Lee Frank Lecture Series
An endowment by the family and friends of Lee Frank, Class of 1921, sponsors a special event each year : a visiting lecturer or artist, a scholar or artist in residence, or a special exhibit.
2024 Lecture information:
Miranda Belarde-Lewis, Assistant Professor, Joe and Jill McKinstry Endowed Faculty Fellow in Native North American Indigenous Knowledge, University of Washington Information School
Visual Sovereignty in the Informatic Age
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
LPAC Cinema
Native artists have always created pieces that reflect a relationship with specific land bases and ways of knowing. Our collective reality now includes a digital scape mediated by platforms; these environments require a modified set of protocols to navigate. Native artists continue to lead the way, offering both documentation and critique, as they hold up a mirror to the ways Native peoples are impacted and participate in our tech-obsessed world.
Past Lee Frank Lectures:
- 2023-2024
Miranda Belarde-Lewis, Assistant Professor, Joe and Jill McKinstry Endowed Faculty Fellow in Native North American Indigenous Knowledge, University of Washington Information School
Visual Sovereignty in the Informatic Age
- 2022–2023
Sarah Lopez, Associate Professor, University of Pennsylvania
Architectural History as Migrant History: Cantera Stone and Construction Labor in Mexico and the United StatesArchitectural History as Migrant History reframes histories of migration and construction by tracking the development, over the last fifty years, of the excavation, processing, and distribution of cantera stone across the US-Mexico boundary. Cantera literally means “quarry,” but the Spanish word is used in Mexico to describe a specific brittle rock used to build colonial churches and civic infrastructure. More recently, a network of Mexican quarrymen, stonemasons, homebuilders, architects, and businessmen have refined a market that caters to a Mexican and Mexican American clientele in the American Southwest. Architectural History Is Migrant History tracks the development of a meaningful and sophisticated binational commercial network that has reshaped design norms and building trades in two countries from the shadows of a formal American economy.
Sarah Lopez, a built environment historian and migration scholar, is an Associate Professor at The University of Pennsylvania. Lopez' book, The Remittance Landscape: The Spaces of Migration in Rural Mexico and Urban USA, was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2015 and won the 2017 Spiro Kostof Book Award from the Society of Architectural Historians. She teaches at the intersection of histories of the built environment, migration, and spatial justice. Lopez is currently a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts.
- 2018–2019
Roberta Wue ’85, Associate Professor, University of California, Irvine
Amoy Chinqua/Chitqua: On Imagining the Chinese Artist in 18th Century London - 2016–2017
Deborah DeMott ’70, Professor of Law, Duke University
Disavowed Art - 2015—2016
Elizabeth Sutton, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Northern Iowa
Mapping Colonization and Decolonization in the 17th Century and Today - 2014—2015
Daniela Bleichmar, Associate Professor of Art History and History, USC
The Legible Image: Translating Pictorial Knowledge in Early Colonial Mexico - 2013—2014
Julia Bryan-Wilson ’95, University of California at Berkeley
Cecilia Vicuna & the Problem of Thread - 2012—2013
Susan Walker, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford University
Renovating the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford - 2011—2012
Ken Tadashi Oshima, University of Washington
In-between Space: Constructing Modern Architecture between Japan and the World - 2010—2011
Julie Nelson Davis, University of Pennsylvania
Reading The Mirror of Yoshiwara Beauties, Compared - 2008—2009
Keith Eggener, University of Missouri.
Settings for History and Oblivion in Modern Mexico, 1942—58 - 2007—2008
Rachel DeLue ’93, Assistant Professor of American Art, Princeton University.
Painting as Translation, or Seeing and Knowing in the Art of Arthur Dove - 2006—2007
Louise Allison Cort, Curator for Ceramics, Freer Gallely of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.
A Japanese Potter's Study Trip to Edo: Ceramic Research and Development in the 17th Century - 2005—2006
Gwendolyn Dubois Shaw, Associate Professor of American and African American Art, University of Pennsylvania
Imagined Subjectivity: Portraits of the Past in Fred Wilson's Mining the Museum - 2004—2005
Joseph Rishel, Senior Curator of European Painting, PMA
Latin American Art 1492-1825: Making an Exhibition - 2003—2004
Ingrid Schaffner, Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia
The Dream of Venus Dreams On: Salvador Dali's Surrealist Funhouse and Contemporary Art - 2002—2003
Matthew Biro ’83, University of Michigan
Raoul Hausmann's Revolutionary Media: Dada Performance, Photomontage, and the Development of the Cyborg in Germany - 2001—2002
Susan Sidlauskas, University of Pennsylvania
Cezanne's Significant 'Other': The Portraits of Hortense - 2000—2001
Bonnie Yochelson ’74
The Story Behind Berenice Abbott's Changing New York - 1998—1999
Nina Athanassoglou-Kallmyer, University of Delaware
Delacroix's Late Works: Between Aesthetics & Consumerism - 1997—1998
Angela Dalle Vacche, Emory University
Italy 1945: Cinema and Painting - 1996-1997
Maxwell Hearn, Curator of Chinese Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Possessing the Past: Treasures from the National Palace, Museum, Taipei - 1995—1996
Joanna E. Ziegler, College of The Holy Cross
Dance, Film, & Gender: Retrieving Historical Women - 1994—1995
Christine Poggi, University of Pennsylvania
"Vito Acconci's Bad Dream of Domesticity" - 1993-1994
Wendy Steiner, University of Pennsylvania
Construing Mapplethorpe - 1992—1993
Richard Martin, Fashion Institute of Technology
Fine Arts and Finery Arts: An Inquiry and an Odyssey - 1991-1992
Robert Storr, Museum of Modern Art, NY
...that was then, this is now--modernism, post-modernism, and post po-mo... - 1990—1991
David Freedberg, Columbia University
Naming the Visible: Art and Science in the Circle of Galileo - 1989—1990
Alison Kettering, Carleton College
The Courtship Paintings of Gerhard ter Borch - 1988—1989
Linda Seidel, University of Chicago
Jan van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait:' Business as Usual? - 1987—1988
Meredith Claussen, University of Washington
The Department Store: Development of the Building Type - 1986—1987
Shen Fu, Freer Gallery, Smisthsonian Institution
The Mongol Princess Sengge as a Chinese Art Collector - 1985—1986
Dale Kinney, Bryn Mawr College
An Excellent Horse: Critical Understandings of the Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius from Antiquity to Modern Times - 1984—1985
Elizabeth Johns, University of Maryland
Thomas Eakins and Nineteenth Century Heroic Ideals - 1983—1984
Kathleen Weil-Garris-Brandt, New York University
Raphael and Cinquecento Sculpture - 1982—1983
William Heckscher, Rare Books, Princeton University
Egogenesis: Fundamental Change as an Essential Ingredient in the Formation of Genius - 1981—1982
Joanna Gottfried Williams, University of California, Berkeley
The Non-Finito in Indian Sculpture - 1980—1981
Wanda M. Corn, Woodrow Wilson International Center (Smithsonian)
The Birth of a National Icon: Grand Wood's American Gothic - 1979—1980
Svetlana Alpers, University of California, Berkeley
Looking at Words: The Representation of Texts in Dutch Seventeenth Century Art