- FALL 2021 -
DECEMBER 1, 2021: THE INDUSTRIAL HANDMADE: CRAFT AND DESIGN IN PEDAGOGY
10:00a – 12:00p EST Via Zoom
“Technical Artistry: The Industrialization of Ceramics Education in Meiji Japan (1868–1912)”
Daria Murphy - Independent Scholar
“Crafting Design Expertise Between India and the United States”
Vishal Khandelwal - PhD Candidate, History of Art, University of Michigan
DECEMBER 15, 2021: MATERIAL KNOWLEDGE
12:00p – 2:00p EST Via Zoom
“Parelmoerwerkers and Plasticity: Material Literacy in Early Modern Dutch Craft”
Cynthia Kok - PhD Candidate, Art History, Yale University
Daniel Niles - Associate Professor, Geography, Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Kyoto
- SPRING 2022 -
JANUARY 12, 2022: TEXTILES, IDENTITY, AND THE MARKETPLACE
“Ribbon skirts and baskets: Indigenous Femininity in Canadian Centennial Exhibitions”
Lisa Binkley - Assistant Professor, Department of History, Dalhousie University
JANUARY 26, 2022: BEYOND THE CRAFTSPERSON: CRAFT AND THE AGENCY OF MATERIALS
“A ‘Suave Combat’? Distributed Agencies between Matter, Artisan, and Workshop in Early Modern Venetian Glassworking”
Emily Hyatt - Research Assistant, Heidelberg Center for Cultural Heritage, Heidelberg University
Estefania Sanchez - Independent Scholar
FEBRUARY 9, 2022: LABOR AND LANDSCAPE IN THE UNITED STATES
“Fruitful Ground: Craft, Nature, and Whiteness”
Matthew K. Limb - PhD Candidate, History of Art and Architecture, University of California Santa Barbara
Rebekah Edwards - Associate Professor of Digital and Critical Pedagogies at California College of the Arts
FEBRUARY 23, 2022: CRAFTING HISTORIES AND THE PRESENT
“Crafting the Patawomeck Eel Pot: History, Survivance, and Culture”
D. Brad Hatch - NEPA/Cultural Resources Media Manager, U.S. Department of the Navy
Hadley Jensen - Research Fellow in Southwest Modernism, Lunder Institute for American Art; Research Associate, Division of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History
MARCH 9, 2022: THE LURE OF RURAL CRAFT
“Rural Craft Production in Britain and Ireland: The Travel Diaries of Margery Kendon”
Thomas Cooper - PhD Candidate and Pigott Scholar, History of Art, University of Cambridge
Noga Bernstein - Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow, Hebrew University in Jerusalem
MARCH 23, 2022: THE CRAFTS IN WAR AND DISPLACEMENT
“Renewing, Repairing, Remembering: Craft in Jewish and Baltic Displaced Persons Camps, 1945–1951”
Alida Jekabson - Curatorial Assistant, Museum of Arts and Design, New York
Wendy Wiertz - Senior Research Fellow, Department of History, English, Linguistics and Music, University of Huddersfield
APRIL 6, 2022: MOBILITIES OF CRAFT KNOWLEDGE
“A Transitional Artisan: Reclaiming Multiplicity in the Craft Making in Deccan India”
Rajarshi Sengupta - National Institute of Fashion Technology, Kangra, and Department of Fine Art, University of Hyderabad
Santosh Kumar Rai - Professor of Modern Indian History, University of Delhi
APRIL 20, 2022: CRAFT POLITICS IN IMPERIAL, SOVIET, AND CONTEMPORARY CENTRAL ASIA
“Crafting Futures: Dismantling and Rebuilding Histories Together”
Rathna Ramanathan, Joseph Pochodzaj, Tom Simmons, and Eleanor Dare - Central Saint Martins, Royal College of Art, and Cambridge University
Sohee Ryuk - PhD Candidate, History, Columbia University
MAY 4, 2022: THE MAKER’S HAND: DIGITAL CRAFT
“Shiny New Toys: A History of Digital Technology in Canadian Post-Secondary Craft”
Lynne Heller, Dorie Millerson, and Kathleen Morris - OCAD University
Jenna Allsopp - PhD Candidate, History of Design, University of Brighton
MAY 18, 2022: LIKE/AS/IS: METAPHOR, EMPATHY, AND 20TH-CENTURY POLITICS
“Art between Text and Textile: The Deployment of Fiber in the Southern Cone”
Jacqueline Witkowski - Visiting Assistant Professor, Massachusetts College of Art and Design
“'Sometimes I feel that if I am intimate enough with the object it will come alive': Crafting Empathy in the Late Twentieth Century”
Rachael Schwabe - Independent Scholar
Quellennachweis:
ANN: Craft History Workshop (online, 1 Dec 21-18 May 22). In: ArtHist.net, 20.11.2021. Letzter Zugriff 05.11.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/35379>.