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Monday 3rd October 2005
'Landscape into Sound'
The Interface between Painting and Music
Rubenshof, 19.30
Digby Hague-Holmes
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This lecture describes the illusory interface between painting and music, using slides and taped samples to illustrate how artists have painted performers and instruments, and how certain paintings have inspired various composers throughout history. The lecture includes 19 musical extracts.
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Monday 7th November 2005
The Arts and Crafts of Mexico, Past and Present
Rubenshof, 19.30
Chloë Sayer
Chloë Sayer is an authority on the art and culture of Mexico. She
has made ethnographic collections and carried out fieldwork in
Mexico and Belize for the British Museum. She has lectured, curated
exhibitions and organised event in Great Britain, Canada and ireland.
In 2004 she was invited by Swan hellenic to be the guest NADFAS
lecturer on the "Mysteries of the Maya" cruise.
Chloë has also worked on a number of television documentaries
about Mexico and the Maya for the BBC and Channel 4.
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In Mexico, arts and crafts remain an essential part of life. While textiles, ceramics, silverwork and other ancient skills combine Aztec, Maya and Spanish traditions, they are a living force, not a nostalgic evocation of a vanished past. Mexican folk art is sought after by private collectors and major museums, including the British Museum with its modern Mexican collections.
Right: Earflare with turquoise inlays, from the National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico.
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Monday 5th December 2005
Three Wise Men: Gold, Frankincense & Myrrh
The Traditions of the Magi
Antwerp Hilton
Christopher Bradley
Christopher Bradley is an expert in the history and culture of the Middle East. As a professional tour guide and lecturer he has led groups throughout Africa, the Middle East and Asia. He has written extensively on Arabia and is the author of The Discovery Guide to Yemen. As a photographer, he has pictures
used by numerous quality newspapers and magazines. Christopher has a broad range of lecturing experience, including to the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Institute of British Architects. As a film producer and cameraman, he has made documentaries for the BBC, National Geographic TV and Channel 4.
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The term 'magi' refers to the Zoroastrian priest-sages, anonymous wise men who were specialists in medicine, religion, astronomy and magic and who travelled from 'The East' - variously identified as any country from Arabia to Persia. Tradition places the number of magi at three, relating to gold, frankincense and myrrh, but earlier versions put the number between 2 and 12. The story of the magi is one of the most famous legends used by storytellers and artists alike, with Caspar of Tarsus, Melchior of Persia and Balthasar of Saba becoming universal symbols and representations, such as the three ages and races of man. The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem was erected in 329 by Queen Helena, in the area where Jesus was born. Her attempts to find traces of the magi and sacred relics led her envoys around the Middle East, and take us on a journey to Constantinople, Milan and Cologne.
Special
Venue
Hilton Hotel Antwerp
Groenplaats
Antwerp, Belgium
Tel: 02 204 21 21
Every Christmas, the Hilton Hotel in Antwerp help us by hosting
our Christmas lecture. We are very grateful for their support both
past and present.
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Monday 9th January 2006
Russian Art under
the Last Tsar
Rubenshof, 19.30
Dr Rosamund Bartlett
Dr Rosamund Bartlett is the enthusiastic and energetic Head of the Russian Department in the University of Durham, and is also an associate lecturer in Music.
Previous positions include Leverhulme Research Fellow in Russian Cultural History. Assistant Professor of Russian Literature University of Michigan, Lecturer in Russian Language,
Literature University of Manchester and is a Fellow of the European Humanities Research Centre at the University of
Oxford. She has published widely on Russian music and literature.
Her most recent book is a biography of Chekhov based on the places with which he was associated.
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Russian culture took a long time in coming to maturity: it was dominated by the Orthodox church until the end of the 17th century, then forced to adopt Western styles and techniques
allowing secular art forms to flourish. It was only in the late 19th century that Russian cultural identity was consolidated, after the emergence of creative talents like Tolstoy and
Dostoevsky, Repin and Bryullov, Musorgsky and Tchaikovsky.
Under Nicholas II, the last Tsar, the arts flourished as never before, fuelled by Russia's belated embrace of capitalism, and the knowledge that they were living on the edge of a volcano.
