History of Art Scholars Well Represented at College Art Association 2018 Conference

Each year thousands of representatives of the art world assemble for the College Art Associationâs annual meeting. Âé¶čAVâs History of Art department was as well represented as ever. This yearâs Los Angeles event featured a number of talks and panels organized by the collegeâs distinguished faculty, graduate students, and alumnae.
Notably, History of Art Professor Homay King organized and chaired the panel âRace and Deleuze: Representation, Affect, Artâ in which she presented the paper âAnna May Wong and the Color-image.â Several Bryn Mawr graduate students from History of Art delivered inspired talks on their ongoing projects. Ph.D. Candidate Michelle Smiley presented an excerpt of her dissertation in the talk âFormless: The Chemical Origins of Photographyâ in which she considers ephemeral chemical spectacles in the context of the scientific development of photography. Also in attendance was Ph.D. Candidate Jamie Richardson, who gave the talk titled âAll in the Family: Northern European Artistic Dynasties, ca. 1350-1750,â sponsored by Historians of Netherlandish Art. Jamieâs paper examines dynasty of the Francken family dynasty, based in Flanders from ca. 1520-1717. First year graduate student Meg Hankel was also in attendance.
In a panel organized by alum Jennie Hirsh (Ph.D â03) called Performance, Voice, and Embodiment: Ventriloquism in Contemporary Artâ alumnae Isabelle Loring Wallace (Ph.D. â99) âVoice, Vivification, and Subjectivity: Jasper Johns âVentriloquistâ (1983)â, and Michael Jay McClure (Ph.D. â06) âLike Iâm Dead: Sharon Hayes, Patty Hearst, and the Dummy Selfâ each presented research related to ventriloquism in contemporary art. Historian of the artist Ray Johnson, Johanna Gosse (Ph.D. â14) drew together the interces of class and pop art in âNice Work (if you can get it): Ray Johnson and the Political Economy of Pop Art.â