Episodes
UC Davis art history graduate student Alexandra Rea-Baum offers a new view on American artist John Sloan through the analysis of his non-objectifying gaze seen in "The Cot," a painting included in the Ash Can's exhibit at the MacBeth Gallery, NYC, in 1907.
Published 05/29/10
Kristina Schlosser presents a section from her thesis on new media and the expanding role of the internet for the 2010 MA orals. She focuses on contemporary video artists Natalie Bookchin and examines her work, "Mass Ornament," and the implications of the individual worker/dancer silently connected by the Internet.
Published 05/29/10
Melanie Ross explores how Paul Morrissey's film "Flesh," used the visual vocabulary of Andy Warhol to advocate for conservative morals and foreshadowed a shifting attitude of public values. Morrissey changed Warholʼs filmmaking techniques from a self-reflexive avant-guard mode to a commercial approach. The film was released in 1968, the cataclysmic year of the counterculture rebellion.
Published 05/29/10
MA candidate Melanie Ross presents her paper on Alice Neel for the Hawaii International Conference of the Humanities. Born in 1900, Neel struggled against social norms as a female painter in a male dominated career. Exploring her paintings of couples from the '60s and '70s, Neel captures the uprising of the feminist movement and the battle of the sexes.
Published 01/05/10
UC Davis art history graduate student Kristina Schlosser explores the reception of Chicano art and its reception within the larger hegemonic art world.
Published 11/10/09
UC Davis art history graduate student Laura Hutchison talks about 'Temporality in Form: Elements of the Michelangelo Theory of Human Proportion in Three of His Early Sculptures'.
Published 11/03/09
UC Davis art history graduate student Lucinda White Frachtenberg reads from her master's thesis about the relatively unstudied photographs of the painter Thomas Eakins, who most known for his painting "Gross Clinic."
Published 10/05/09
Published 10/05/09