The Clark – Saundra Weddle on the Place-Based Networks of Sex Workers in Early Modern Venice

This urban history lecture examines sex workers’ residences and places of solicitation, situating them in relation to members of their professional network, including their procurers, some of whom were gondoliers. Mapping these locations in relation to pedestrian and boat routes reveals a spatial syntax that connected sex work with the rhythms of everyday life, demonstrating that location itself serves as an actor within this complex network.

Producer
The Clark
Series
The Clark
Category
Lectures & Forums

The Clark Connects – Storytelling with Keely Kempster Sarr – The Chariot of Aurora

Keely Kempster Sarr, Coordinator of Family and Community Programs, tells the story of The Chariot of Aurora, painted by the Italian artist Giovanni Battista Tiepolo.

Producer
The Clark
Series
The Clark
Category
Studio Shows & Interviews

The Clark Connects – Storytelling with Keely Kempster Starr – Daphnis and Chloe

Keely Kempster Sarr, Coordinator of Family and Community Programs, explores the story of friendship and blossoming romance behind the sculpture Daphnis and Chloe by the French artist Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux.

Producer
The Clark
Series
The Clark
Category
Studio Shows & Interviews

The Clark Connects – Pia Camil and Mari Rodriguez Binnie

Join artist Pia Camil as she discusses her work and her current exhibition at the Clark, Velo Revelo. Camil, whose work explores the histories of fashion and postwar painting as well as questions of privacy, publicity, and femininity, will be in conversation with Mari Rodríguez Binnie, Assistant Professor of Art at Williams College whose teaching focuses on modern and contemporary art with particular emphasis on Latin America.

Producer
The Clark
Series
The Clark
Category
Studio Shows & Interviews

The Clark – Joan Kee, ‘Black and White, Reconsidered’

Among the most prominent collaborative works involving both an African American and Asian American artist, Black & White (1993) by Glenn Ligon and Byron Kim occupies something of exemplary space in an art history particularly attuned to multiculturalism and its analogues. Joan Kee, professor in the History of Art at the University of Michigan, argues that its urgency lies in how deftly it revealed humanist efforts at reifying minoritarian personhood as part of a larger and more insidious counter-humanist enterprise where the individual was simply another byte to be identified, collected, and harvested. Perhaps clearer now than it was in 1993, Black & White emerges most forcefully as an argument for a view of abstraction embedded in habits, routines, and rituals sustaining multiple structures of regulation as perpetuated through discourse, technology and politics.

Producer
The Clark
Series
The Clark
Category
Lectures & Forums