University of Oregon Department of the History of Art and Architecture

University of Oregon Department of the History of Art and Architecture

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The Department of the History of Art and Architecture offers BA, MA, and PhD degrees in art history and an interdisciplinary museum studies certificate.

The Department of the History of Art and Architecture (HA&A) offers BA, MA, and PhD degrees in art history, as well as an interdisciplinary museum studies certificate. Our students and faculty members explore global history, culture, and society through art and architecture from antiquity to the present day. Courses are aligned with faculty research and examine visual and material cultural product

04/10/2024

Congratulations to Mew Jiang, who has been awarded the prestigious and highly competitive Japan Foundation Japanese Studies Fellowship!

For twelve months between August 2024 to July 2025, Mew will be affiliated with the Waseda University in Tokyo – with a top art history program in Japan – and travel across Japan to conduct her dissertation research.

Curator Talk: Pious Customs: Religious Painting in European Art | Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art 04/10/2024

Congratulations to Alexis Garcia and Margaryta Golovchenko for giving a terrific Curator Talk at the JSMA on April 6! And more congratulations for the opening of Pious Customs: Religious Painting in European Art, their exhibition!

Curator Talk: Pious Customs: Religious Painting in European Art | Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art Alexis Garcia & Margaryta GolovchenkoSat, 04/06/2024 - 2:00pmJoin Alexis Garcia, Post-Graduate Fellow in European & American Art and Margaryta Golovchenko, PhD candidate in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture, for a presentation on the new exhibition Pious Customs: Religious Painti...

04/08/2024

Please join us for our upcoming Haseltine Lecture on Thursday, April 11:

DATE/TIME: Thursday, April 11, 6-7pm
LOCATION: Lillis 132
TOPIC: “Captive Subjects, Wild Images: Romantic Artists at the Menagerie of the Museum of Natural History in Paris.”
PRESENTER: Dr. Katie Hornstein, Associate Professor at Dartmouth College

A specialist in nineteenth-century French art and visual culture, Prof. Hornstein recently published a monograph entitled Myth and Menagerie: Seeing Lions in the Nineteenth Century (Yale University Press, 2024).

Below please find link to Prof. Hornstein's profile:
https://arthistory.dartmouth.edu/people/katie-hornstein

History of Art and Architecture Class Visits Oregon State Hospital | College of Design 04/01/2024

Check out the new story on Professor Joyce Cheng’s course, “Art, Madness and Disability.” on the College of Design website:

History of Art and Architecture Class Visits Oregon State Hospital | College of Design In fall 2023, students in art history and related disciplines were given the opportunity to take associate art history professor Joyce Cheng’s course, “Art, Madness and Disability.” The class, designed for art history students with an interest in the medical humanities, examines the historical...

03/14/2024

Congratulations to Prof. Nina Amstutz, who has received the College of Design's Jerry & Gunilla Finrow Research & Creative Work Award. Prof. Amstutz will be working on her book project, A Multispecies Framework for Art: The Bowerbird Across Disciplines, Cultures, and Time.

03/14/2024

Congratulations to Prof. Chiara Gasparini, who is presently in Washington, DC, as a member of the UO delegation to participate in the National Humanities Alliance Meeting and Humanities Advocacy Day, and meet with congressional representatives to advocate for humanistic studies. Prof. Gasparini was selected to take this important role by the Office of the VP for Research and Innovation, the Office of Federal Affairs, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Oregon Humanities Center.

In addition, Prof. Gasparini has also received a College of Design Dean's Research & Creative Work Award to conduct research this summer on the book project, Across the Tuyuhun-Tubo Kingdom: Material Culture from Dunhuang to Sichuan between the Sixth and Ninth Century!

03/04/2024

Greetings from Lawrence Hall. To celebrate the legacy of former UO professor Marion Dean Ross and his founding of the Department of the History of Art and Architecture some 60 years ago, we have put together a Spring 2024 lecture series and a small online exhibition (forthcoming) that may be of interest to some of you. Given the extensive collection of student-made models from Ross’s classes still visible around Lawrence Hall, we decided to focus the series on the theme of ARCHITECTURAL MODELS AND WORLD-BUILDING. Attached is a flyer indicating the speakers (Wharton, Wolf, Fankhanel) and the dates and titles of their talks. Please note that lecture locations may change in the coming weeks due to room scheduling difficulties. Below are excerpts from the speakers’ departmental pages.

