Graduate Student Conference: Context and Meaning 2021

Start Date

Friday January 22, 2021

End Date

Saturday January 23, 2021

Time

12:00 pm - 12:00 pm

Location

The of 澳门六合彩开奖现场 is hosting its 18th annual Context and Meaning conference this year. 17 graduate students from across Canada and the United States will be presenting their papers that address this year's theme: "Pay Attention." Our keynote speaker, Dr. Dylan Robinson, will be presenting at the conference as well. Context and Meaning XVIII: Pay Attention will be held on Friday, February 1st and Saturday, February 2nd at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. .

Art History's Johanna Amos' Edit-A-Thon Makes News!

Date

Sunday March 3, 2019
12:00 pm - 12:00 pm

Location

Online

Art History's Johanna Amos' organized a digital workshop to help increase the online presence of women. This event was co-sponsored with . The Art & Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-Thon was designed to help female contributors use Wikipedia and to increase the female contributions to the online encyclopedia. For more information on this event, read the . 

Professor Matthew Reeve presents: "Queer Family Romance and Collecting at Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill"

Date

Tuesday March 20, 2018
2:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Watson Hall 517

Dr. Leslie Topp presents: "When Room Becomes Cell: Solitude and Isolation in Nineteenth-Century Asylum Spaces"

Date

Wednesday March 28, 2018
5:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Location

Agnes Etherington Art Centre Atrium

This talk is co-sponsored by The Departments of Art History and Art Conservation, Geography and Planning, Psychiatry, the Graduate Program in Cultural Studies, the Principal's Development Fund, and the Agnes Etherington Art Centre.

Art Conservation hosts 44th ANAGPIC!

Start Date

Thursday April 5, 2018

End Date

Saturday April 7, 2018

Time

12:00 pm - 12:00 pm

Location

Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen鈥檚 University

 Association of North American Graduate Programs in the Conservation of Cultural Property: 44th Annual Student Conference

Anagpic 2018

At a Glance

Hosted by:

Queen鈥檚 University, Art Conservation Program

When:

April 5-7, 2018

Where:

April 5

  • Tours at the Art Extension Centre (15 Bader Lane)
  • Welcome Reception and Registration at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre (36 University Avenue)

April 6

  • Sessions: Bellevue Ballroom at the Holiday Inn Kingston Waterfront (2 Princess St.)
  • Banquet: University Club at Queen鈥檚 (168 Stuart St.)

April 7

  • Sessions: Biosciences Complex Auditorium, Queen鈥檚 University (116 Barrie St.)

 

Please find the schedule here: ANAGPIC 2018 Schedule

Please find the list of student speakers and abstracts here: Speakers and Abstracts

 

The Art Conservation Program at Queen鈥檚 University is pleased to host the 44th annual ANAGPIC student conference on April 5-7, 2018. The conference will give student representatives from each of the eight ANAGPIC member institutions the opportunity to present the research, treatment, and/or technical analyses undertaken at their respective institutions. Speaker sessions will take place at the Bellevue Ballroom at the Holiday Inn Kingston Waterfront on April 6, and the Biosciences Complex Auditorium at Queen鈥檚 University on April 7. We will be hosting a welcome reception at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre and a banquet dinner at the University Club at Queen鈥檚 University on April 5 and 6 respectively.

 

This year鈥檚 Angelica Rudenstine Lecture will be given by Heidi Swierenga, Senior Conservator and Head of the Collections Care, Management, and Access department at the UBC Museum of Anthropology. She is an object conservator specializing in the care and use of Indigenous belongings. She is also an associate in the department of Anthropology at UBC where she teaches the conservation of organic and inorganic materials. She has published and lectured on conservation issues, has developed and delivered several workshops in her region on collections care and preservation, and has also served as a consultant on numerous special projects ranging from the care and movement of monumental works to the care of family belongings in communities. Her lecture, to be given on April 6, is entitled 鈥淩ights of Use and Permissible Risk: 7 Objects that Shaped a Practice.鈥

 

Queen鈥檚 University is situated on traditional Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee territory. We have paid homage to the Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee peoples through our logo: the Thunderbird is a powerful spiritual symbol for the Anishinaabe, while the Two Row Wampum signifies the 1613 mutual treaty agreement declaring peaceful coexistence between the Haudenosaunee and Dutch settlers. This year鈥檚 proceedings will be blessed by Mishiikenh (Vernon) Altiman, Cultural Counsellor at Four Directions Aboriginal Student Centre, Queen鈥檚 University, who will be opening and closing our conference with a pipe ceremony to first welcome and later wish our guests safe travels as they return home.

