View allAll Photos Tagged lectures
Here, Dr. Moore is discussing about plants that are traditionally known to have medicinal properties.
11-15-2011 - Photos of the Chancellor's Lecture held in the Vanderbilt Law School's Flynn Auditorium with guest speaker and political author, Francis Fukuyama. (Vanderbilt University/Steve Green)
Simon Ruda, Pedro Lomba and Jose Pereirinha during Kapuscinski Development Lecture in Lisbon on 13 November 2014. More: kapuscinskilectures.eu.
Sketchnotes of lecture by Art Spiegelman at the Calgary Distinguished Writers Program series (March 31, 2011)
(With the topic, speaker, ideas expressed, and how it fit into the page out as the lecture unfolded, I think this session of my sketchnoting is the one I'm most pleased with to date... but still gotta draw people better: that's supposed to be Art Spiegelman in the bottom right...)
Simon Ruda talks about how behavioural science could improve public policies during lecture in Lisbon on 13 November 2014. More: kapuscinskilectures.eu.
Boredom and a slice of 'luck' created this one. I went to change a setting on my camera and accidentally triggered the shutter and up flashed this. Not sure what it says about me/the lecturer/the university, but whatever it is it made a reasonable photo!
Photo a Day #5
11-15-2011 - Photos of the Chancellor's Lecture held in the Vanderbilt Law School's Flynn Auditorium with guest speaker and political author, Francis Fukuyama. (Vanderbilt University/Steve Green)
Historian and author Joel Helander of Guilford will present the biography of Captain Oliver N. Brooks, a distinguished captain during the heyday of the Long Island Sound coastal trade, as well as the Faulkner Island lightkeeper from 1851 to 1882. Captain Brooks, along with his family members, tended the beloved Faulkner Island Light, known to many from Guildford and Madison, during the peak years of the coastal trade. His records of shipping across Long Island Sound, the comings and goings from the mainland to the island, and the daily lifeways of island lighthouse keepers, provide a wonderful window into this hardy life and its necessary engagement with maritime traders.
See www.madisonhistory.org/other-events/frederick-lee-lectures/ for details about this lecture series.
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.
Edgar Pieterse, Director, African Centre for Cities, University of Cape Town speaking at the Kapuscinski Development Lecture on 5 November 2014. More: kapuscinskilectures.eu
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.
Wednesday 18 March 6.15pm
Panel Discussion
Chair: Naomi Cass, CCP Director
Speakers:
Elena Galimberti
Paul McNamara (NZ)
Susan van Wyk
“On the vexed issue of editions, while everyone seems to agree that work should be signed, dated and numbered by the artist, there is a clear divergence of opinion between those who see editioning as contrary to the nature of the medium, and those who see it as inevitable in the passage of photography into the fine art market.” Dr Daniel Palmer, Australian Art Collector, Issue 21, July-September 2002, 86-8
What are the considerations for artists when editioning paper or screen-based work? What underpins market confidence in editioning practices? This panel of experts from the commercial, education and public gallery sectors will explore the issues surrounding the editioning of photography and video art. Speakers will address principles, practices and problems within the arenas of analogue and digital media drawing upon local and international experience.
Elena Galimberti is a PhD candidate and research assistant in the Theory Department of the Faculty of Art & Design at Monash University. Her research includes conservation, video installations, and the Australian Video Art Archive (AVAA), which she built in collaboration with Matthew Perkins and Dr Anne Marsh
(www.videoartchive.org.au).
Paul McNamara (NZ) opened McNamara Gallery seven years ago as an art gallery dedicated to exhibiting and promoting photo-media by New Zealand, selected Pacific Rim and international artists. Previously Paul was a medical practitioner and art collector. He is a member of the Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) and conducts original research, produces small publications, and stages out-reach exhibitions in a number of public galleries.
Susan van Wyk has been a curator in the Department of Photography at the National Gallery of Victoria since 1989. She has curated numerous exhibitions of Australian and international photography, including the recent Rennie Ellis retrospective. She is the author of The Paris End: Photography Fashion and Glamour, and co-author of Second Sight: Australian Photography in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria. She has also written numerous exhibition catalogues, and contributed to Australian and international journals and publications.
Gold coin donation gratefully accepted on entry.
Image: Hamish Tocher Illuminated Books [no title] 4 2008
digital print, 32.5 x 48.0 cm, open edition
Photo credit: Gregory Pendolino
Earl Lewis, the president of the Mellon Foundation and a scholar of American history, presented a workshop and lecture, "The Liberal Arts College and America’s Future: Addressing the Tension between Community and Change," in the Science Center, Dye Lecture Hall.
The Veterinary School’s Anatomical Theatre of the Humboldt University of Berlin (HU) re-opened its doors to the public on October 15th, 2012. The former auditorium is the oldest academic facility in Berlin and was designed by architect Carl Gotthard Langhans, who also designed the Brandenburg Gate at the same time in 1780/90.
With its tiered seating, the classical structure is reminiscent of an ancient amphitheatre. It owes its present name to its previous use as a research centre to control and combat animal and equine diseases.