Speakers:

Annabel Wharton, William B. Hamilton Professor of Art History, Duke University. She served as the first female Vincent Scully Visiting Professor at the Yale School of Architecture in 2014 and as the Harry Porter Visiting Professor of Architectural History, University of Virginia School of Architecture in 2019. She received her Ph.D. at the Courtauld Institute, London University. Initially her research focused on Late Ancient and Byzantine art and culture (Art of Empire [Penn State] and Refiguring the Post-Classical City [Cambridge]). Then she began to investigate the effects of modernity on ancient landscapes, notably in Building the Cold War: Hilton International Hotels and Modern Architecture (Chicago, 2001). She has combined her interests in the Ancient and the Modern in her last two books: Selling Jerusalem: Relics, Replicas, Theme Parks (Chicago, 2006) and Architectural Agents: The Delusional, Abusive, Addictive Lives of Buildings (Minnesota, 2015). Architectural Agents considers material and digital buildings as agents that both endure pain and inflict it. Her new book, Models and World Making: Buildings, Bodies, Black Boxes (University of Virginia Press) will appear at the end of 2021.

Mark J. P. Wolf is a Professor in the Communication Department at Concordia University Wisconsin. He has a B. A. (1990) in Film Production and an M. A. (1992) and Ph. D. (1995) in Critical Studies from the School of Cinema/Television (now renamed the School of Cinematic Arts) at the University of Southern California. His books include Abstracting Reality: Art, Communication, and Cognition in the Digital Age (2000), The Medium of the Video Game (2001), Virtual Morality: Morals, Ethics, and New Media (2003), The Video Game Theory Reader (2003), The Video Game Explosion: A History from PONG to PlayStation and Beyond (2007), The Video Game Theory Reader 2 (2008), Myst and Riven: The World of the D’ni (2011), Before the Crash: Early Video Game History (2012), the two-volume Encyclopedia of Video Games: The Culture, Technology, and Art of Gaming (2012), Building Imaginary Worlds: The Theory and History of Subcreation (2012), The Routledge Companion to Video Game Studies (2014), LEGO Studies: Examining the Building Blocks of a Transmedial Phenomenon (2014), Video Games Around the World (2015), the four-volume Video Games and Gaming Cultures (2016), Revisiting Imaginary Worlds: A Subcreation Studies Anthology (2017), Video Games FAQ (2017), The World of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood (2017), The Routledge Companion to Imaginary Worlds (2017), The Routledge Companion to Media History and Obsolescence (2018), and two novels for which he is looking for a publisher. He is also founder and co-editor of the Landmark Video Game book series from University of Michigan Press, founder and editor of the Imaginary Worlds book series from Routledge, and founder of the Video Game Studies Scholarly Interest Group and the Transmedia Studies Special Interest Group within the Society of Cinema and Media Studies. He has been invited to speak in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Second Life, and has had work published in journals including Compar(a)ison, Convergence, Film Quarterly, Games and Culture, New Review of Film and Television Studies, Projections, and The Velvet Light Trap. He is on the advisory boards of Videotopia, the International Arcade Museum Library, and the International Journal of Gaming and Computer-Mediated Simulations; and is on several editorial boards including those of Games and Culture and The Journal of E-media Studies.

Teresa Fankhänel is a curator and writer. Before joining the MSU Broad Art Museum in 2022, she was a curator at the Architecture Museum in Munich (Germany) and an associate professor at the Department of Architectural History and Curatorial Practice at the Architecture School of the Technical University of Munich. Her exhibitions include The Architectural Model (2012), Werkzeuge des Entwerfens (2017), African Mobilities (2018), The Architecture Machine (2020–21), Built Together (2021), Shouldn’t You Be Working? (2023) and Andrea Canepa: As We Dwell in the Fold (2023). Her writing focuses on model making, computation, archival strategies, the practice and theory of exhibition making, and architectural design practices.

Q&A with Nina Amstutz and Cleo Davis 02/28/2024

Professor Nina Amstutz and Cleo Davis did an interview with the online west coast art publication, Variable West, surrounding the exhibition they have curated at the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, Policing Justice.

Q&A with Nina Amstutz and Cleo Davis We talked to the curators of “Policing Justice” about the upcoming exhibition at Portland Institute for Contemporary Art.

02/16/2024

An upcoming exciting event next Monday, February 19!

Screening of the award-winning documentary, _Carving the Divine: Buddhist Sculptors of Japan_, followed by a Q and A session with director Yujiro Seki.

Monday, Feb. 19, 4:30 PM, Lawrence Hall 115
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBtdhue11UA

02/15/2024

HAA is co-sponsoring some of the Visiting Artist Lectures with the Art Department, the first one is today at 4pm in Lawrence 115.

The lecture will also be live streamed and recorded on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkb9sZzZWwEXut43HyuC0Xqr6k-DR_YPR

Sandy Rodriguez Lecture
DATE/TIME: Thursday, February 15th at 4pm
LOCATION: Lawrence 115 and live streamed on YouTube

Alfredo Jaar Lecture
DATE/TIME: Wednesday, February 21st at 4pm
LOCATION: Lawrence 115 and live streamed on YouTube

Robert Trafford Lecture
DATE/TIME: Monday, February 26th at 4pm
LOCATION: Lawrence 115 and live streamed on YouTube

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105 Lawrence Hall, 1190 Franklin Boulevard
Eugene, OR
97403