This lecture explores how Russian merchants became the new art patrons, financing Stanislavsky's Moscow Arts Theatre, and establishing priceless collections of works by Picasso,
Cezanne, Matisse and the French Impressionists. It looks at how fearless young Russian artists shocked polite society with their revolutionary exhibitions of radical new work, and the role played by Diaghilev's epoch-making Ballets
Russes. Finally it examines how Kandinsky and Scriabin strode boldly into abstraction and atonality and how Rachmaninov wrote brooding symphonies and concertos, whose sweeping melodies speak of his passionate attachment to his native land.
Above: Stanislavsky's Moscow Arts Theatre.
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Monday 6th February 2006
The Florentine Renaissance Palace
Dr James R. Lindow
Dr James R. Lindow has a doctorate in History of Art at the joint institutions of the Royal College of Art and the Victoria & Albert Museum. He also has an MA in Advanced Art Historical and related Studies and a degree in Art History of Art and Architecture from the University of East Anglia. He lectures frequently at conferences and has been involved in a major exhibition at the V&A on Renaissance Domestic Interior.

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This lecture considers both the exterior and the interior of the 15th century Florentine palace. In particular, the palace facades of the extremely wealthy patrons Cosimo de' Medici, Giovanni Rucellai and Filippo Strozzi are discussed before a wider investigation is undertaken of the possible appearance of the interiors of such structures. While many of the great palace facades from this period survive largely intact, their interiors have been lost or remain at best greatly altered since the 15th century. The paper therefore draws upon contemporary written accounts, inventories and architectural plans together with surviving objects and visual sources in order to 'recreate' the palace interior.
Above: Palazzo Medici-Riccardi, Florence.
Left: Palazzo Medici
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Monday 6th March 2006
The 'New' Berlin:
Art and Architecture
Eveline Eaton
Eveline Eaton is a free-lance art historian, lecturing and guiding art trips all over the world. She was educated at the Study Centre for Fine and Decorative Arts, London, and obtained her BA Hons degree at London University's Courtauld Institute. Originally from Germany, Eveline has lived in London since 1973.

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Since unification of East and West in 1989, the formerly battered and divided city has miraculously risen like a phoenix from the ashes to become once again the German capital and a veritable cultural treasure-trove. Everywhere in Berlin, spectacular buildings are being erected, designed by leading architects from all over the world.
Sir Norman Foster's new Reichstag is only one of many famous examples.
Rich art-collections are presented all over the 'new' and 'old' Berlin in splendid museums and historic palaces. The talk will be infused with "Berliner
luft", that typical Berlin atmosphere that the lecturer can add as a born-and-bred native of the metropolis ! For
more pictures check out this CNN
web site. Left: The Chancellery.
Below: the new German Reichstag.
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Monday 3rd April 2006
"Mission Impossible"
The Awkward Relation Between Art and Reality
Claire Portheine
Claire Portheine studied History of Art at Leiden University where she graduated in 1968. She started her professional activities as a researcher in historical archives, but discovered the thrill of guiding people in looking at art while living abroad. She started giving courses and lectures as soon as she returned to Holland after ten years. Her particular interest is in modern and applied art, and in the perception and communication in visual language, which is what art is mainly about.
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Making art is creating an illusion. But what happens exactly in our minds when we see a flat piece of textile covered with coloured paste, and translate it quite naturally into a landscape or a still life?
This lecture examines some of the tricks used in painting to convey the message of space, movement and sound, and above all, the rules by which the game of sending and receiving the message
is, consciously or otherwise, played by the artists and their public.
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Monday 8th May 2006
A Garden Tour of Europe
Maggie Lamb
Maggie Lamb specialises in photography, plants and garden history. She has education and horticultural qualifications; having trained as a teacher, she also has theatre experience. She has published articles for specialist plant societies, and has been lecturing to horticultural, flower and garden groups since 1992. Maggie Lamb also speaks for the National Trust, the Royal Horticultural Society and the Women's Institutes.
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Many of the famous gardens of Europe are visited as we journey from the Moorish Gardens of the Alhambra Palace to the influential early Northern Italian Renaissance and baroque period villa gardens. In France we see the grandeur of the impressive formal gardens of Le Notre, and many other interesting gardens such as the charming Château de Bagatelle. Some present-day gardens in
Holland and Belgium are also included.
Above and left: the Alhambra gardens.
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