 

Thank you to our conference co-chairs, Colette Hardman-Peavy, Valerie Moscato, Lauren Osmond, and Rosaleen Hill for their work in preparation for this conference. We would also like to thank our generous sponsors:

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation LogoThe Tri Art Logo

The Tru Vue LogoThe Art Noise Logo

The 澳门六合彩开奖现场 LogoThe Japanese Paper Place Poster

Agnes Etherington Art Centre LogoPan Chancho Logo

ANAGPIC Map

The ANAGPIC Map

Art History Graduate Seminar in Vienna

Start Date

Tuesday December 3, 2019

End Date

Wednesday December 4, 2019

Time

12:00 pm - 12:00 pm

Location

Interested in studying in Vienna this winter? From December 3-14, 2018, join instructor Prof. Ron Spronk for ARTH 844, Topics in Northern Renaissance Art, "The Hand of the Master; Materials and Techniques of Pieter Bruegel the Elder". The seminar is in conjunction with the .

Download the course description (1.3MB)

 

Julie Hollenbach: Unpacking the Living Room

Date

Monday November 4, 2019
12:00 pm - 12:00 pm

Location

Julie Hollenbach, an Art History PhD graduate from Queen's has curated a show at the Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery in Nova Scotia.

Art Conservation Homecoming Open House

Date

Saturday October 20, 2018
10:30 am - 1:30 pm

Location

15 Bader Ln, Agnes Etherington Art Centre Extension

Fall Preview: Learn about 澳门六合彩开奖现场 Grad Studies

Start Date

Saturday November 3, 2018

End Date

Saturday November 17, 2018

Time

12:00 pm - 12:00 pm

Location

Come find out more about your community-to-be. Explore your learning spaces, talk to your professors, hear from current students and get a feel for how awesome Kingston is to live in. All 30+ of our Arts and Science departments will have professors and students to talk to. Most importantly Fall Preview will give you a feel of what it will be like to sit in our classrooms - participate in a tour, a living lecture or hands-on demonstration.

Art Conservation Guest Speaker: Silicone Solvents and the Modular Cleaning Program

Date

Wednesday January 16, 2019
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Location

Agnes Etherington Art Centre 36 University Ave, Kingston, ON

Presented by Queen's Art Conservation Program and the Margaret Light Visiting Scholar Program 

This presentation by Chris Stavroudis will introduce the various uses of silicone solvents for art conservation in both theory and practice and will review the formation and uses of emulsions, both conventional and microemulsions.

Silicone solvents, relatively new to conservation, possess many properties of great utility to conservators. They are relatively non-toxic, have little to no odor, and are sublimely nonpolar. They have uses as neat solvents; in solvent mixtures; as protective, water-repellant barriers; and as components in microemulsions and polymeric emulsion stabilized systems. Modified silicone solvents, liquids and gels will be discussed as ways to extend the utility of the silicone world.

Chris will also provide an introduction to The Modular Cleaning Program (MCP), a systematic approach he developed to assist cleaning artworks. The MCP consists of a series of concentrated stock solutions and a computer database which may be adapted for the creation of liquid, emulsified and gelled cleaning agents.

Chris Stavroudis is a private paintings conservator in Los Angeles. He developed the Modular Cleaning Program in 2002 as an off-shoot of the work of Richard Wolbers and the Gels Cleaning Project at the Getty Conservation Institute. The Modular Cleaning Program is both an approach to cleaning and a FileMaker Pro database. He has codified the scientific basis of aqueous cleaning and solvent theories into the logic of the computer database. The program models aqueous chemistry at a given pH, reflects an ad-hoc theory of solvent gel formulation, and makes calculations in Hansen solubility space as it guides the conservator in the preparation of test cleaning solutions.

Chris obtained undergraduate degrees in Chemistry and Art History from the University of Arizona and his Master鈥檚 degree from the University of Delaware/Winterthur program in 1983.