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Annual Conference Update
CAA invites proposals for the 2018 Annual Conference in Los Angeles that cover the breadth of current thought and research in studio art, art and architectural history, pedagogical issues, theory and criticism, museum and curatorial practice, conservation, design, new media, and technology.
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This new volume is devoted to the display of art within the visual culture of the Netherlands and contains articles that examine and conceptualize the history, meaning and techniques of exhibiting works of art in the Low Countries from the early modern period to the present.
Also available online >>
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Annual Conference Update
Thank you everyone who made the 2017 Annual Conference in New York a lively and vibrant event. The CAA staff, board, and myCAA helpers spoke with as many attendees as we could and attended as many sessions as we could. From what we heard at the conference, people had a good time and learned.
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Annual Conference Update
Art matters. Art has always mattered. Whether we are art scholars or artists, critics or designers, gallery goers or museum professionals, art matters to all of us a great deal. Equally importantly, art matters—critically—to the societies in which we live and work.
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Please visit the Research and Academic Program’s website to find out about upcoming scholarly events and activities, access archives of past activities, and get information about the fellowship program at the Clark. MORE
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Annual Conference Update
If you attended the 2017 Annual Conference in New York, we would love your feedback. Please take the official postconference survey to let us know how to improve your next experience. Deadline: March 10, 2017.
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Annual Conference Update
On Friday, February 17, protesters marched from the 2017 CAA Annual Conference to the entry hall of the Museum of Modern Art to demand that the institution remove Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, from its board because of his ties to the Trump administration.
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Reimagine the creative process through Azusa Pacific’s MFA in Visual Art, a low-residency program close to the Los Angeles area’s world-class cultural venues. Get details.
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Annual Conference Update
As part of the CAA conference, US Latinx Forum held a formal business meeting and then a plenary session. Ahead of those events, ARTnews spoke with the major players in this dialogue between CAA and Latinx art: Hunter O'Hanian, Rose G. Salseda, and Adriana Zavala.
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Annual Conference Update
Videos from the 2017 Annual Conference are now available on CAA's YouTube channel. Watch Mary Miller's keynote address; the Distinguished Artist Interviews with Coco Fusco and Katherine Bradford; sessions on "Public Art in the Era of Black Lives Matter"; and Hyperallergic's Hrag Vartanian talking to Amin Husain and Nitasha Dhillon from Decolonize This Place.
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CAA News
CAA has announced an exclusive offer to its members to spend two weeks exploring the art and art history of Greece and Italy. The trip, hosted CAA's executive director Hunter O'Hanian and taking place June 2–11, 2017, will include stops in the majestic cities of Athens, Rome, and Florence. Deadline: March 6, 2017.
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CAA News
The four newly elected members of the CAA Board of Directors are: Colin Blakely, Peter M. Lukehart, Melissa Hilliard Potter, and Julia Sienkewicz. Thank you for voting!
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CAA News
The deadline for applications for spring 2017 grants through the Millard Meiss Publication Fund, which supports book-length scholarly manuscripts in the history of art and related subjects, is Wednesday, March 15. Get your application ready soon!
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OF PhD Research, praxis-based. Your art/creative work (in any genre) IS the research, not parallel to or in support of a thesis. Keep your job, attend residencies with international colleagues. Critique, workshops in New York/Berlin. Option to fast track through the MFA first. Scholarship deadline March 1st.
Contact: Andrew Cooks, admissions@transart.org
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CAA News
CAA invites nominations and self-nominations for one member-at-large to serve on the Publications Committee for a three-year term. The Publications Committee is a consultative body that advises CAA's Publications Department and Board of Directors. Deadline: April 21, 2017.
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CAA News
CAA invites nominations and self-nominations for three individuals to serve on the caa.reviews Editorial Board for four-year terms. The journal also seeks a librarian to serve in an ex officio capacity to advise on technical and distribution issues. Deadline: April 21, 2017.
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CAA News
The Art Bulletin Editorial Board invites nominations and self-nominations for the position of reviews editor for the term July 1, 2018–June 30, 2021, with service as incoming reviews editor designate 2017–18. Deadline: April 3, 2017.
