\, MB150\, Main Building\, Main Campus\, HKU\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:Conversation
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190829T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190829T173000
DTSTAMP:20260521T222835
CREATED:20190820T082108Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200622T011753Z
UID:190-1567094400-1567099800@arthistory.hku.hk
SUMMARY:The Botanical Illustrations of Boym's Flora Sinensis and Overlapping Knowledge Networks in Seventeenth-Century Eurasia
DESCRIPTION:The Botanical Illustrations of Boym’s Flora Sinensis and Overlapping Knowledge Networks in Seventeenth-Century Eurasia\nDate: 29 August 2019 (Thursday)\nTime: 4:00pm\nVenue: Room 7.58\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus \nMichael Boym’s Flora Sinensis [Flora of China]\, published in Vienna in 1656\, contains twenty-two hand-coloured woodcuts depicting Southeast Asian flora and fauna. While his work is entitled Flora Sinensis\, few of the plants depicted are of Chinese origin. Rather\, they were cultivated and traded in Southeast Asia\, and transplanted in China. My thesis is hat Boym’s selection of plants shows that China’s ecosystem exceeds the geographical boundaries of the empire itself by means of trade\, knowledge transfer and cultural engagement. Using examples drawn from Boym\, we can see how different\, overlapping networks functioned; we also see these networks were not only European\, but also intra-Asian\, and Eurasian. Through an interdisciplinary study of Boym’s work\, it becomes apparent how these emergent network configurations shaped the Chinese knowledge\, practices and materials that arrived in early-modern Europe. \nSpeaker: Eszter Csillag \nEszter Csillag is a 3rd year PhD candidate in the Fine Arts Department of the School of Humanities at The University of Hong Kong. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on seventeenth-century Polish Jesuit Michael Boym’s contributions to knowledge transfer from China to Europe\, based on his illustrations\, which range from the botanical to the medical\, from the geographical to the zoological. She took her BA at the Sapienza University of Rome and her MA at Roma Tre University\, where she specialized in seventeenth-century Italian baroque art.
URL:https://arthistory.hku.hk/index.php/event/the-botanical-illustrations-of-boyms-flora-sinensis-and-overlapping-knowledge-networks-in-seventeenth-century-eurasia/
LOCATION:Faculty Room 758\, Room 7.58\, Run Run Shaw Tower\, Centennial Campus\, HKU\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:Seminar
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END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR