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art history

Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
Captioned

Liu pin fo lou (Building of Six Classes of Sutra and Tantra), the Tibetan Buddhist pantheon in the Forbidden City

Ziyi Shao takes us to the reign of the Qianlong Emperor and will show us around the Fan hua lou (Hall of Buddhist Efflorescence), one of the most complex and prominent Buddhist monuments in the Forbidden city
History of the Book 2017-2019

History of Art - The De Spira Brothers vrs. Nicolaus Jenson, 1469-1472: A Rivalry Traced through Hand-illuminated Copies of their Editions

Professor Lilian Armstrong (Wellesley College) gives a talk for the History of the Book seminar series on 2nd March 2018.
Mansfield College

Images and Influence: The Fetus in Art

Professor Carol Sanger, Hon. Fellow, Mansfield College, gives a talk for the Mansfield college lecture series.
The Beazley Archive - Classical Art Research Centre

Positioning Gandharan Buddhas in Chronology: Significant Coordinates and Anomalies

Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art (Session 5, 24th March 2017) with Juhyung Rhi.
The Beazley Archive - Classical Art Research Centre

Is it Appropriate to Ask a Celestial Lady's Age?

Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art (Session 4b, 24th March 2017) with Robert Bracey.
Mansfield College

Turner and Catastrophe

Franny Moyle gives a talk for Mansfield College.
Rothermere American Institute

‘O Say Can You See?’ Art, Propaganda and the First World War

A public lecture by Professor David Lubin (Wake Forest University) as part of a series on the history of the United States and World War One.
Thinking with Things: The Oxford Collection

Portrait of Mademoiselle Claus by Édouard Manet

Are Eastern Art and Western Art basically the same, and what is painting for? On Édouard Manet, Cézanne and their similarity to Chinese paintings. With Professor Craig Clunas Art History, University of Oxford.
The Secrets of Mathematics

M. C. Escher - Artist, Mathematician, Man

M.C. Escher is known as the mathematician's (and hippie's) favourite artist. But why? And was Escher, a man who claimed he knew no mathematics, really a mathematical genius?
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Observing by Hand: Sketching the Nebulae in the Nineteenth Century

A discussion of Omar Nasim's book
Humanities at the Department for Continuing Education

The Truth about Art 3 - Aesthetics

Another ancient belief held that an art should be governed by rules.
Humanities at the Department for Continuing Education

The Truth about Art 1 - Mystery or Mastery

E.H. Gombrich famously observed that 'there really is no such thing as Art' (with a capital A).
Exploring Humanities - The Ertegun Scholarship Programme

Picasso: Passions and Politics

British Art Historian and Picasso Biographer Sir John Richardson in conversation with Gijs van Hensbergen.
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge

Pictures and Texts

A symposium with William Kentridge, Ivo Mesquita and Estrella de Diego Otero, chaired by Shearer West on Thursday 9 May 2013 in the Grove Auditorium, Magdalen College, Oxford.
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge

Thinking on one's feet and Museums: experience versus numbers

Double inaugural lecture with William Kentridge and Ivo Mesquita, chaired by Seamus Perry.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Bygone Glories and Frivolous Pleasures: The Rococo Revival and National Identity in Austrian and Hungarian Art, 1840-1860

Part of the East and Est-Central Europe Seminar series. Dr Nóra Veszprémi (Cantemir Fellow, Budapest) gives a talk on art and identity in Austria and Hungary in the mid 19th Century.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Boulevards, Brushwork and Bugattis : Modern Art and Design in Paris

In the nineteenth-century Paris was transformed into an alluring spectacle of cafés, department stores and exhibitions. Dr Claire O'Mahony looks at the inspiration of the modern city of light from Impressionist painters to the glamour of Art Deco.
Department for Continuing Education Open Day 2012

Boulevards, Brushwork and Bugattis : Modern Art and Design in Paris

In the nineteenth-century Paris was transformed into an alluring spectacle of cafés, department stores and exhibitions. Dr Claire O'Mahony looks at the inspiration of the modern city of light from Impressionist painters to the glamour of Art Deco.
History of Art: Special Lectures and Research Seminars

Not Vital: Art is Global

International artist, Not Vital, gives a talk about his art and his work.
Wolfson College Podcasts

Sir Anthony Caro in conversation with Tim Marlow

Wolfson College was privileged to welcome back esteemed honorary fellow Sir Anthony Caro on 2nd November, who, 'in conversation' with art historian Tim Marlow, recounted his fifty-year career as one of the key figures in contemporary sculpture.

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