Lindner Lecture Series

The Lindner Lecture Series is funded by the Sacks Art Lecture Endowment which supports an annual lecture within the Department of Art.  The series is named after the Carl H. and Martha S. Lindner Center for Art History which supports student and faculty programs and research in the Art History Department within the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences at UVA.


Thursday, Sept. 29th, 6.30pm, 160 Campbell Hall

Patrick R. Crowley, Associate Curator of European Art, Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University

Solid Pictures: Photosculpture and the Reproduction of Reality 

This lecture investigates the little-known invention of photosculpture in 1860s France, a labor-saving device that promised portraits or domestically scaled sculptural reproductions at a fraction of the cost of traditional methods.


Thursday, Oct. 27th, 6.30pm, 160 Campbell Hall

Ömür Harmanşah, Director of the School of Art and Art History & Associate Professor of Art History, University of Illinois at Chicago

Landscape and Fieldwork in a Changing Climate: Art, Cultural Heritage, and the Anthropocene

What are the challenges of climate change, the global ecological crisis, and the onset of the new geological epoch called the Anthropocene for the arts and the humanities? In this talk, I will be speaking about experimental field projects that bring participants from different disciplinary backgrounds to engage with heritage landscapes and their communities under duress. I call for a return to fieldwork as creative practice and I argue that the idea of landscape is a potentially helpful framework to engage with world communities and their cultural heritage living under precarious conditions.