museum studies

Beyond the Absence: Recovering the Architectural Imprints of Slavery

Location: Randolph College, Leggett Building Room 537 (fifth floor) Doors open at 5:30 p.m. | Lecture begins at 6:00 p.m. Kathleen Powers Conti ’11, Assistant Professor of History, Florida State […]

Bringing the masters home: Michelangelo, Raphael and Leonardo on the Renaissance table

A shallow maiolica bowl with a painting of two men riding white horses and a third man who had fallen from his brown horse on the ground. In the sky above, the sun appears from behind clouds, with a ray directed toward the man on the ground. The scene depicts the biblical story of the conversion of Saul.

Alison Luchs, Curator of Early European Sculpture and Deputy Head, Department of Sculpture and Decorative Arts, National Gallery of Art Luch will discuss ways maiolica artists adapted major works of […]

AIA Archaeology Lecture: Jon Frey

Jon Frey, Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Michigan State University

THE ORIGINS OF ROMAN BATHING AT THE SANCTUARY OF POSEIDON AT ISTHMIA Jon Frey, Associate Professor of Classical Studies, Michigan State University Lecture at 5 p.m. | Doors open at […]

What Lies Ahead… And Beneath: The Future of Archaeology at Colonial Williamsburg

Jack Gary, Executive Director of Archaeology at Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, archaeology dig at First Baptist Church site. For Trend & Tradition magazine, Winter 2021 issue.

Jack Gary, Executive Director of Archaeology at Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. Archaeology has been an integral part of the research, interpretation, and reconstruction of Colonial Williamsburg for almost a century. With […]