| | 🌷 Welcome to March! 🌷Women's History Month brings us blooming flowers and longer days! At the Harvard Art Museums we’re offering a lineup of inspiring events, many of which celebrate the achievements of women, both historical and contemporary. We also have excellent new special exhibitions, LaToya M. Hobbs: It's Time and Future Minded: New Works in the Collection! Whether you’re taking a quick break from midterms or swinging by during spring recess, we can’t wait for you to see what we have to offer :) |
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| spotlight TOur Women's Health and Art, with Eve Crompton '24 Friday, March 8 11:30AM-12:15PM Celebrate International Women's Day with this tour about historical social attitudes toward female health and illness, aiming to empower women to claim the equitable care they deserve. |
| Curatorial TOUR Future Minded: New Works in the Collection Sunday, March 10 12-1PM Explore a selection of the museums' most recently acquired works, nearly all of which are on view for the first time, with curatorial fellow Jackson Davidow. |
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| Materials Lab Workshop It's Time to Make a Print! Wednesday, March 13 12-3PM Create your own woodblock print with guidance from artist Deighton Abrams, after taking a close look at LaToya M. Hobbs: It's Time with exhibition curator Elizabeth M. Rudy. $15 materials fee and advance registration required. |
| Gallery TALK Curator Joachim Homann on Future Minded: New Works in the Collection Wednesday, March 13 12:30-1PM Take a closer look at works in the exhibition and hear Homann's insights about a highly decorative watercolor by Dutch art nouveau artist T.W. Nieuwenhuis. |
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| From Our Friends... The Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts will present an artist talk with Catherine Quan Damman (Linda Nochlin Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History at the Institute of Fine Arts, NYU), on Monday, March 4 at 6:30-8PM in Farkas Hall. Entitled “The Ramos Amendment,” the talk is drawn from Damman's book project, Performance: A Deceptive History (focused on the 1970s), and is co-presented with Theater, Dance and Media. RSVP required. The event will not be livestreamed. In conjunction with the exhibition A Female Landscape and the Abstract Gesture, Harvard Radcliffe Institute will present a conversation between the artist Maren Hassinger and the curator Chassidy A. Winestock, moderated by the art historian and curator Mary Schneider Enriquez. Check it out on Thursday, March 7 at 5PM in person at the Knafel Center or on Zoom. ​Celebrating Women’s History Month in conjunction with the 2023-2025 exhibition supported by the C. Ludens Ringnes Sculpture Collection at Harvard Business School, the HBS Art Program and HBS Connects will present “An Evening with Ursula von Rydingsvard & Film Screening” on Thursday, March 7 at 6-7:30PM in Klarman Hall. The film, Ursula von Rydingsvard: Into Her Own, is described as “an artistic biography of one of the few women in the world working in monumental sculpture.” Snacks will be served. Registration is required. ________________________________________ Spotlight on Women in the Museums' History Associate Conservator Evelyn Ehrlich working on a drawing. Photograph by George S. Woodruff, 1944. Fogg History Photographs, International News Photos, folder 2. Harvard Art Museums Archives, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Evelyn S. Ehrlich, Associate Conservator of Prints, Drawings, and Manuscripts, began working in the Conservation Department at the Fogg Museum around 1929. Although she had a degree in architecture from the University of Pennsylvania, she started as a volunteer at the museum, as many women did. While at the Fogg she researched and wrote about prints and became an expert in document forgeries. During World War II, because of her expertise in paper conservation, she and a colleague (conservator and future museum director George Stout) were called on to restore the Declaration of Independence in Washington, D.C. To learn more about the contributions of women throughout the museums' history, including Ehrlich, check out a pop-up exhibit with Senior Archivist Megan Schwenke at the Museums at Night on Thursday, March 28! |
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Share this email Update your preferences Unsubscribe Image (Header): Installation view of Renée Sintenis, German, Daphne, 1930. Bronze. Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, Gift of Mrs. Charles L. (Hetty) Kuhn, BR59.49. |
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