Category Archives: GSAS Faculty

History of Art Professor Homay King discusses her role in new Met exhibition

China Through Looking Glass b

The new exhibition from The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, China: Through the Looking Glass, explores the influence of Chinese culture and fashion on Western designers. And the sophistication and sensitivity with which the exhibition presents the complicated nexus of exchange between East and West is, according to a recent article in the International Business Times, thanks to Homay King, Bryn Mawr History of Art Professor and Director of Program in Film Studies and Center for Visual Culture. King became involved in the project after curator Andrew Bolton read her book Lost in Translation: Orientalism, Cinema and the Enigmatic Signifier, which explores how Western cinema has portrayed East Asia as a land of mystery.

Professor King also contributed an essay to the exhibition catalog, “Cinema’s Virtual Chinas.”

Filmic representations of China made in Hollywood create and disseminate fantasies about the East that have been more inspirational to designers than any actual visits to China, explains Bolton in a Business of Fashion article. Still, both Bolton and King were anxious to get outside of a critical framework of exploitation and “Orientalism” in their assessment of these hybrid cultural products. Instead they advocate a more nuanced study of this work, one that simultaneously recognizes the influence of largely inaccurate collective fantasies about China while also allowing for and admitting the pleasure of looking at these stunning costumes.

The show remains open through August 16th.

Read More:

Review of the exhibition in the Washington Post

Vogue interview between curator Andrew Bolton and designer John Galliano

 

 

Professor Peter Magee speaks at German Archaeological Institute annual plenary

Magee - well Tell Abraq

Professor Magee was invited to speak at the final plenary of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI), a scientific organization within the German Foreign Ministry. Magee delivered his research to a group of scholars from the DAI and German Universities who focus on technical innovations and their social consequences in prehistory and antiquity. Magee’s talk, “The Impact of Technical Innovations in the Later Prehistory of the Persian Gulf Region,” explored innovations in water supply from about 3000 to 1000 BC.

The well seen above, which Magee excavated last winter, was used at the ancient settlement of  in the United Arab Emirates; Magee discussed the technology behind this sort of well in his lecture.

Professor Lisa Saltzman (History of Art) participated in “The Art of Memory and Mourning” Symposium

Adams Memorial by Augustus Saint-Gaudens
Adams Memorial by Augustus Saint-Gaudens

Lisa Saltzman, Professor of History of Art and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Chair in the Humanities, participated in the symposium “The Art of Memory and Mourning,” November 14 at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

The symposium was dedicated to art historian Cynthia J. Mills (1947–2014), former executive editor of the journal American Art and Smithsonian American Art Museum academic programs advisor, and recognizes the release of her book Beyond Grief: Sculpture and Wonder in the Gilded Age Cemetery (Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, 2014). It also featured talks by Miguel de Baca of Lake Forest College; Erika Doss of Notre Dame University, James Meyer of the National Gallery of Art, Jennifer Van Horn of George Mason University, and independent scholar Sarah Beetham.

The entire symposium can be viewed online, at:

http://youtu.be/etV5SVIIsBo