View allAll Photos Tagged Lecture
Descriptive Title: Anatomy lecture.
Technique: woodcut
Dimensions: 30 x 20 cm.
Digital ID: RBAI002-0008
Scope and Content: Anatomy lecture; professor speaking from a lectern, assistant performing the dissection for 7 observers.
This plate is taken from the book:
Title: Fasciculus medicinæ
Author: Ketham, Joannes de, 15th cent.
Published: Impressum in alma Venetiarum ciuitate [Venice] : Per Cesarem Arriuabenum, 1522
Part of the digital collection Anatomia 1522-1867 located at link.library.utoronto.ca/anatomia/application/index.cfm
Prexy Nesbitt offers his lecture on Martin Luther King Jr. and the importance on systematic change. Photo by Toby Ziemer on 1/19/15.
I am always delighted to speak in Boulder City. This time I will have my extra plants with me - mostly tomato plants.
Gardening tips are here in my videos on You Tube: www.youtube.com/user/LeslierDoyle and you can also subscribe to my monthly email desert gardening newsletter - request it by sending me an email: gardeningnewsletter@sweettomatotestgarden.com. No Spam, I promise.
Photo of "Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres" 1807 by Hugh Blair (1719-1800) / work originally published in 1783
◆演講時間:109年1月9日(四)下午4:30~6:15(4點開始報到)
◆演講地點:林酒店三樓環球廳(西屯區朝富路99號)
◆演講主題:『People‧Place‧Purpose』
◆主講人︰Friso van der Steen技術總監|Mecanoo architecten(麥肯諾建築師事務所)
Professor Jay Fiskio discusses her new book: Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental Justice, at a fall semester President's Lecture. Fiskio also discussed ways that environmental justice communities protect and repair the world through expressive culture, including dancing, cooking, and blockades.
Photo by Mike Crupi
Dr. Timothy Knepper gives a lecture on how philosophy of religion should be taught at a religion institution. Photos by Sarah Bauer
Cadets at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy attend the Elenchus lecture at the Officers Club, Oct. 4.The Elenchus lecture series was created to give future junior officers the opportunity to reflect on the nature of their obligations to other human beings and how such duties relate to their commissions as Coast Guard officers. Photos by Petty Officer 3rd Class Nicole Barger.
Pacific Northwest College of Art (PNCA) in collaboration with Oregon Humanities, is honored to welcome celebrated author, activist, and cultural historian Rebecca Solnit who will deliver the 2013 Alfred Edelman Lecture on Wednesday, April 3, 6:30 pm.
Solnit will deliver a lecture entitled On Getting Lost and What you Find There: Uses of the Unknown for Artists and Explorers, drawing from ideas in several of her recent books: A Paradise Built in Hell which addressed the way individuals to rally for good in the face of disasters, and Field Guide to Getting Lost, on wandering, being lost, and the generative qualities of the unknown. Rebecca Solnit is a remarkably versatile, politically engaged, and erudite writer who has taken on subjects ranging from 19th-century photography to Nevada nuclear test sites, from Yosemite to a social history of walking, in a career spanning twenty years. She is a nature writer with an outraged consciousness of what humans are doing to nature, but along with alarm and dismay comes undiluted hope that we can be better.
The annual Edelman Lecture is one of PNCA’s four Cornerstone Lectures, which also include the College’s Convocation Address at the start of the academic year, the Homecoming Lecture during Alumni weekend, and the Graduation Address given at Commencement in May.
About Rebecca Solnit
San Francisco writer Rebecca Solnit is the author of thirteen books about art, landscape, public and collective life, ecology, politics, hope, meandering, reverie, and memory. They include November 2010’s Infinite City: A San Francisco Atlas, a book of 22 maps and nearly 30 collaborators; A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster, and many others, including Storming the Gates of Paradise; A Field Guide to Getting Lost; Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities; Wanderlust: A History of Walking; As Eve Said to the Serpent: On Landscape, Gender and Art; and River of Shadows, Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West (for which she received a Guggenheim, the National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism, and the Lannan Literary Award). She has worked with climate change, Native American land rights, antinuclear, human rights, antiwar and other issues as an activist and journalist. A product of the California public education system from kindergarten to graduate school, she is a contributing editor to Harper’s and frequent contributor to the political site Tomdispatch.com and has made her living as an independent writer since 1988.
About the Edelman Lecture
When the late Portland architect and photographer, Alfred Edelman, taught three-dimensional design at PNCA, he challenged his students to consider the principles of engineering, kinetics, physics and other subjects seemingly dissimilar to art. In doing so he brought the outside world into his classroom. Founded by Carol Edelman, the Alfred Edelman Lecture was created to enhance the student’s understanding of the visual world by presenting timeless and/or unique ways to examine and manipulate three-dimensional space and to be a catalyst for lively discussions in the classroom at PNCA.
April 3, 2013.
Photograph by: Clinton Chambers '13.
The Lecture Hall in the Doudna Fine Arts Center on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois on August 10, 2012. (Jay Grabiec)
Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee, from the architecture firm of Johnston Marklee, join patrons of the museum for the annual Mary Atkins Lecture at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, MO on Octboer 10th, 2019. Media Services Photographer / Jason Tracy
71st Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting
Lecture William Kaelin, Picture/Credit: Christian Flemming/Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings