Jan Cox The Significance of Erik Werenskiold’s Painting ‘A Peasant Burial’
Jan Cox
The Significance of Erik Werenskiold’s Painting ‘A Peasant Burial’
Thursday, 11 February 2016, 5.15pm, Room 1.06 (Project Room), 50 George Square
Jan Cox
The Significance of Erik Werenskiold’s Painting ‘A Peasant Burial’
Thursday, 11 February 2016, 5.15pm, Room 1.06 (Project Room), 50 George Square
Professor Matt Worley (University of Reading): “While the world was dying, did you wonder why?” Punk, Politics and British Fanzines, 1976-84
Dr Jenny Terry (Durham University): Afrofuturism, Sci-fi and the Scopic in the Art of Ellen Gallacher
History of Art Research Seminars take place on Thursdays at 5.15pm in the newly-refurbished Hunter Building Lecture Theatre on Lauriston Place, with drinks afterwards in the John Higgit Gallery. Everyone is welcome; please contact Dr Catriona Murray, the series organiser, if you have any questions.
with Europa Nostra UK
Mark Hopton: The Abbotsford Project: Romantic Rationalism
Architectural Conservation Masterclass at the Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies organised jointly with Europa Nostra UK:
Thursday, 11 February 2016, 5.30 – 7.00pm (followed by a wine and nibbles reception)
Main Lecture Theatre, Edinburgh College of Art
The Abbotsford Project: Romantic Rationalism
European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Award 2014
Panel Discussion: Migration, the EU referendum and ‘Brexit’—public opinion, prospects and implications
Professor Susan Docherty (Newman University Birmingham): How Did the New Testament Authors Read Proverbs?
Alistair Bell (National Library of Scotland): National Sound Archive
Dr Fionnuala Dillane (UCD): '"Pineapple for the Million': Periodical Genres and the Politics of Affect'