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Students’ Guide to Italian Renaissance Architecture •
Abundantly illustrated, including many explanatory graphics
• Buildings discussed by both architect and type • Includes discussions of major ancient and medieval buildings
www.sgira.org
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CAA News
CAA invites nominations for three individuals to serve on the Art Bulletin Editorial Board for a four-year term. The ideal candidate has published substantially in the field and may be an academic, museum-based, or independent scholar. Deadline: April 17, 2017.
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CAA News
CAA seeks a part-time advertising sales rep with media sales experience in both print and digital platforms. The ideal candidate should have established contacts in the arts and culture publishing landscape and in the wider culture field.
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Danny Smith visits Architecture of Life at the University of California's Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Kimberly L. Dennis reads Old Women and Art in the Early Modern Italian Domestic Interior by Erin J. Campbell. Dustin London reviews Suzanne P. Hudson's book Robert Ryman: Used Paint. Read more reviews at caa.reviews.
THIS WEEK IN OPPORTUNITIES |
Anolic Family Awards
Awards, Grants, Fellowships
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University at Buffalo
Calls for Papers
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Teaching. Research. Exhibitions
Our Gallery exhibitions, MA and PhD programs, and research initiatives explore new ways of thinking about decorative arts, design history, and material culture. MORE
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Art Shape Mammoth
Residencies, Workshops, Exchanges
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Parsons School of Design
Conferences & Symposia
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Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts and Sciences
Exhibition Opportunities
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NEWS FROM THE ART AND ACADEMIC WORLDS |
Artsy
How can we save the NEA? Since Republicans argue they are merely trimming the bloated federal budget, it is tempting to rely on the simple fact that eliminating the NEA will do little toward this goal. But this fiscal argument, while factually correct, won't galvanize people to come out and support the agency.
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On Friday, April 21 and Saturday, April 22, the Saint Louis Art Museum examines millinery as a key subject for Edgar Degas and his Impressionist circle, situating their images of hatmakers, shoppers, and hats within wider historical contexts of fashion, changing attitudes to women, and shifting patterns of trade.
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CultureGrrl
If quality of life and nourishment of intellect and spirit are as important to our national well-being as military might, then maintaining support for the arts is a no-brainer. Maybe the arts legions descending on Washington, DC, this month should try to seduce members of Congress with excerpts from performances and art displays that our tax dollars have helped to make possible.
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New York Times
David Pulphus, a high school artist from Saint Louis, may never become a free-speech cause célèbre akin to Chris Ofili, the London artist who caused a furor in 1999. Still, Rep. William Lacy Clay from Missouri filed a federal lawsuit arguing that the removal of a work by Pulphus from the Cannon House Office Building in Washington, DC, violates the artist's First Amendment rights.
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Strategic National Arts Alumni Project
Recent graduates with arts degrees have better career and entrepreneurial training than those who came before them, according to a report released by the Indiana University School of Education. The research, based on a survey of arts graduates, demonstrates that new approaches to arts education are helping prepare students for careers and give them tools they need to succeed.
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Inside Higher Ed
When Betsy DeVos accused liberal faculty members of forcing their views on students, she infuriated many professors and won praise from conservatives. Most faculty members who weighed in on social media denied the indoctrination and unfairness charges. While not disputing her assertion that they are more likely than others to be liberal, they said it was unfair to say that this meant they were indoctrinating anyone.
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Art History Teaching Resources
Most of my students in art history and art appreciation are first-generation college students, and many of them come from the economically depressed counties within a short driving distance of my institution, Morehead State University in eastern Kentucky. Through in-class discussion and office-hour chats, I have learned that many of them feel strong ties to an Appalachian identity.
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Artnet News
"Young kids think everything has to be free," said the curator and publisher Bice Curiger in a recent phone interview, shortly after the announcement that Parkett—the hefty, finger-on-the-pulse German-English magazine she cofounded some ninety-nine issues ago—would cease publication. "How can you survive?"
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Scholarly Kitchen
Is there good reason to expect that open access is likely to lead libraries and other customers to cancel their paid journal subscriptions? The context in which we have to ask this question is, quite frankly, one of dire economic straits in many academic libraries. Of course, libraries have been saying this for years, even decades.
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