Programs > Academic Programs > CHAViC
2009 CHAVIC Summer Seminar
Interpreting Historical Images
for Teaching and Research
June 14-19, 2009
Worcester, Massachusetts
The Center for Historic American Visual Culture (CHAViC) at the American
Antiquarian Society is pleased to announce that its first summer seminar
will be held in Worcester from June 15 to 19, 2009. The topic of the
seminar will be focused on Interpreting Visual Materials for Research
and Teaching.
CHAViC is committed to enabling graduate students, faculty members, museum educators and other non-academic professionals to learn about the history of American visual materials and demystifying their use. This seminar will enable participants to take advantage of the AAS collection of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century prints, maps, sheet music covers, and ephemera of all kinds. There will be guided tutorials as well as hands-on explorations of a topic of specific interest. Topics will include colonial prints, antebellum images of Native Americans, western landscape photography, chromolithography, and the etching revival. Participants will also be able to pursue research in the AAS collection as a part of the seminar.
The focus of the workshop will be on learning about printmaking processes and the publication of prints of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, how to access images from the web and to incorporate them in a meaningful way into the curriculum, and how to develop image-based student activities and projects. Guest scholars will focus on specific topics which will serve as exemplars for the students in the workshop.
About the Faculty
David Jaffee, professor of early American history and material culture at the Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture, will lead the seminar. He is the project director of two National Endowment for the Humanities grants to develop multimedia resources for the teaching of U.S. History.
Among the Guest faculty members will be Paul Staiti of Mount Holyoke College, Joshua Brown, Executive Director, American Social History Project, at The Graduate Center, City University of New York, Lucia Knoles, professor of English at Assumption College, Sally Pierce of the Boston Athenaeum, and Georgia Barnhill, Director of CHAViC and curator of graphic arts at AAS.
Cost
Tuition for the Seminar is $750. A grant from a major foundation allows AAS to offer financial aid to graduate students and non-academic professionals.
Application
The deadline for applications has passed.
Housing
A block of rooms, at the reduced rate of $119 per night, are available at the Worcester Courtyard by Marriott, 72 Grove Street, Worcester, MA 01605.
Reservations must be made by May 25, 2009, to receive this rate.
To make a reservation please use the Courtyard Worcester's CHAVIC Summer Seminar page or call 1-508-363-0300 and mention that you are coming in with the American Antiquarian Society "CHAVIC" group.
Contact Information
For more information about the seminar, please contact Georgia B. Barnhill (gbarnhill[at]mwa.org; 508-471-2173).