Jeffrey Collins contributed to the
catalogue of the exhibition Casanova: The Seduction of Europe,
opening August 27 at the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, and traveling to the
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Legion of Honor, and the Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston. Collins’s essay, “Pleasures of the Road,” investigates the
mechanics and motivations of Casanova’s incessant wanderings, asking what his
nearly 40,000-mile journey—from Rialto to Riga, by way of Calais and
Constantinople—meant for his evolving sense of self.
Ivan Gaskell returned
in July from the Advanced Study Institute, Göttingen, Germany, where he is a
permanent senior fellow, and participated in the NEH Summer Institute at BGC.
Read more about his Göttingen fellowship here.
Urmila Mohan, along with master’s student, Jaime Ding, and Manager of Education and Engagement Carla
Repice, lead participants in the BGC Lab
For Teen Thinkers summer intensive on a fieldtrip to the American Museum of
Natural on July 13. As part of a pilot program that includes a focus on
material culture, these outstanding students from Bard High School Early
College Program were introduced to museum practices and ethnographic
collections in the museum.
Andrew Morrall
presented a talk entitled “Io’s Hoof and the Origins of Letters.
Ingenuity and Invention in the Champ Fleury of Geofroy Tory of 1529” at the
conference Ingenuity in the
Making: Materials and Technique in Early Modern Europe held at the
University of Cambridge in May. His essay, “Urban Craftsmen and the Courts in
Sixteenth-Century Germany,” has been published in Civic Artists and Court Artists (1300-1600): Case Studies and
Conceptual Ideas about the Status, Tasks and the Working Conditions of Artists
and Artisans, Dagmar Eichberger and Phillipe Lorentz, eds (Michael Imhoff Verlag, 2017).
Paul Stirton spent two weeks during August at the Getty
Research Library, Los Angeles, as part of his fellowship researching the work
of the German graphic designer Jan Tschichold, who will be the subject a spring 2019 Bard Graduate
Center Focus Project.