@ What’s New in Papyrology
Summer Institute in Papyrology at Princeton University, 7 July – 8 August 2014
http://papyrology.blogspot.com/2013/11/summer-institute-in-papyrology-at.html
quidquid bene dictum est ab ullo, meum est
@ What’s New in Papyrology
Summer Institute in Papyrology at Princeton University, 7 July – 8 August 2014
http://papyrology.blogspot.com/2013/11/summer-institute-in-papyrology-at.html
@ Portus Project
Portus lecture tweets
http://www.portusproject.org/portus-mooc/2013/11/portus-lecture-tweets/
seen on the Classicists list:
Greek Art in Context
An International Conference at the University of Edinburgh
7th-9th April 2014We invite offers of papers and posters for the forthcoming conference, Greek Art in Context, to be held at the University of Edinburgh, 7th-9th April 2014.
The deadline for electronic abstracts is FRIDAY 20TH DECEMBER 2013.This two and a half-day conference will explore the broad notion of context in relation to Greek Art. Its aim is twofold: to address the problem of defining and determining context from a theoretical point of view and to explore how it affects the interpretation of the material culture of ancient Greece from the Dark Ages to the end of the Hellenistic period. What do we mean by context? In which ways and under what circumstances does context become relevant for the interpretation of Greek material culture? Which contexts should we look at – viewing context, political, social and religious discourse, artistic tradition…? What happens when there is no context?
We welcome proposals for papers of 30 minutes addressing questions relevant to the scope of the conference. There will be 8 three-paper sessions followed by Q&A. Topics for discussion may include, but are not limited to:
– Same iconographies, different meanings. Greek images abroad
– Interpreting old works through new lenses
– Reading objects in context
– Images and social realities
– Distribution, consumption and trade of Greek art.
– Contexts of use of Greek vases and how they affect our interpretation of the object and its images
– Interpreting monumental sculpture and non-portable objects
– Greek art in its modern contexts (museums, collections etc.)KEYNOTE speakers: Prof. Carmen Sánchez (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid) and Dr. Antonis Kotsonas (University of Edinburgh).
Abstracts of ca. 300 words are invited from scholars working in the fields of classical archaeology and history of art and with an interest in contextualization as an integral part of the study of ancient Greek art. The conference is open to advanced postgraduate students. Please send title and abstract of your proposed paper/poster to the conference organiser, Dr. Diana Rodríguez Pérez (diana.rodperez AT gmail.com), by Friday, 20th December 2013. We will inform you by 15th of January if your abstract has been accepted. The language of the conference is English.
Posters related to the topics outlined above are also welcome. Instructions regarding the posters format will be provided at a later stage. Posters will be exhibited throughout the conference in the McMillan Room of the School of History, Classics and Archaeology. Authors will have a chance to give a short 5-minute presentation on their poster during the drinks receptions. Small prizes will be awarded to the best posters of the conference.
The conference fee is £50 standard rate and £35 for students. It includes coffee and tea on the 7th, 8th and 9th, sandwich lunch on the 7th and 8th, as well as the drinks receptions on the 7th and 8th. Delegates are expected to arrange their own travel and accommodation. They are also encouraged to apply for funding at their own institutions.
This conference is made possible through the generous support of School of History, Classics and Archaeology of the University of Edinburgh, and of the Institute of Classical Studies. Several student bursaries will be available thanks to a contribution from the Classical Association.
@ Bread & Circuses
Antonine Wall: Callendar Park
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/CGkB/~3/N8PRQnEnnGA/antonine-wall-callendar-house.html
Bernard Frischer sends this along:
Nov. 22, 2013 Launch of The Digital Hadrian’s Villa Project!
Dear Friends of Hadrian’s Villa and the Tomb of the Gladiator,
I write you because you were good enough to sign our iPetition to save Hadrian’s Villa and/or to support a related petition to save the Gladiator Tomb when these precious monuments were at risk.
The occasion for contacting you now is something very positive, indeed. After five years of work by many individuals and with the cooperation of many academic and cultural institutions, we are proud to announce the launch of The Digital Hadrian’s Villa Project.
The goals of the project are to provide: (1) a website with rich visual documentation of the condition of the site today; (2) a 3D restoration model of the site as it appeared during the reign of Hadrian; and (3) an interactive simulation that puts the 3D restoration model into web players of a game engine.
Here is a brief progress report on our efforts to reach these goals:
The project website documenting the state of the villa today is now open to the public and can be viewed at: http://vwhl.clas.virginia.edu/villa/
Please be sure to "like" the website on Facebook and other social media.The first web player to be finished is the Canopus-Serapaeum. It will be released by the end of this month and will be freely available from the Canopus page of the project website (http://vwhl.clas.virginia.edu/villa/canopus.php). Over the next 18 months, our plan is to release web players of a dozen of the most important structures in the villa (Canopus, Hall of the Doric Pillars, Piazza d’Oro, etc.).
The current state of the 3D model can be seen in an HD video at:
Please be sure to select the HD setting for best viewing quality and to "like" it.This Friday, November 22, 2013, starting at 6:30 pm Eastern Daylight Time, there will be a public launch of project hosted by the Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington, DC. The guest of honor is Dr. Marina Sapelli Ragni. The event will be webcast, and you can watch it live at:
http://new.livestream.com/idialab/VirtualHadriansVillaLaunch
Please go online a few minutes early so that you are present when we start.
Thank you very much again for your interest and support. Please remember to join us on Friday, November 22, 2013 at 6:30 pm EDT via our webcast!
Sincerely yours,
Prof. Bernard Frischer, Director
The Digital Hadrian’s Villa Project
The Virtual World Heritage Laboratory, Indiana University School of InformaticsP.S. The Digital Hadrian’s Villa Project has been generously supported by an anonymous private donor, the National Science Foundation (grant # IIS-1018512), and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. We are very grateful for this support.
We thank the Archaeological Superintendency for Lazio, a unit of the Italian Ministry of Culture, for its kind permission to gather and publish on the website visual documentation of the site today. We especially thank Superintendent Emerita Dr. Marina Sapelli Ragni for her encouragement and support.
Co-sponsors of the public launch on November 22, 2013 are: School of Informatics, Indiana University; Ball State University; the Center for Hellenic Studies; and the American Institute for Roman Culture.
Copyright © 2013 Frischer Consulting, Inc., All rights reserved.
You are on this email list because you either signed the iPetition to Save Hadrian’s Villa in 2012-13 or else are a supporter of the American Institute for Roman Culture (AIRC).