Exhibits

7 02, 2017

From Bethlehem to Bedlam: classifying the incurables through science (Amanda Ruggeri, BBC Culture)

By |2017-02-09T23:56:29-05:00February 7th, 2017|2017, Europe, Everything Else, Exhibits, February, History, Medicine, Museums, News, Philosophy, psychology, science|0 Comments

From Bethlehem to Bedlam: classifying the incurables through science. What was founded as a place open to those in need became a palatial institution that housed those deemed mentally unsound. From the article: By the 17th Century, the asylum was well-known enough to appear in numerous Jacobean dramas and ballads. Often – as in Shakespeare’s plays [...]

18 11, 2016

Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston (September 2016 – January 2017)

By |2016-11-18T21:30:10-05:00November 18th, 2016|2016, Academia, Arts, Europe, Exhibits, Libraries, Literature, Other Sites, Recommendations, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston: three venues showcase the rich store of imagination in Europe before modernity. From the description: The exhibition presents more than 260 outstanding manuscripts and printed books from nineteen Boston-area collections, dating from the ninth to the seventeenth centuries. h/t Roberta Morosini

6 11, 2016

Coco Chanel and the Art of Reading: Exhibit in Ca’ Pesaro, Venice

By |2016-11-06T08:02:18-05:00November 6th, 2016|2016, Europe, Exhibits, Fashion, History, Libraries, Museums, November, Other Sites, People, Recommendations|0 Comments

Coco Chanel and the Art of Reading: Exhibit in the Ca'Pesaro, Venice, through 8 January 2017. From the description: From Greek authors to modern poets, Gabrielle Chanel’s abundant library reveals the works that left an impression on her life and shaped her personality.... This dialogue through the ages, from antiquity to her contemporaries, is underlined in particular by [...]

23 10, 2016

From Greece to China

By |2016-10-22T15:56:07-04:00October 23rd, 2016|2016, Academia, Arts, Asia, China, Europe, Everything Else, Exhibits, History, Museums, News, October, science, Technology|0 Comments

From Greece to China, with kouros: the Terracotta Warriors in Xi'an may have found their footing through Greek artisans who migrated to China, a hypothesis supported by genetic research. From the article: A separate study shows European-specific mitochondrial DNA has been found at sites in China's western-most Xinjiang Province, suggesting that Westerners may have settled, lived [...]

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