Ohio State nav bar

CMRS Colloquium: Alanna S. Radlo-Dzur - The Invisible in Early Modern Nahua Art

Early Modern Nahua Art
October 21, 2019
4:00PM - 5:00PM
189 Hagerty Hall - Humanities Institute Conference Room

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2019-10-21 16:00:00 2019-10-21 17:00:00 CMRS Colloquium: Alanna S. Radlo-Dzur - The Invisible in Early Modern Nahua Art Please join us for the first CMRS colloquium of this semester with PhD Candidate Alanna S. Radlo-Dzur (History of Art) on Monday, October 21st. This hour-long colloquium will begin at 4pm as usual but will now be held in the new Humanities Institute conference room, through the Foreign Language bookstore (on the right as you enter the main entrance of Hagerty Hall).   Bio: Alanna S. Radlo-Dzur studies Precolumbian Art with a primary research focus on Post-Classic manuscript traditions in Central Mexico and Oaxaca. She also addresses issues surrounding the collecting history of Precolumbian objects, from the colonial period to the contemporary art market. She received her MA from the University of Chicago with a thesis on sculpted metates (grinding stones) from Greater Nicoya, and a BA from Brooks in Film and Video Production. Her work as a lens-based artist and curator of moving image art can be found at alannasimone.com. You can also access an introduction to her research by visiting: go.osu.edu/radlodzur 189 Hagerty Hall - Humanities Institute Conference Room Department of History of Art historyofart@osu.edu America/New_York public

Please join us for the first CMRS colloquium of this semester with PhD Candidate Alanna S. Radlo-Dzur (History of Art) on Monday, October 21st. This hour-long colloquium will begin at 4pm as usual but will now be held in the new Humanities Institute conference room, through the Foreign Language bookstore (on the right as you enter the main entrance of Hagerty Hall).

 

Bio: Alanna S. Radlo-Dzur studies Precolumbian Art with a primary research focus on Post-Classic manuscript traditions in Central Mexico and Oaxaca. She also addresses issues surrounding the collecting history of Precolumbian objects, from the colonial period to the contemporary art market. She received her MA from the University of Chicago with a thesis on sculpted metates (grinding stones) from Greater Nicoya, and a BA from Brooks in Film and Video Production. Her work as a lens-based artist and curator of moving image art can be found at alannasimone.com.

You can also access an introduction to her research by visiting: go.osu.edu/radlodzur

Events Filters: