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X-WR-CALNAME:Art History Graduate Student Organization  
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://sites.rutgers.edu/ahgso
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Art History Graduate Student Organization  
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DTSTART:20240310T070000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240405T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240405T130000
DTSTAMP:20260424T054002
CREATED:20240122T192014Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240122T192014Z
UID:1144-1712318400-1712322000@sites.rutgers.edu
SUMMARY:AHGSO Meeting
DESCRIPTION:AHGSO Meeting in Graduate Student Lounge and over Zoom. Link for meeting provided via Canvas. Open to all interested graduate students.
URL:https://sites.rutgers.edu/ahgso/event/ahgso-meeting-19/
LOCATION:Art History Graduate Student Lounge (VH006F)\, 71 Hamilton Street\, New Brunswick\, NJ\, 08901\, United States
CATEGORIES:GSO Meeting
ORGANIZER;CN="Art History GSO":MAILTO:ahgso.rutgers@gmail.com
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240419T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240419T170000
DTSTAMP:20260424T054002
CREATED:20240201T143653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240405T150452Z
UID:1150-1713517200-1713546000@sites.rutgers.edu
SUMMARY:14th Annual Art History Graduate Student Symposium
DESCRIPTION:Uncovering the Senses: Immersion\, Performance\, and Sensoriality in Art \nArt History Graduate Student Symposium 2023-24 \nSymposium Date: Friday\, April 19\, 2024 \nLocation: Academic Building East 2400\nZoom Registration Link \nKeynote Speaker: Distinguished Professor Cynthia Hahn\, CUNY Graduate Center \nThe discipline of art history has only recently evolved to include not only the visual\, but also the other senses\, such as touch\, taste\, sound\, and smell. This sensorial turn has led to innovative ways of experiencing and analyzing art\, architecture\, and cultural practices. Multi-sensory approaches have allowed us to reassess assumptions of past material culture\, while providing new directions for contemporary artistic production. Uncovering the Senses aims to foster conversations about multi-sensory perceptions and reactions to art beyond its visuality.
URL:https://sites.rutgers.edu/ahgso/event/14th-annual-art-history-graduate-student-symposium/
LOCATION:AB East Room 2400\, 15 Seminary Place\, New Brunswick\, NJ\, 08901
CATEGORIES:Annual Symposium
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=application/pdf:https://sites.rutgers.edu/ahgso/wp-content/uploads/sites/634/2024/02/Final_Poster_Uncovering_the_Senses-1.pdf
ORGANIZER;CN="Art History GSO":MAILTO:ahgso.rutgers@gmail.com
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240424T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240424T180000
DTSTAMP:20260424T054002
CREATED:20240405T142222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240405T145002Z
UID:1159-1713974400-1713981600@sites.rutgers.edu
SUMMARY:[Distinguished Speaker Series] Dr. Kelli Wood: "The Athletic Arts in Early Modern Italy"
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Kelli Wood: “The Athletic Arts in Early Modern Italy” \nWednesday\, April 24th\, 2024 // 4:00 PM EST \nVorhees Hall\, Room 001 // 71 Hamilton St\, New Brunswick\, NJ 08901 \nZoom Registration: https://tinyurl.com/dsswood \n  \nThis talk will explore the development and expression of the athletic arts in Renaissance Italy as they responded to intellectual\, courtly\, and civic revivals of antiquity as well as an unprecedented expansion of artisanal and professional work related to leisure. Girolamo Cardano classified sport as requiring two separate abilities\, “agility of body\, as with a ball; or of strength\, as with a discus and in wrestling\,” and in the sixteenth century exercises which emphasized agility over brute strength increasingly gained prominence as venues for the salubrious maintenance of physique and the performance of aristocratic masculine virtue during social and political conduct. A rhetorical slippage between sport and war frequently manifested itself in both artistic representations of and the performance of sport in order to ascribe the virtues of virility to aristocratic athletes. Yet the real or potential corporeal dominance of a brawny artisanal class\, a “rivalry not of birth\, but of strength and ability\, wherein villagers are quite a match for nobles\,” in the words of Castiglione\, also fundamentally influenced the regulation and representation of bodies through sport. The rising need for a professional class of athletes paid to perform on the street and as salaried members of courts\, experts who also wrote about and taught their athletic arts\, alongside the rising need for craftsmen to produce and manage equipment and spaces\, proved a complication to the maintenance and perception of social hierarchies. The codification of systems of rules and equipment\, far from simply reflecting a growing interest in athletics\, was a response in part to bodies on display\, and thusly created structures of supervision that consolidated control for powerful operators in homosocial networks. Sports were a central tool in literally and imaginatively shaping the bodies of early modern men and women within intersecting systems of bodily signification\, political performance\, and social decorum. \n  \nDr. Kelli Wood is an interdisciplinary researcher\, writer\, and curator whose work combines methods from art history\, game studies\, sports science\, and museology. In 2019 she joined the University of Tennessee as the Dale G. Cleaver Asst. Professor of Art History – Museum & Curatorial Studies following three years as a postdoctoral scholar in the Michigan Society of Fellows. Wood’s research on the visual and material culture of games and sports spanning from Renaissance board games to contemporary video games has been published in journals such as Art History\, Renaissance Studies\, ArLis\, and in edited volumes and art magazines. Her first book based on her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago\, The Art of Play in Early Modern Italy\, is under contract with Amsterdam University Press. In 2021-2022 Wood undertook an NEH-Mellon Fellowship in Digital Publication for her project on digitizing board games from the Renaissance as playable video games. Her new scholarly projects turn toward sixteenth and seventeenth-century Goa\, India\, and her research as a Fulbright U.S. Scholar to India in 2022-2023 is forthcoming in Renaissance Quarterly. Wood’s research has also been generously supported by the Fulbright Italy\, a CASVA Kress fellowship at the NGA\, and the Renaissance Society of America. Wood curated a permanent wing of the Qatar Olympic and Sports Museum\, A Global History of Sport\, which opened in 2022 for the FIFA World Cup. She serves as Field Editor of Early Modern Art for the College Art Association and an editor of The New Art Examiner.
URL:https://sites.rutgers.edu/ahgso/event/distinguished-speaker-series-dr-kelli-wood-the-athletic-arts-in-early-modern-italy/
LOCATION:Vorhees Hall\, 71 Hamilton\, New Brunswick\, NJ\, 08901\, United States
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=application/pdf:https://sites.rutgers.edu/ahgso/wp-content/uploads/sites/634/2024/04/DSS-Dr-Kelli-Wood-The-Athletic-Arts-in-Early-Modern-Italy12.pdf
ORGANIZER;CN="Art History GSO":MAILTO:ahgso.rutgers@gmail.com
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